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Dive into the research topics where Lynn VerPlank is active.

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Featured researches published by Lynn VerPlank.


Current Biology | 2002

Rho1 Directs Formin-Mediated Actin Ring Assembly during Budding Yeast Cytokinesis

Nicola Tolliday; Lynn VerPlank; Rong Li

In eukaryotic cells, dynamic rearrangement of the actin cytoskeleton is critical for cell division. In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, three main structures constitute the actin cytoskeleton: cortical actin patches, cytoplasmic actin cables, and the actin-based cytokinetic ring. The conserved Arp2/3 complex and a WASP-family protein mediate actin patch formation, whereas the yeast formins (Bni1 and Bnr1) promote assembly of actin cables. However, the mechanism of actin ring formation is currently unclear. Here, we show that actin filaments are required for cytokinesis in S. cerevisiae, and that the actin ring is a highly dynamic structure that undergoes constant turnover. Assembly of the actin ring requires the formin-like proteins and profilin, but is not Arp2/3-mediated. Furthermore, the formin-dependent actin ring assembly pathway is regulated by the Rho-type GTPase Rho1 but not Cdc42. Finally, we show that the formins are not required for localization of Cyk1/Iqg1, an IQGAP-like protein previously shown to be required for actin ring formation, suggesting that formin-like proteins and Cyk1 act synergistically but independently in assembly of the actin ring.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2014

Phenothiazines induce PP2A-mediated apoptosis in T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Alejandro Gutierrez; Li Pan; Richard W.J. Groen; Frederic Baleydier; Alex Kentsis; Jason J. Marineau; Ruta Grebliunaite; Elena Kozakewich; Casie Reed; Françoise Pflumio; Sandrine Poglio; Benjamin Uzan; Paul A. Clemons; Lynn VerPlank; Frank An; Jason Burbank; Stephanie Norton; Nicola Tolliday; Hanno Steen; Andrew P. Weng; H. Yuan; James E. Bradner; Constantine S. Mitsiades; A. Thomas Look

T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) is an aggressive cancer that is frequently associated with activating mutations in NOTCH1 and dysregulation of MYC. Here, we performed 2 complementary screens to identify FDA-approved drugs and drug-like small molecules with activity against T-ALL. We developed a zebrafish system to screen small molecules for toxic activity toward MYC-overexpressing thymocytes and used a human T-ALL cell line to screen for small molecules that synergize with Notch inhibitors. We identified the antipsychotic drug perphenazine in both screens due to its ability to induce apoptosis in fish, mouse, and human T-ALL cells. Using ligand-affinity chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry, we identified protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) as a perphenazine target. T-ALL cell lines treated with perphenazine exhibited rapid dephosphorylation of multiple PP2A substrates and subsequent apoptosis. Moreover, shRNA knockdown of specific PP2A subunits attenuated perphenazine activity, indicating that PP2A mediates the drugs antileukemic activity. Finally, human T-ALLs treated with perphenazine exhibited suppressed cell growth and dephosphorylation of PP2A targets in vitro and in vivo. Our findings provide a mechanistic explanation for the recurring identification of phenothiazines as a class of drugs with anticancer effects. Furthermore, these data suggest that pharmacologic PP2A activation in T-ALL and other cancers driven by hyperphosphorylated PP2A substrates has therapeutic potential.


Cell | 2012

Identification of Regulators of Polyploidization Presents Therapeutic Targets for Treatment of AMKL

Qiang Wen; Benjamin Goldenson; Serena J. Silver; Monica Schenone; Vlado Dančík; Zan Huang; Lingzhi Wang; Tim Lewis; W. Frank An; Xiaoyu Li; Mark Anthony Bray; Clarisse Thiollier; Lauren Diebold; Laure Gilles; Martha S. Vokes; Christopher B. Moore; Meghan Bliss-Moreau; Lynn VerPlank; Nicola Tolliday; Rama K. Mishra; Sasidhar Vemula; Jianjian Shi; Lei Wei; Reuben Kapur; Cécile K. Lopez; Bastien Gerby; Paola Ballerini; Françoise Pflumio; D. Gary Gilliland; Liat Goldberg

The mechanism by which cells decide to skip mitosis to become polyploid is largely undefined. Here we used a high-content image-based screen to identify small-molecule probes that induce polyploidization of megakaryocytic leukemia cells and serve as perturbagens to help understand this process. Our study implicates five networks of kinases that regulate the switch to polyploidy. Moreover, we find that dimethylfasudil (diMF, H-1152P) selectively increased polyploidization, mature cell-surface marker expression, and apoptosis of malignant megakaryocytes. An integrated target identification approach employing proteomic and shRNA screening revealed that a major target of diMF is Aurora kinase A (AURKA). We further find that MLN8237 (Alisertib), a selective inhibitor of AURKA, induced polyploidization and expression of mature megakaryocyte markers in acute megakaryocytic leukemia (AMKL) blasts and displayed potent anti-AMKL activity in vivo. Our findings provide a rationale to support clinical trials of MLN8237 and other inducers of polyploidization and differentiation in AMKL.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

Identification of a Selective Small Molecule Inhibitor of Breast Cancer Stem Cells

Andrew Germain; Leigh C. Carmody; Barbara Morgan; Cristina Fernandez; Erin Forbeck; Tim Lewis; Partha Nag; Amal Ting; Lynn VerPlank; Yuxiong Feng; Jose R. Perez; Sivaraman Dandapani; Michelle Palmer; Eric S. Lander; Piyush B. Gupta; Stuart L. Schreiber; Benito Munoz

A high-throughput screen (HTS) with the National Institute of Health-Molecular Libraries Small Molecule Repository (NIH-MLSMR) compound collection identified a class of acyl hydrazones to be selectively lethal to breast cancer stem cell (CSC) enriched populations. Medicinal chemistry efforts were undertaken to optimize potency and selectivity of this class of compounds. The optimized compound was declared as a probe (ML239) with the NIH Molecular Libraries Program and displayed greater than 20-fold selective inhibition of the breast CSC-like cell line (HMLE_sh_Ecad) over the isogenic control line (HMLE_sh_GFP).


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2016

Mitigation of NADPH Oxidase 2 Activity as a Strategy to Inhibit Peroxynitrite Formation.

Jacek Zielonka; Monika Zielonka; Lynn VerPlank; Gang Cheng; Micael Hardy; Olivier Ouari; Mehmet Menaf Ayhan; Radosław Podsiadły; Adam Sikora; John David Lambeth; B. Kalyanaraman

Using high throughput screening-compatible assays for superoxide and hydrogen peroxide, we identified potential inhibitors of the NADPH oxidase (Nox2) isoform from a small library of bioactive compounds. By using multiple probes (hydroethidine, hydropropidine, Amplex Red, and coumarin boronate) with well defined redox chemistry that form highly diagnostic marker products upon reaction with superoxide (O2̇̄), hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), and peroxynitrite (ONOO−), the number of false positives was greatly decreased. Selected hits for Nox2 were further screened for their ability to inhibit ONOO− formation in activated macrophages. A new diagnostic marker product for ONOO− is reported. We conclude that the newly developed high throughput screening/reactive oxygen species assays could also be used to identify potential inhibitors of ONOO− formed from Nox2-derived O2̇̄ and nitric oxide synthase-derived nitric oxide.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2012

Phenotypic High-Throughput Screening Elucidates Target Pathway in Breast Cancer Stem Cell–Like Cells

Leigh C. Carmody; Andrew Germain; Lynn VerPlank; Partha Nag; Benito Munoz; Jose R. Perez; Michelle Palmer

Cancer stem cells (CSCs) are resistant to standard cancer treatments and are likely responsible for cancer recurrence, but few therapies target this subpopulation. Due to the difficulty in propagating CSCs outside of the tumor environment, previous work identified CSC-like cells by inducing human breast epithelial cells into an epithelial-to-mesenchymal transdifferentiated state (HMLE_sh_ECad). A phenotypic screen was conducted against HMLE_sh_ECad with 300 718 compounds from the Molecular Libraries Small Molecule Repository to identify selective inhibitors of CSC growth. The screen yielded 2244 hits that were evaluated for toxicity and selectivity toward an isogenic control cell line. An acyl hydrazone scaffold emerged as a potent and selective scaffold targeting HMLE_sh_ECad. Fifty-three analogues were acquired and tested; compounds ranged in potency from 790 nM to inactive against HMLE_sh_ECad. Of the analogues, ML239 was best-in-class with an IC50= 1.18 µM against HMLE_sh_ECad, demonstrated a >23-fold selectivity over the control line, and was toxic to another CSC-like line, HMLE_shTwist, and a breast carcinoma cell line, MDA-MB-231. Gene expression studies conducted with ML239-treated cells showed altered gene expression in the NF-κB pathway in the HMLE_sh_ECad line but not in the isogenic control line. Future studies will be directed toward the identification of ML239 target(s).


ACS Chemical Biology | 2014

Identification of Inhibitors of PvdQ, an Enzyme Involved in the Synthesis of the Siderophore Pyoverdine.

Jacqueline Wurst; Eric J. Drake; Jimmy R. Theriault; Ivan Jewett; Lynn VerPlank; Jose R. Perez; Sivaraman Dandapani; Michelle Palmer; Samuel M. Moskowitz; Stuart L. Schreiber; Benito Munoz; Andrew M. Gulick

Pseudomonas aeruginosa produces the peptide siderophore pyoverdine, which is used to acquire essential Fe3+ ions from the environment. PvdQ, an Ntn hydrolase, is required for the biosynthesis of pyoverdine. PvdQ knockout strains are not infectious in model systems, suggesting that disruption of siderophore production via PvdQ inhibition could be exploited as a target for novel antibacterial agents, by preventing cells from acquiring iron in the low iron environments of most biological settings. We have previously described a high-throughput screen to identify inhibitors of PvdQ that identified inhibitors with IC50 values of ∼100 μM. Here, we describe the discovery of ML318, a biaryl nitrile inhibitor of PvdQ acylase. ML318 inhibits PvdQ in vitro (IC50 = 20 nM) by binding in the acyl-binding site, as confirmed by the X-ray crystal structure of PvdQ bound to ML318. Additionally, the PvdQ inhibitor is active in a whole cell assay, preventing pyoverdine production and limiting the growth of P. aeruginosa under iron-limiting conditions.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

Cinnamides as selective small-molecule inhibitors of a cellular model of breast cancer stem cells.

Andrew Germain; Leigh C. Carmody; Partha Nag; Barbara Morgan; Lynn VerPlank; Cristina Fernandez; Etienne J. Donckele; Yuxiong Feng; Jose R. Perez; Sivaraman Dandapani; Michelle Palmer; Eric S. Lander; Piyush B. Gupta; Stuart L. Schreiber; Benito Munoz

A high-throughput screen (HTS) was conducted against stably propagated cancer stem cell (CSC)-enriched populations using a library of 300,718 compounds from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Molecular Libraries Small Molecule Repository (MLSMR). A cinnamide analog displayed greater than 20-fold selective inhibition of the breast CSC-like cell line (HMLE_sh_Ecad) over the isogenic control cell line (HMLE_sh_eGFP). Herein, we report structure-activity relationships of this class of cinnamides for selective lethality towards CSC-enriched populations.


Antiviral Research | 2016

Novel diversity-oriented synthesis-derived respiratory syncytial virus inhibitors identified via a high throughput replicon-based screen

Jeremy R. Duvall; Lynn VerPlank; Barbara Ludeke; Sarah M. McLeod; Maurice D. Lee; Karthick Vishwanathan; Carol Mulrooney; Sebastian le Quement; Qin Yu; Michelle Palmer; Paul R. Fleming; Rachel Fearns; Michael Foley; Christina Scherer

Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infections affect millions of children and adults every year. Despite the significant disease burden, there are currently no safe and effective vaccines or therapeutics. We employed a replicon-based high throughput screen combined with live-virus triaging assays to identify three novel diversity-oriented synthesis-derived scaffolds with activity against RSV. One of these small molecules is shown to target the RSV polymerase (L protein) to inhibit viral replication and transcription; the mechanisms of action of the other small molecules are currently unknown. The compounds described herein may provide attractive inhibitors for lead optimization campaigns.


Molecular Cancer Research | 2014

Abstract IA8: A new class of drugs active in T-ALL is revealed in a zebrafish screen

Alejandro Gutierrez; Li Pan; Richard W.J. Groen; Frederic Baleydier; Alex Kentsis; Jason J. Marineau; Ruta Grebliunaite; Elena Kozakewich; Casie Reed; Françoise Pflumio; Sandrine Poglio; Benjamin Uzan; Paul A. Clemons; Lynn VerPlank; Frank An; Jason Burbank; Stephanie Norton; Nicola Tolliday; Hanno Steen; Andrew P. Weng; H. Yuan; James E. Bradner; Constantine S. Mitsiades; A. Thomas Look

T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) is an aggressive cancer frequently associated with activating NOTCH1 mutations and dysregulation of MYC. We performed two complementary screens to identify novel agents with activity against T-ALL: i) a zebrafish screen for small molecules toxic to MYC-overexpressing thymocytes, and ii) a human T-ALL cell line screen for small molecules that synergize with Notch inhibitors. “Hits” common to both screens included perphenazine, a phenothiazine antipsychotic that induced apoptosis of fish, mouse, and human T-ALL cells. Using ligand-affinity chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry, we identified protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) as the critical perphenazine target. In line with this finding, T-ALL cell lines treated with perphenazine underwent apoptosis associated with rapid dephosphorylation of multiple PP2A substrates, indicating that perphenazine binds and activates the PP2A tumor supressor. Moreover, shRNA knockdown of the scaffolding or catalytic subunits of PP2A attenuated the activity of perphenazine, indicating that PP2A is required for its antileukemic activity. Finally, treatment of primary human T-ALLs with pherphenazine suppressed cell growth and caused dephosphorylated of PP2A targets in vitro and in vivo. Our findings provide a mechanistic explanation for the recurrent “rediscovery” of phenothiazines as a class of drugs with anti-cancer effects and highlight the therapeutic potential of pharmacologic PP2A activation in T-ALL and other cancers driven by hyperphosphorylated PP2A substrates. Citation Format: Alejandro Gutierrez, Li Pan, Richard Groen, Frederic Baleydier, Alex Kentsis, Jason Marineau, Ruta Grebliunaite, Elena Kozakewich, Casie Reed, Francoise Pflumio, Sandrine Poglio, Benjamin Uzan, Paul Clemons, Lynn Verplank, Frank An, Jason Burbank, Stephanie Norton, Nicola Tolliday, Hanno Steen, Andrew P. Weng, Huipin Yuan, James E. Bradner, Constantine Mitsiades, A. Thomas Look, Jon C. Aster. A new class of drugs active in T-ALL is revealed in a zebrafish screen. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the AACR Special Conference: The Translational Impact of Model Organisms in Cancer; Nov 5-8, 2013; San Diego, CA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Mol Cancer Res 2014;12(11 Suppl):Abstract nr IA8.

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Stuart L Schreiber

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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James Dilks

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Robert Flaumenhaft

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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