Mark A. McCoy
Merck & Co.
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Featured researches published by Mark A. McCoy.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003
Mark A. McCoy; Jennifer J. Gesell; Mary M. Senior; Daniel F. Wyss
The stabilization of p53 against Mdm2-mediated degradation is an important event in DNA damage response. Initial models of p53 stabilization focused on posttranslational modification of p53 that would disrupt the p53–Mdm2 interaction. The N-terminal regions of both p53 and Mdm2 are modified in vivo in response to cellular stress, suggesting that modifications to Mdm2 also may affect the p53–Mdm2 interaction. Our NMR studies of apo-Mdm2 have found that, in addition to Mdm2 residues 25–109 that form the well ordered p53-binding domain that was observed in the p52–Mdm2 complex, Mdm2 residues 16–24 form a lid that closes over the p53-binding site. The Mdm2 lid, which is strictly conserved in mammals, may help to stabilize apo-Mdm2. It also competes weakly with peptidic and nonpeptidic antagonists. Modifications to the Mdm2 lid may disrupt p53–Mdm2 binding leading to p53 stabilization. Mdm2 and Mdm4 possess nearly identical p53-binding domains but different lids suggesting that lid modifications may select for p53 binding.
Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2015
Giovanna Scapin; Xiaoyu Yang; Winifred W. Prosise; Mark A. McCoy; Paul Reichert; Jennifer M Johnston; Ramesh S. Kashi; Corey Strickland
Immunoglobulin G4 antibodies exhibit unusual properties with important biological consequences. We report the structure of the human full-length IgG4 S228P anti-PD1 antibody pembrolizumab, solved to 2.3-Å resolution. Pembrolizumab is a compact molecule, consistent with the presence of a short hinge region. The Fc domain is glycosylated at the CH2 domain on both chains, but one CH2 domain is rotated 120° with respect to the conformation observed in all reported structures to date, and its glycan chain faces the solvent. We speculate that this new conformation is driven by the shorter hinge. The structure suggests a role for the S228P mutation in preventing the IgG4 arm exchange. In addition, this unusual Fc conformation suggests possible structural diversity between IgG subclasses and shows that use of isolated antibody fragments could mask potentially important interactions, owing to molecular flexibility.
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011
Xiaohua Huang; Gerald W. Shipps; Cliff C. Cheng; Peter Spacciapoli; Xingmin Zhang; Mark A. McCoy; Daniel F. Wyss; Xianshu Yang; Abdelghani Abe Achab; Kyle A. Soucy; Donna K. Montavon; Charles E. Whitehurst
A novel series of non-ATP-competitive MK2 inhibitors based on a furan-2-carboxyamide scaffold was discovered through high-throughput screening using the affinity selection-mass spectrometry-based Automated Ligand Identification System platform. Medicinal chemistry efforts optimized the initial screening hit to leadlike compounds with significant improvements in biochemical and cellular potencies, while maintaining excellent kinase selectivity and in vitro pharmacokinetic properties. Biophysical and biochemical studies confirmed the unique non-ATP-competitive binding mode of this series and suggested that highly selective inhibitors of MK2 should be feasible by targeting the outside ATP pocket.
PLOS Pathogens | 2016
Paul A. Mann; Anna Müller; Kerstin A. Wolff; Thierry O. Fischmann; Hao Wang; Patricia Reed; Yan Hou; Wenjin Li; Christa E. Müller; Jianying Xiao; Nicholas J. Murgolo; Xinwei Sher; Todd Mayhood; Payal R. Sheth; Asra Mirza; Marc Labroli; Li Xiao; Mark A. McCoy; Charles Gill; Mariana G. Pinho; Tanja Schneider; Terry Roemer
Here we describe a chemical biology strategy performed in Staphylococcus aureus and Staphylococcus epidermidis to identify MnaA, a 2-epimerase that we demonstrate interconverts UDP-GlcNAc and UDP-ManNAc to modulate substrate levels of TarO and TarA wall teichoic acid (WTA) biosynthesis enzymes. Genetic inactivation of mnaA results in complete loss of WTA and dramatic in vitro β-lactam hypersensitivity in methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) and S. epidermidis (MRSE). Likewise, the β-lactam antibiotic imipenem exhibits restored bactericidal activity against mnaA mutants in vitro and concomitant efficacy against 2-epimerase defective strains in a mouse thigh model of MRSA and MRSE infection. Interestingly, whereas MnaA serves as the sole 2-epimerase required for WTA biosynthesis in S. epidermidis, MnaA and Cap5P provide compensatory WTA functional roles in S. aureus. We also demonstrate that MnaA and other enzymes of WTA biosynthesis are required for biofilm formation in MRSA and MRSE. We further determine the 1.9Å crystal structure of S. aureus MnaA and identify critical residues for enzymatic dimerization, stability, and substrate binding. Finally, the natural product antibiotic tunicamycin is shown to physically bind MnaA and Cap5P and inhibit 2-epimerase activity, demonstrating that it inhibits a previously unanticipated step in WTA biosynthesis. In summary, MnaA serves as a new Staphylococcal antibiotic target with cognate inhibitors predicted to possess dual therapeutic benefit: as combination agents to restore β-lactam efficacy against MRSA and MRSE and as non-bioactive prophylactic agents to prevent Staphylococcal biofilm formation.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2014
Yao Ma; Manami Shizuka; Timothy J. Guzi; Yuan Liu; Yuan Tian; Brian R. Lahue; Craig R. Gibeau; Gerald W. Shipps; Yaolin Wang; Stephane Bogen; Latha G. Nair; Weidong Pan; Mark A. McCoy; Matthew E. Voss; Margarita Kirova-Snover; W. Bent Clayton
Novel small molecule HDM2 inhibitor, substituted piperidine, was identified. Initial SAR study indicated potential for several position optimizations. Additional potency enhancement was achieved by introducing a sidechain off the aromatic ring. DMPK study of one of the active compounds has shown a moderate oral PK and reasonable bioavailability.
ACS Chemical Biology | 2018
Noreen F. Rizvi; John A. Howe; Ali Nahvi; Daniel J. Klein; Thierry O. Fischmann; Hai-Young Kim; Mark A. McCoy; Scott S. Walker; Alan Hruza; Matthew Richards; Chad Chamberlin; Peter Saradjian; Margaret T. Butko; Gabriel Mercado; Julja Burchard; Corey Strickland; Peter J. Dandliker; Graham F. Smith; Elliott Nickbarg
Recent advances in understanding the relevance of noncoding RNA (ncRNA) to disease have increased interest in drugging ncRNA with small molecules. The recent discovery of ribocil, a structurally distinct synthetic mimic of the natural ligand of the flavin mononucleotide (FMN) riboswitch, has revealed the potential chemical diversity of small molecules that target ncRNA. Affinity-selection mass spectrometry (AS-MS) is theoretically applicable to high-throughput screening (HTS) of small molecules binding to ncRNA. Here, we report the first application of the Automated Ligand Detection System (ALIS), an indirect AS-MS technique, for the selective detection of small molecule-ncRNA interactions, high-throughput screening against large unbiased small-molecule libraries, and identification and characterization of novel compounds (structurally distinct from both FMN and ribocil) that target the FMN riboswitch. Crystal structures reveal that different compounds induce various conformations of the FMN riboswitch, leading to different activity profiles. Our findings validate the ALIS platform for HTS screening for RNA-binding small molecules and further demonstrate that ncRNA can be broadly targeted by chemically diverse yet selective small molecules as therapeutics.
Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2016
Yan Hou; Todd Mayhood; Payal R. Sheth; Christopher M. Tan; Marc Labroli; Jing Su; Daniel F. Wyss; Terry Roemer; Mark A. McCoy
Nonessential enzymes in the staphylococcal wall teichoic acid (WTA) pathway serve as highly validated β-lactam potentiation targets. MnaA (UDP-GlcNAc 2-epimerase) plays an important role in an early step of WTA biosynthesis by providing an activated form of ManNAc. Identification of a selective MnaA inhibitor would provide a tool to interrogate the contribution of the MnaA enzyme in the WTA pathway as well as serve as an adjuvant to restore β-lactam activity against methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). However, development of an epimerase functional assay can be challenging since both MnaA substrate and product (UDP-GlcNAc/UDP-ManNAc) share an identical molecular weight. Herein, we developed a nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) functional assay that can be combined with other NMR approaches to triage putative MnaA inhibitors from phenotypic cell-based screening campaigns. In addition, we determined that tunicamycin, a potent WTA pathway inhibitor, inhibits both S. aureus MnaA and a functionally redundant epimerase, Cap5P.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2002
Mark A. McCoy; Daniel F. Wyss
Archive | 2007
Yao Ma; Brian R. Lahue; Gerald W. Shipps; Yaolin Wang; Stephane Bogen; Matthew E. Voss; Latha G. Nair; Yuan Tian; Ronald J. Doll; Zhuyan Guo; Corey O. Strickland; Rumin Zhang; Mark A. McCoy; Weidong Pan; Elise M. Siegel; Craig R. Gibeau
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2002
Mark A. McCoy; Daniel F. Wyss