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Dive into the research topics where Mekala Gunaratnam is active.

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Featured researches published by Mekala Gunaratnam.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Molecular basis of structure-activity relationships between salphen metal complexes and human telomeric DNA quadruplexes.

Nancy H. Campbell; Nurul H. Abd Karim; Gary N. Parkinson; Mekala Gunaratnam; Vanessa Petrucci; Alan K. Todd; Ramon Vilar; Stephen Neidle

The first X-ray crystal structures of nickel(II) and copper(II) salphen metal complexes bound to a quadruplex DNA are presented. Two structures have been determined and show that these salphen-metal complexes bind to human telomeric quadruplexes by end-stacking, with the metal in each case almost in line with the potassium ion channel. Quadruplex and duplex DNA binding is presented for these two and other related salphen complexes, all with side-chains terminating in pyrrolidino end-groups and differing patterns of substitution on the salphen core. The crystal structures are able to provide rationalizations for the structure-activity data, and in particular for the superior quadruplex-binding of the nickel complexes compared to that of the copper-containing ones. The complexes show significant antiproliferative activity for the compounds in a panel of cancer cell lines. They also show telomerase inhibitory activity in the telomerase TRAP-LIG assay.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009

Targeting Human Gastrointestinal Stromal Tumor Cells with a Quadruplex-Binding Small Molecule

Mekala Gunaratnam; Stephen Swank; Shozeb Haider; Katja Galesa; Anthony P. Reszka; Monica Beltran; Francisco Cuenca; Jonathan A. Fletcher; Stephen Neidle

Most of human gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST) are driven by activating mutations in the proto-oncogene KIT, a tyrosine kinase receptor. Clinical treatment with imatinib targets the kinase domain of KIT, but tumor regrowth occurs as a result of the development of resistant mutations in the kinase active site. An alternative small-molecule approach to GIST therapy is described, in which the KIT gene is directly targeted, and thus, kinase resistance may be circumvented. A naphthalene diimide derivative has been used to demonstrate the concept of dual quadruplex targeting. This compound strongly stabilizes both telomeric quadruplex DNA and quadruplex sites in the KIT promoter in vitro. It is shown here that the compound is a potent inducer of growth arrest in a patient-derived GIST cell line at a concentration (approximately 1 microM) that also results in effective inhibition of telomerase activity and almost complete suppression of KIT mRNA and KIT protein expression. Molecular modeling studies with a telomeric quadruplex have been used to rationalize aspects of the experimental quadruplex melting data.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008

Tri- and tetra-substituted naphthalene diimides as potent G-quadruplex ligands.

Francisco Cuenca; Olga Greciano; Mekala Gunaratnam; Shozeb Haider; Deeksha Munnur; Rupesh Nanjunda; Wilson Wd; Stephen Neidle

A series of tri- and tetra-substituted naphthalene diimides have been designed and synthesized. Several compounds show exceptional affinity for telomeric G-quadruplex DNA in classical and competition FRET assays and SPR studies. They inhibit telomerase in the TRAP assay, and show potent senescence-based short-term anti-proliferative effects on MCF7 and A549 cancer cell lines, and localize in the nucleus and particularly the nucleolus of MCF7 cells.


Analytical Biochemistry | 2008

TRAP–LIG, a modified telomere repeat amplification protocol assay to quantitate telomerase inhibition by small molecules

Julie E Reed; Mekala Gunaratnam; Monica Beltran; Anthony P. Reszka; Ramón Vilar; Stephen Neidle

The telomerase enzyme is implicated in a large proportion of human cancers. Its major function is to maintain the length of telomeric DNA by synthesizing telomeric DNA repeats, and its enzymatic activity is assayed by means of the telomere repeat amplification protocol (TRAP) assay. We show here that this assay is unable to reliably determine the ability of small molecules to inhibit the enzyme because they interfere with the PCR step of the assay, resulting in a major overestimation of their activity. We report a modified TRAP assay that incorporates the addition of an intermediate step, enabling ligand to be removed from the final PCR process using a commercially available oligonucleotide purification kit, so that more reliable estimates of telomerase inhibition can be made.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Rational Design of Acridine-Based Ligands with Selectivity for Human Telomeric Quadruplexes

Silvia Sparapani; Shozeb Haider; Filippo Doria; Mekala Gunaratnam; Stephen Neidle

Structure-based modeling methods have been used to design a series of disubstituted triazole-linked acridine compounds with selectivity for human telomeric quadruplex DNAs. A focused library of these compounds was prepared using click chemistry and the selectivity concept was validated against two promoter quadruplexes from the c-kit gene with known molecular structures, as well as with duplex DNA using a FRET-based melting method. Lead compounds were found to have reduced effects on the thermal stability of the c-kit quadruplexes and duplex DNA structures. These effects were further explored with a series of competition experiments, which confirmed that binding to duplex DNA is very low even at high duplex:telomeric quadruplex ratios. Selectivity to the c-kit quadruplexes is more complex, with some evidence of their stabilization at increasing excess over human telomeric quadruplex DNA. Selectivity is a result of the dimensions of the triazole-acridine compounds, and in particular the separation of the two alkyl-amino terminal groups. Both lead compounds also have selective inhibitory effects on the proliferation of cancer cell lines compared to a normal cell line, and one has been shown to inhibit the activity of the telomerase enzyme, which is selectively expressed in tumor cells, where it plays a role in maintaining telomere integrity and cellular immortalization.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Structure-based design and evaluation of naphthalene diimide g-quadruplex ligands as telomere targeting agents in pancreatic cancer cells.

Marialuisa Micco; Gavin W. Collie; Aaron G. Dale; Stephan A. Ohnmacht; Ingrida Pazitna; Mekala Gunaratnam; Anthony P. Reszka; Stephen Neidle

Tetra-substituted naphthalene diimide (ND) derivatives with positively charged termini are potent stabilizers of human telomeric and gene promoter DNA quadruplexes and inhibit the growth of human cancer cells in vitro and in vivo. The present study reports the enhancement of the pharmacological properties of earlier ND compounds using structure-based design. Crystal structures of three complexes with human telomeric intramolecular quadruplexes demonstrate that two of the four strongly basic N-methyl-piperazine groups can be replaced by less basic morpholine groups with no loss of intermolecular interactions in the grooves of the quadruplex. The new compounds retain high affinity to human telomeric quadruplex DNA but are 10-fold more potent against the MIA PaCa-2 pancreatic cancer cell line, with IC50 values of ~10 nM. The lead compound induces cellular senescence but does not inhibit telomerase activity at the nanomolar dosage levels required for inhibition of cellular proliferation. Gene array qPCR analysis of MIA PaCa-2 cells treated with the lead compound revealed significant dose-dependent modulation of a distinct subset of genes, including strong induction of DNA damage responsive genes CDKN1A, DDIT3, GADD45A/G, and PPM1D, and repression of genes involved in telomere maintenance, including hPOT1 and PARP1.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Tetrasubstituted naphthalene diimide ligands with selectivity for telomeric G-quadruplexes and cancer cells

Sonja M. Hampel; Assitan Sidibe; Mekala Gunaratnam; Jean-François Riou; Stephen Neidle

A series of tetrasubstituted naphthalene diimide compounds with N-methylpiperazine end groups has been synthesized and evaluated as G-quadruplex ligands. They have high affinity and selectivity for telomeric G-quadruplex DNA over duplex DNA. CD studies show that they induce formation of a parallel G-quadruplex topology. They inhibit the binding of hPOT1 and topoisomerase IIIα to telomeric DNA and inhibit telomerase activity in MCF7 cells. The compounds have potent activity in a panel of cancer cell lines, with typical IC(50) values of ∼0.1 μM, and up to 100-fold lower toxicity in a normal human fibroblast cell line.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

Rational Design of Substituted Diarylureas: A Scaffold for Binding to G-Quadruplex Motifs

Drewe Wc; Nanjunda R; Mekala Gunaratnam; Beltran M; Parkinson Gn; Anthony P. Reszka; Wilson Wd; Stephen Neidle

The design and synthesis of a series of urea-based nonpolycyclic aromatic ligands with alkylaminoanilino side chains as telomeric and genomic G-quadruplex DNA interacting agents are described. Their interactions with quadruplexes have been examined by means of fluorescent resonance energy transfer melting, circular dichroism, and surface plasmon resonance-based assays. These validate the design concept for such urea-based ligands and also show that they have significant selectivity over duplex DNA, as well as for particular G-quadruplexes. The ligand-quadruplex complexes were investigated by computational molecular modeling, providing further information on structure-activity relationships. Preliminary biological studies using short-term cell growth inhibition assays show that some of the ligands have cancer cell selectivity, although they appear to have low potency for intracellular telomeric G-quadruplex structures, suggesting that their cellular targets may be other, possibly oncogene-related quadruplexes.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Defining the mechanism of action and enzymatic selectivity of psammaplin A against its epigenetic targets.

Matthias G. J. Baud; Thomas Leiser; Patricia Haus; Sharon Samlal; Ai Ching Wong; Robert J. Wood; Vanessa Petrucci; Mekala Gunaratnam; Siobhan M. Hughes; Lakjaya Buluwela; Fabrice Turlais; Stephen Neidle; Franz-Josef Meyer-Almes; Andrew J. P. White; Matthew J. Fuchter

Psammaplin A (11c) is a marine metabolite previously reported to be a potent inhibitor of two classes of epigenetic enzymes: histone deacetylases and DNA methyltransferases. The design and synthesis of a focused library based on the psammaplin A core has been carried out to probe the molecular features of this molecule responsible for its activity. By direct in vitro assay of the free thiol generated upon reduction of the dimeric psammaplin scaffold, we have unambiguously demonstrated that 11c functions as a natural prodrug, with the reduced form being highly potent against HDAC1 in vitro (IC(50) 0.9 nM). Furthermore, we have shown it to have high isoform selectivity, being 360-fold selective for HDAC1 over HDAC6 and more than 1000-fold less potent against HDAC7 and HDAC8. SAR around our focused library revealed a number of features, most notably the oxime functionality to be important to this selectivity. Many of the compounds show significant cytotoxicity in A549, MCF7, and W138 cells, with the SAR of cytotoxicity correlating to HDAC inhibition. Furthermore, compound treatment causes upregulation of histone acetylation but little effect on tubulin acetylation. Finally, we have found no evidence for 11c functioning as a DNMT inhibitor.


Chemical Communications | 2009

Biaryl polyamides as a new class of DNA quadruplex-binding ligands

Khondaker M. Rahman; Anthony P. Reszka; Mekala Gunaratnam; Shozeb Haider; Philip W. Howard; Keith R. Fox; Stephen Neidle; David E. Thurston

We report a novel class of biaryl polyamides highly selective for G-quadruplex DNA, and with significant cytotoxicity in several cancer cell lines; they form planar U-shaped structures that match the surface area dimensions of a terminal G-quartet in quadruplex structures rather than the grooves of duplex DNA.

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Shozeb Haider

University College London

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Jonathan A. Fletcher

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Alan K. Todd

University College London

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