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Dive into the research topics where Matthew B. Soellner is active.

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Featured researches published by Matthew B. Soellner.


Chemical Communications | 2012

A general method for detecting protease activity via gelation and its application to artificial clotting

Steven C. Bremmer; Jing Chen; Anne J. McNeil; Matthew B. Soellner

A modular system for detecting protease activity via enzyme-triggered gel formation is described. Protease-specific recognition sequences are utilized to achieve enzyme specificity. Artificial blood clotting is demonstrated by activating endogenous thrombin to trigger gelation in fibrinogen-deficient blood plasma.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2012

Development of a Highly Selective c-Src Kinase Inhibitor

Kristoffer R. Brandvold; Michael E. Steffey; Christel C. Fox; Matthew B. Soellner

Generating highly selective probes to interrogate protein kinase function in biological studies remains a challenge, and new strategies are required. Herein, we describe the development of the first highly selective and cell-permeable inhibitor of c-Src, a key signaling kinase in cancer. Our strategy involves extension of traditional inhibitor design by appending functionality proposed to interact with the phosphate-binding loop of c-Src. Using our selective inhibitor, we demonstrate that selective inhibition is significantly more efficacious than pan-kinase inhibition in slowing the growth of cancer cells. We also show that inhibition of c-Abl kinase, an off-target of most c-Src inhibitors, promotes oncogenic cell growth.


Analytical Chemistry | 2013

Activation State-Selective Kinase Inhibitor Assay Based on Ion Mobility-Mass Spectrometry

Jessica N. Rabuck; Suk Joon Hyung; Kristin S. Ko; Christel C. Fox; Matthew B. Soellner; Brandon T. Ruotolo

The discovery of activation state dependent kinase inhibitors, which bind specifically to the inactive conformation of the protein, is considered to be a promising pathway to improved cancer treatments. Identifying such inhibitors is challenging, however, because they can have Kd values similar to molecules known to inhibit kinase function by interacting with the active form. Further, while inhibitor induced changes within the kinase tertiary structure are significant, few technologies are able to correctly assign inhibitor binding modes in a high-throughput fashion based exclusively on protein-inhibitor complex formation and changes in local protein structure. We have developed a new assay, using ion mobility-mass spectrometry, capable of both rapidly detecting inhibitor binding and classifying the resultant kinase binding modes. Here, we demonstrate the ability of our approach to classify a broad set of kinase inhibitors, using micrograms of protein, without the need for protein modification or tagging.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2012

Irreversible inhibitors of c-Src kinase that target a nonconserved cysteine.

Frank E. Kwarcinski; Christel C. Fox; Michael E. Steffey; Matthew B. Soellner

We have developed the first irreversible inhibitors of wild-type c-Src kinase. We demonstrate that our irreversible inhibitors display improved potency and selectivity relative to that of their reversible counterparts. Our strategy involves modifying a promiscuous kinase inhibitor with an electrophile to generate covalent inhibitors of c-Src. We applied this methodology to two inhibitor scaffolds that exhibit increased cellular efficacy when rendered irreversible. In addition, we have demonstrated the utility of irreversible inhibitors in studying the conformation of an important loop in kinases that can control inhibitor selectivity and cause drug resistance. Together, we have developed a general and robust framework for generating selective irreversible inhibitors from reversible, promiscuous inhibitor scaffolds.


Chemical Communications | 2014

Enzyme-triggered gelation: targeting proteases with internal cleavage sites

Steven C. Bremmer; Anne J. McNeil; Matthew B. Soellner

A generalizable method for detecting protease activity via gelation is described. A recognition sequence is used to target the protease of interest while a second protease is used to remove the residual residues from the gelator scaffold. Using this approach, selective assays for both MMP-9 and PSA are demonstrated.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2016

Conformation-Selective Analogues of Dasatinib Reveal Insight into Kinase Inhibitor Binding and Selectivity.

Frank E. Kwarcinski; Kristoffer R. Brandvold; Sameer Phadke; Omar M. Beleh; Taylor K. Johnson; Jennifer L. Meagher; Markus A. Seeliger; Jeanne A. Stuckey; Matthew B. Soellner

In the kinase field, there are many widely held tenets about conformation-selective inhibitors that have yet to be validated using controlled experiments. We have designed, synthesized, and characterized a series of kinase inhibitor analogues of dasatinib, an FDA-approved kinase inhibitor that binds the active conformation. This inhibitor series includes two Type II inhibitors that bind the DFG-out inactive conformation and two inhibitors that bind the αC-helix-out inactive conformation. Using this series of compounds, we analyze the impact that conformation-selective inhibitors have on target binding and kinome-wide selectivity.


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

Substrate Activity Screening with Kinases: Discovery of Small‐Molecule Substrate‐Competitive c‐Src Inhibitors

Meghan E. Breen; Michael E. Steffey; Eric J. Lachacz; Frank E. Kwarcinski; Christel C. Fox; Matthew B. Soellner

Substrate-competitive kinase inhibitors represent a promising class of kinase inhibitors, however, there is no methodology to selectively identify this type of inhibitor. Substrate activity screening was applied to tyrosine kinases. By using this methodology, the first small-molecule substrates for any protein kinase were discovered, as well as the first substrate-competitive inhibitors of c-Src with activity in both biochemical and cellular assays. Characterization of the lead inhibitor demonstrates that substrate-competitive kinase inhibitors possess unique properties, including cellular efficacy that matches biochemical potency and synergy with ATP-competitive inhibitors.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2015

Synthesis and Biological Evaluation of Lactimidomycin and Its Analogues

Brian J. Larsen; Zhankui Sun; Eric J. Lachacz; Yaroslav Khomutnyk; Matthew B. Soellner; Pavel Nagorny

The studies culminating in the total synthesis of the glutarimide-containing eukaryote translation elongation inhibitor lactimidomycin are described. The optimized synthetic route features a Zn(II)-mediated intramolecular Horner-Wadsworth-Emmons (HWE) reaction resulting in a highly stereoselective formation of the strained 12-membered macrolactone of lactimidomycin on a 423 mg scale. The presence of the E,Z-diene functionality was found to be key for effective macrocyclizations as a complete removal of these unsaturation units resulted in exclusive formation of the dimer rather than monocyclic enoate. The synthetic route features a late-stage installation of the glutarimide functionality via an asymmetric catalytic Mukaiyama aldol reaction, which allows for a quick generation of lactimidomycin homolog 55 containing two additional carbons in the glutarimide side chain. Similar to lactimidomycin, this analog was found to possess cytotoxicity against MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells (GI50 =1-3 μM) using in vitro 2D and 3D assays. Although lactimidomycin was found to be the most potent compound in terms of anticancer activity, 55 as well as truncated analogues 50-52 lacking the glutarimide side-chain were found to be significantly less toxic against human mammary epithelial cells.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2016

UM-164: A Potent c-Src/p38 Kinase Inhibitor with In Vivo Activity against Triple-Negative Breast Cancer.

Rabia Gilani; Sameer Phadke; Li Wei Bao; Eric J. Lachacz; Michele L. Dziubinski; Kristoffer R. Brandvold; Michael E. Steffey; Frank E. Kwarcinski; Carrie R. Graveel; Kelley M. Kidwell; Sofia D. Merajver; Matthew B. Soellner

Purpose: c-Src has been shown to play a pivotal role in breast cancer progression, metastasis, and angiogenesis. In the clinic, however, the limited efficacy and high toxicity of existing c-Src inhibitors have tempered the enthusiasm for targeting c-Src. We developed a novel c-Src inhibitor (UM-164) that specifically binds the DFG-out inactive conformation of its target kinases. We hypothesized that binding the inactive kinase conformation would lead to improved pharmacologic outcomes by altering the noncatalytic functions of the targeted kinases. Experimental Design: We have analyzed the anti–triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) activity of UM-164 in a comprehensive manner that includes in vitro cell proliferation, migration, and invasion assays (including a novel patient-derived xenograft cell line, VARI-068), along with in vivo TNBC xenografts. Results: We demonstrate that UM-164 binds the inactive kinase conformation of c-Src. Kinome-wide profiling of UM-164 identified that Src and p38 kinase families were potently inhibited by UM-164. We further demonstrate that dual c-Src/p38 inhibition is superior to mono-inhibition of c-Src or p38 alone. We demonstrate that UM-164 alters the cell localization of c-Src in TNBC cells. In xenograft models of TNBC, UM-164 resulted in a significant decrease of tumor growth compared with controls, with limited in vivo toxicity. Conclusions: In contrast with c-Src kinase inhibitors used in the clinic (1, 2), we demonstrate in vivo efficacy in xenograft models of TNBC. Our results suggest that the dual activity drug UM-164 is a promising lead compound for developing the first targeted therapeutic strategy against TNBC. Clin Cancer Res; 22(20); 5087–96. ©2016 AACR.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015

Discovery of Bivalent Kinase Inhibitors via Enzyme-Templated Fragment Elaboration.

Frank E. Kwarcinski; Michael E. Steffey; Christel C. Fox; Matthew B. Soellner

We have employed novel fragment-based screening methodology to discover bivalent kinase inhibitors with improved selectivity. Starting from a low molecular weight promiscuous kinase inhibitor, we appended a thiol for subsequent reaction with a library of acrylamide electrophiles. Enzyme-templated screening was performed to identify acrylamides that assemble into bivalent inhibitors of c-Src kinase. Upon identification of acrylamide fragments that improve the binding affinity of our lead thiol, we characterized the resulting bivalent inhibitors and identified a series of kinase inhibitors with improved potency and selectivity compared to the thiol-containing precursor. Provided that protein can be prepared free of endogenous reactive cysteines, our methodology is general and could be applied to nearly any enzyme of interest.

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Li Wei Bao

University of Michigan

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