Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Ramappa Chakrasali is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Ramappa Chakrasali.


Biology of Reproduction | 2008

Gamendazole, an Orally Active Indazole Carboxylic Acid Male Contraceptive Agent, Targets HSP90AB1 (HSP90BETA) and EEF1A1 (eEF1A), and Stimulates Il1a Transcription in Rat Sertoli Cells

Joseph S. Tash; Ramappa Chakrasali; Sudhakar Jakkaraj; Jennifer R. Hughes; S. Kendall Smith; Kaori I. Hornbaker; Leslie L. Heckert; Sedide B. Ozturk; M. Kyle Hadden; Terri Goss Kinzy; Brian S. J. Blagg; Gunda I. Georg

Gamendazole was recently identified as an orally active antispermatogenic compound with antifertility effects. The cellular mechanism(s) through which these effects occur and the molecular target(s) of gamendazole action are currently unknown. Gamendazole was recently designed as a potent orally active antispermatogenic male contraceptive agent. Here, we report the identification of binding targets and propose a testable mechanism of action for this antispermatogenic agent. Both HSP90AB1 (previously known as HSP90beta [heat shock 90-kDa protein 1, beta]) and EEF1A1 (previously known as eEF1A [eukaryotic translation elongation factor 1 alpha 1]) were identified as binding targets by biotinylated gamendazole (BT-GMZ) affinity purification from testis, Sertoli cells, and ID8 ovarian cancer cells; identification was confirmed by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry and Western blot analysis. BT-GMZ bound to purified yeast HSP82 (homologue to mammalian HSP90AB1) and EEF1A1, but not to TEF3 or HBS1, and was competed by unlabeled gamendazole. However, gamendazole did not inhibit nucleotide binding by EEF1A1. Gamendazole binding to purified Saccharomyces cerevisiae HSP82 inhibited luciferase refolding and was not competed by the HSP90 drugs geldanamycin or novobiocin analogue, KU-1. Gamendazole elicited degradation of the HSP90-dependent client proteins AKT1 and ERBB2 and had an antiproliferative effect in MCF-7 cells without inducing HSP90. These data suggest that gamendazole may represent a new class of selective HSP90AB1 and EEF1A1 inhibitors. Testis gene microarray analysis from gamendazole-treated rats showed a marked, rapid increase in three interleukin 1 genes and Nfkbia (NF-kappaB inhibitor alpha) 4 h after oral administration. A spike in II1a transcription was confirmed by RT-PCR in primary Sertoli cells 60 min after exposure to 100 nM gamendazole, demonstrating that Sertoli cells are a target. AKT1, NFKB, and interleukin 1 are known regulators of the Sertoli cell-spermatid junctional complexes. A current model for gamendazole action posits that this pathway links interaction with HSP90AB1 and EEF1A1 to the loss of spermatids and resulting infertility.


Biology of Reproduction | 2008

A Novel Potent Indazole Carboxylic Acid Derivative Blocks Spermatogenesis and Is Contraceptive in Rats after a Single Oral Dose

Joseph S. Tash; Barbara Attardi; Sheri Ann Hild; Ramappa Chakrasali; Sudhakar Jakkaraj; Gunda I. Georg

Women have historically been the focus for development of new contraceptive methods. The National Institutes of Health, World Health Organization, and Institute of Medicine have stressed the need to develop nonhormonal, nonsteroidal male contraceptive agents. We report results from initial dose-ranging studies of a new indazole carboxylic acid analogue, gamendazole. An infertility rate of 100% was achieved in seven out of seven proven-fertile male rats 3 wk after a single oral dose of 6 mg/kg of gamendazole. Fertility returned by 9 wk in four of seven animals, with typical numbers of normal-appearing conceptuses. A fertility rate of 100% returned in four of six animals that became infertile at a single oral dose of 3 mg/kg of gamendazole. No differences in mating behavior were observed in either of the gamendazole-treated groups versus the control (vehicle-only) group. In the animals that showed reversible infertility, a transient increase in circulating FSH levels coincided with an initial decline in inhibin B levels after administration of gamendazole, but no other significant changes in circulating reproductive hormones were observed. Gamendazole inhibited production of inhibin B by primary Sertoli cells in vitro with a median inhibitory concentration of 6.8 thorn+/- 3.0 (SEM) (3/4)x 10(-10) M, suggesting that Sertoli cells are a primary target. A biotinylated gamendazole analogue revealed cytoplasmic and perinuclear binding of gamendazole in primary Sertoli cells. Gamendazole represents the most potent new oral antispermatogenic indazole carboxylic acid to date. Our results, however, demonstrate that additional dose-finding studies are required to improve reversibility and widen the therapeutic window before more detailed drug development of this potential nonhormonal male contraceptive agent can occur.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Development of highly potent and selective diaminothiazole inhibitors of cyclin-dependent kinases.

Ernst Schönbrunn; Stephane Betzi; Riazul Alam; Mathew P. Martin; Andreas Becker; Huijong Han; Rawle Francis; Ramappa Chakrasali; Sudhakar Jakkaraj; Aslamuzzaman Kazi; Said M. Sebti; Christopher L. Cubitt; Anthony W. Gebhard; Lori A. Hazlehurst; Joseph S. Tash; Gunda I. Georg

Cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) are serine/threonine protein kinases that act as key regulatory elements in cell cycle progression. We describe the development of highly potent diaminothiazole inhibitors of CDK2 (IC50 = 0.0009-0.0015 μM) from a single hit compound with weak inhibitory activity (IC50 = 15 μM), discovered by high-throughput screening. Structure-based design was performed using 35 cocrystal structures of CDK2 liganded with distinct analogues of the parent compound. The profiling of compound 51 against a panel of 339 kinases revealed high selectivity for CDKs, with preference for CDK2 and CDK5 over CDK9, CDK1, CDK4, and CDK6. Compound 51 inhibited the proliferation of 13 out of 15 cancer cell lines with IC50 values between 0.27 and 6.9 μM, which correlated with the complete suppression of retinoblastoma phosphorylation and the onset of apoptosis. Combined, the results demonstrate the potential of this new inhibitors series for further development into CDK-specific chemical probes or therapeutics.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2010

Total Synthesis and Evaluation of C26-Hydroxyepothilone D Derivatives for Photoaffinity Labeling of β-Tubulin

Emily A. Reiff; Sajiv Krishnan Nair; John T. Henri; Jack F. Greiner; Bollu S. Reddy; Ramappa Chakrasali; Sunil A. David; Ting Lan Chiu; Elizabeth A. Amin; Richard H. Himes; David Vander Velde; Gunda I. Georg

Three photoaffinity labeled derivatives of epothilone D were prepared by total synthesis, using efficient novel asymmetric synthesis methods for the preparation of two important synthetic building blocks. The key step for the asymmetric synthesis of (S,E)-3-(tert-butyldimethylsilyloxy)-4-methyl-5-(2-methylthiazol-4-yl)pent-4-enal involved a ketone reduction with (R)-Me-CBS-oxazaborolidine. For the synthesis of (5S)-5,7-di[(tert-butyldimethylsilyl)oxy]-4,4-dimethylheptan-3-one an asymmetric Noyori reduction of a beta-ketoester was employed. The C26 hydroxyepothilone D derivative was constructed following a well-established total synthesis strategy and the photoaffinity labels were attached to the C26 hydroxyl group. The photoaffinity analogues were tested in a tubulin assembly assay and for cytotoxicity against MCF-7 and HCT-116 cancer cell lines. The 3- and 4-azidobenzoic acid analogues were found to be as active as epothilone B in a tubulin assembly assay, but demonstrated significantly reduced cellular cytotoxicity compared to epothilone B. The benzophenone analogue was inactive in both assays. Docking and scoring studies were conducted that suggested that the azide analogues can bind to the epothilone binding site, but that the benzophenone analogue undergoes a sterically driven ligand rearrangement that interrupts all hydrogen bonding and therefore protein binding. Photoaffinity labeling studies with the 3-azidobenzoic acid derivative did not identify any covalently labeled peptide fragments, suggesting that the phenylazido side chain was predominantly solvent-exposed in the bound conformation.


Archive | 2005

Lonidamine analogues and their use in male contraception and cancer treatment

I. Gunda Georg; Joseph S. Tash; Ramappa Chakrasali; Sudhakar Jakkaraj


Archive | 2009

Lonidamine analogues and treatment of polycystic kidney disease

Ingrid Gunda Georg; Joseph S. Tash; Ramappa Chakrasali; Sudhakar Jakkaraj; James P. Calvet


Archive | 2010

Lonidamine analogues for fertility management

Ingrid Gunda Georg; Joseph S. Tash; Ramappa Chakrasali; Sudhakar Jakkaraj; Katherine F. Roby


Biology of Reproduction | 2012

KU-AS-272, a Potential Single-Dose Sterilant for Cats and Dogs, Shows Safety and Ability to Block Spermatogenesis in Testis to Sertoli Cells Only after a Single Subcutaneous Injection in Male Rat.

Vijayalaxmi Gupta; Katherine F. Roby; Brian Kern; Todd Hall; Sudhakar Jakkaraj; Ramappa Chakrasali; Gunda I. Georg; Melinda Broward; Robyn Wood; Scott Weir; Joseph S. Tash


Biology of Reproduction | 2011

Anti-Spermatogenic Efficacy of Nonhormonal Male Contraceptive Agent, H2-Gamendazole, in Mice, Rats, Rabbits, and Nonhuman Primates (Rhesus), and a Multiple Low Dose Oral Regimen That Gives 100% Infertility with Complete Reversibility.

Vijayalaxmi Gupta; Mary B. Zelinski; Karen Steinmetz; Andras Miklos; Melinda Broward; Sudhakar Jakkaraj; Ramappa Chakrasali; Gunda I. Georg; Joseph S. Tash


Biology of Reproduction | 2011

Effect of H2-Gamendazole and Other Indazole Carboxylic Acid (ICA) Analogs on Primary Rat Sertoli Cells Cytoskeletal Structure and Elongation Factor 1 Alpha (EEF1A1) Expression and Function.

Lesya M. Holets; Julie Cottita; Sudhakar Jakkaraj; Ramappa Chakrasali; Terri Goss Kinzy; Gunda I. Georg; Joseph S. Tash

Collaboration


Dive into the Ramappa Chakrasali's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mary B. Zelinski

Oregon National Primate Research Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge