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Dive into the research topics where Rekha G. Panchal is active.

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Featured researches published by Rekha G. Panchal.


Nature | 2014

Protection against filovirus diseases by a novel broad-spectrum nucleoside analogue BCX4430

Travis K. Warren; Jay Wells; Rekha G. Panchal; Kelly S. Stuthman; Nicole L. Garza; Sean Van Tongeren; Lian Dong; Cary Retterer; Brett Eaton; Gianluca Pegoraro; Shelley P. Honnold; Shanta Bantia; Pravin L. Kotian; Xilin Chen; Brian R. Taubenheim; Lisa S. Welch; Dena M. Minning; Yarlagadda S. Babu; Sina Bavari

Filoviruses are emerging pathogens and causative agents of viral haemorrhagic fever. Case fatality rates of filovirus disease outbreaks are among the highest reported for any human pathogen, exceeding 90% (ref. 1). Licensed therapeutic or vaccine products are not available to treat filovirus diseases. Candidate therapeutics previously shown to be efficacious in non-human primate disease models are based on virus-specific designs and have limited broad-spectrum antiviral potential. Here we show that BCX4430, a novel synthetic adenosine analogue, inhibits infection of distinct filoviruses in human cells. Biochemical, reporter-based and primer-extension assays indicate that BCX4430 inhibits viral RNA polymerase function, acting as a non-obligate RNA chain terminator. Post-exposure intramuscular administration of BCX4430 protects against Ebola virus and Marburg virus disease in rodent models. Most importantly, BCX4430 completely protects cynomolgus macaques from Marburg virus infection when administered as late as 48 hours after infection. In addition, BCX4430 exhibits broad-spectrum antiviral activity against numerous viruses, including bunyaviruses, arenaviruses, paramyxoviruses, coronaviruses and flaviviruses. This is the first report, to our knowledge, of non-human primate protection from filovirus disease by a synthetic drug-like small molecule. We provide additional pharmacological characterizations supporting the potential development of BCX4430 as a countermeasure against human filovirus diseases and other viral diseases representing major public health threats.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

In vivo oligomerization and raft localization of Ebola virus protein VP40 during vesicular budding

Rekha G. Panchal; Gordon Ruthel; Tara Kenny; George Kallstrom; Douglas Lane; Shirin S. Badie; Limin Li; Sina Bavari; M. Javad Aman

The matrix protein VP40 plays a critical role in Ebola virus assembly and budding, a process that utilizes specialized membrane domains known as lipid rafts. Previous studies with purified protein suggest a role for oligomerization of VP40 in this process. Here, we demonstrate VP40 oligomers in lipid rafts of mammalian cells, virus-like particles, and in the authentic Ebola virus. By mutagenesis, we identify several critical C-terminal sequences that regulate oligomerization at the plasma membrane, association with detergent-resistant membranes, and vesicular release of VP40, directly linking these phenomena. Furthermore, we demonstrate the active recruitment of TSG101 into lipid rafts by VP40. We also report the successful application of the biarsenic fluorophore, FlAsH, combined with a tetracysteine tag for imaging of Ebola VP40 in live cells.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2004

Identification of small molecule inhibitors of anthrax lethal factor

Rekha G. Panchal; Ann R. Hermone; Tam Luong Nguyen; Thiang Yian Wong; Robert Schwarzenbacher; James J. Schmidt; Douglas Lane; Connor F. McGrath; Benjamin E. Turk; James C. Burnett; M. Javad Aman; Stephen F. Little; Edward A. Sausville; Daniel W. Zaharevitz; Lewis C. Cantley; Robert C. Liddington; Rick Gussio; Sina Bavari

The virulent spore-forming bacterium Bacillus anthracis secretes anthrax toxin composed of protective antigen (PA), lethal factor (LF) and edema factor (EF). LF is a Zn-dependent metalloprotease that inactivates key signaling molecules, such as mitogen-activated protein kinase kinases (MAPKK), to ultimately cause cell death. We report here the identification of small molecule (nonpeptidic) inhibitors of LF. Using a two-stage screening assay, we determined the LF inhibitory properties of 19 compounds. Here, we describe six inhibitors on the basis of a pharmacophoric relationship determined using X-ray crystallographic data, molecular docking studies and three-dimensional (3D) database mining from the US National Cancer Institute (NCI) chemical repository. Three of these compounds have Ki values in the 0.5–5 μM range and show competitive inhibition. These molecular scaffolds may be used to develop therapeutically viable inhibitors of LF.


Journal of Immunology | 2005

Dendritic Cells Endocytose Bacillus Anthracis Spores: Implications for Anthrax Pathogenesis

Katherine C. Brittingham; Gordon Ruthel; Rekha G. Panchal; Claudette L. Fuller; Wilson J. Ribot; Timothy A. Hoover; Howard A. Young; Arthur O. Anderson; Sina Bavari

Phagocytosis of inhaled Bacillus anthracis spores and subsequent trafficking to lymph nodes are decisive events in the progression of inhalational anthrax because they initiate germination and dissemination of spores. Found in high frequency throughout the respiratory track, dendritic cells (DCs) routinely take up foreign particles and migrate to lymph nodes. However, the participation of DCs in phagocytosis and dissemination of spores has not been investigated previously. We found that human DCs readily engulfed fully pathogenic Ames and attenuated B. anthracis spores predominately by coiling phagocytosis. Spores provoked a loss of tissue-retaining chemokine receptors (CCR2, CCR5) with a concurrent increase in lymph node homing receptors (CCR7, CD11c) on the membrane of DCs. After spore infection, immature DCs displayed a mature phenotype (CD83bright, HLA-DRbright, CD80bright, CD86bright, CD40bright) and enhanced costimulatory activity. Surprisingly, spores activated the MAPK cascade (ERK, p38) within 30 min and stimulated expression of several inflammatory response genes by 2 h. MAPK signaling was extinguished by 6 h infection, and there was a dramatic reduction of secreted TNF-α, IL-6, and IL-8 in the absence of DC death. This corresponded temporally with enzymatic cleavage of proximal MAPK signaling proteins (MEK-1, MEK-3, and MAP kinase kinase-4) and may indicate activity of anthrax lethal toxin. Taken together, these results suggest that B. anthracis may exploit DCs to facilitate infection.


PLOS ONE | 2013

A Systematic Screen of FDA-Approved Drugs for Inhibitors of Biological Threat Agents

Peter B. Madrid; Sidharth Chopra; Ian D. Manger; Lynne Gilfillan; Tiffany R. Keepers; Amy C. Shurtleff; Carol E. Green; Lalitha V. Iyer; Holli Hutcheson Dilks; Robert A. Davey; Andrey A. Kolokoltsov; Ricardo Carrion; Jean L. Patterson; Sina Bavari; Rekha G. Panchal; Travis K. Warren; Jay Wells; Walter H. Moos; RaeLyn L. Burke; Mary J. Tanga

Background The rapid development of effective medical countermeasures against potential biological threat agents is vital. Repurposing existing drugs that may have unanticipated activities as potential countermeasures is one way to meet this important goal, since currently approved drugs already have well-established safety and pharmacokinetic profiles in patients, as well as manufacturing and distribution networks. Therefore, approved drugs could rapidly be made available for a new indication in an emergency. Methodology/Principal Findings A large systematic effort to determine whether existing drugs can be used against high containment bacterial and viral pathogens is described. We assembled and screened 1012 FDA-approved drugs for off-label broad-spectrum efficacy against Bacillus anthracis; Francisella tularensis; Coxiella burnetii; and Ebola, Marburg, and Lassa fever viruses using in vitro cell culture assays. We found a variety of hits against two or more of these biological threat pathogens, which were validated in secondary assays. As expected, antibiotic compounds were highly active against bacterial agents, but we did not identify any non-antibiotic compounds with broad-spectrum antibacterial activity. Lomefloxacin and erythromycin were found to be the most potent compounds in vivo protecting mice against Bacillus anthracis challenge. While multiple virus-specific inhibitors were identified, the most noteworthy antiviral compound identified was chloroquine, which disrupted entry and replication of two or more viruses in vitro and protected mice against Ebola virus challenge in vivo. Conclusions/Significance The feasibility of repurposing existing drugs to face novel threats is demonstrated and this represents the first effort to apply this approach to high containment bacteria and viruses.


FEBS Letters | 1992

Combinatorial RNA splicing alters the surface charge on the NMDA receptor

Vellareddy Anantharam; Rekha G. Panchal; Andrew Wilson; Vladimir V. Kolchine; Steven N. Treistman; Hagan Bayley

Transcripts encoding four NMDA receptor subunits, generated from the NMDAR1 gene by alternative RNA splicing, have been demonstrated in adult rat brain. RNA transcripts derived from cDNAs encoding each form direct the formation of functional NMDA receptors in Xenopus oocytes. The two amino acid cassettes of 21 and 37 amino acids found in the splice variants increase the positive extracellular surface charge on the subunits and may thereby modulate the functional properties of the receptor.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Inhibition of Metalloprotease Botulinum Serotype A from a Pseudo-peptide Binding Mode to a Small Molecule That Is Active in Primary Neurons

James C. Burnett; Gordon Ruthel; Christian M. Stegmann; Rekha G. Panchal; Tam Luong Nguyen; Ann R. Hermone; Robert G. Stafford; Douglas Lane; Tara Kenny; Connor F. McGrath; Peter Wipf; Andrea M. Stahl; James J. Schmidt; Rick Gussio; Axel T. Brunger; Sina Bavari

An efficient research strategy integrating empirically guided, structure-based modeling and chemoinformatics was used to discover potent small molecule inhibitors of the botulinum neurotoxin serotype A light chain. First, a modeled binding mode for inhibitor 2-mercapto-3-phenylpropionyl-RATKML (Ki = 330 nm) was generated, and required the use of a molecular dynamic conformer of the enzyme displaying the reorientation of surface loops bordering the substrate binding cleft. These flexible loops are conformationally variable in x-ray crystal structures, and the model predicted that they were pivotal for providing complementary binding surfaces and solvent shielding for the pseudo-peptide. The docked conformation of 2-mercapto-3-phenylpropionyl-RATKML was then used to refine our pharmacophore for botulinum serotype A light chain inhibition. Data base search queries derived from the pharmacophore were employed to mine small molecule (non-peptidic) inhibitors from the National Cancer Institutes Open Repository. Four of the inhibitors possess Ki values ranging from 3.0 to 10.0 μm. Of these, NSC 240898 is a promising lead for therapeutic development, as it readily enters neurons, exhibits no neuronal toxicity, and elicits dose-dependent protection of synaptosomal-associated protein (of 25 kDa) in a primary culture of embryonic chicken neurons. Isothermal titration calorimetry showed that the interaction between NSC 240898 and the botulinum A light chain is largely entropy-driven, and occurs with a 1:1 stoichiometry and a dissociation constant of 4.6 μm.


Science Translational Medicine | 2014

Rational design of small molecules as vaccine adjuvants

Manmohan Singh; Andrew T. Miller; Francesco Doro; David Skibinski; M. Lamine Mbow; Simone Bufali; Ann E. Herman; Alex Cortez; Yongkai Li; Bishnu P. Nayak; Elaine Tritto; Christophe M. Filippi; Gillis Otten; Luis A. Brito; Elisabetta Monaci; Chun Li; Susanna Aprea; Sara Valentini; Donatello Laera; Brunella Brunelli; Elena Caproni; Padma Malyala; Rekha G. Panchal; Travis K. Warren; Sina Bavari; Derek O'hagan; Michael P. Cooke; Nicholas M. Valiante

Small-molecule immune potentiators can be engineered to be potent adjuvants with localized innate immune activation and short in vivo residence times. Better Adjuvants Through Chemistry Vaccine development has come a long way since Jenner first noticed that cowpox protected against smallpox. And yet, many vaccines do not work well alone; adjuvants are included with the vaccine to boost the immune response. Despite the critical role of adjuvants in vaccine efficacy, new adjuvant development has been empirical. Now, Wu et al. report the rational optimization of small-molecule immune potentiators (SMIPs) as adjuvants. These SMIPs were engineered to have limited bioavailability and remain localized, inducing temporally and spatially restricted inflammation. This systematic approach to optimizing adjuvant properties may allow for improved immune responses to vaccines with fewer side effects. Adjuvants increase vaccine potency largely by activating innate immunity and promoting inflammation. Limiting the side effects of this inflammation is a major hurdle for adjuvant use in vaccines for humans. It has been difficult to improve on adjuvant safety because of a poor understanding of adjuvant mechanism and the empirical nature of adjuvant discovery and development historically. We describe new principles for the rational optimization of small-molecule immune potentiators (SMIPs) targeting Toll-like receptor 7 as adjuvants with a predicted increase in their therapeutic indices. Unlike traditional drugs, SMIP-based adjuvants need to have limited bioavailability and remain localized for optimal efficacy. These features also lead to temporally and spatially restricted inflammation that should decrease side effects. Through medicinal and formulation chemistry and extensive immunopharmacology, we show that in vivo potency can be increased with little to no systemic exposure, localized innate immune activation and short in vivo residence times of SMIP-based adjuvants. This work provides a systematic and generalizable approach to engineering small molecules for use as vaccine adjuvants.


Viruses | 2012

Discovery and Early Development of AVI-7537 and AVI-7288 for the Treatment of Ebola Virus and Marburg Virus Infections

Patrick L. Iversen; Travis K. Warren; Jay Wells; Nicole L. Garza; Lisa S. Welch; Rekha G. Panchal; Sina Bavari

There are no currently approved treatments for filovirus infections. In this study we report the discovery process which led to the development of antisense Phosphorodiamidate Morpholino Oligomers (PMOs) AVI-6002 (composed of AVI-7357 and AVI-7539) and AVI-6003 (composed of AVI-7287 and AVI-7288) targeting Ebola virus and Marburg virus respectively. The discovery process involved identification of optimal transcript binding sites for PMO based RNA-therapeutics followed by screening for effective viral gene target in mouse and guinea pig models utilizing adapted viral isolates. An evolution of chemical modifications were tested, beginning with simple Phosphorodiamidate Morpholino Oligomers (PMO) transitioning to cell penetrating peptide conjugated PMOs (PPMO) and ending with PMOplus containing a limited number of positively charged linkages in the PMO structure. The initial lead compounds were combinations of two agents targeting separate genes. In the final analysis, a single agent for treatment of each virus was selected, AVI-7537 targeting the VP24 gene of Ebola virus and AVI-7288 targeting NP of Marburg virus, and are now progressing into late stage clinical development as the optimal therapeutic candidates.


Antiviral Research | 2012

Identification of an antioxidant small-molecule with broad-spectrum antiviral activity.

Rekha G. Panchal; St. Patrick Reid; Julie P. Tran; Alison A. Bergeron; Jay Wells; Krishna P. Kota; Javad Aman; Sina Bavari

The highly lethal filoviruses, Ebola and Marburg cause severe hemorrhagic fever in humans and non-human primates. To date there are no licensed vaccines or therapeutics to counter these infections. Identifying novel pathways and host targets that play an essential role during infection will provide potential targets to develop therapeutics. Small molecule chemical screening for Ebola virus inhibitors resulted in identification of a compound NSC 62914. The compound was found to exhibit anti-filovirus activity in cell-based assays and in vivo protected mice following challenge with Ebola or Marburg viruses. Additionally, the compound was found to inhibit Rift Valley fever virus, Lassa virus and Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus in cell-based assays. Investigation of the mechanism of action of the compound revealed that it had antioxidant properties. Specifically, compound NSC 62914 was found to act as a scavenger of reactive oxygen species, and to up-regulate oxidative stress-induced genes. However, four known antioxidant compounds failed to inhibit filovirus infection, thus suggesting that the mechanistic basis of the antiviral function of the antioxidant NSC 62914 may involve modulation of multiple signaling pathways/targets.

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Sina Bavari

University of Pittsburgh

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Rick Gussio

University of Pittsburgh

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Douglas Lane

Science Applications International Corporation

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Gordon Ruthel

United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases

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James C. Burnett

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Tam Luong Nguyen

Science Applications International Corporation

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Tara Kenny

Science Applications International Corporation

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Ann R. Hermone

Science Applications International Corporation

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John J. Kasianowicz

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Wilson J. Ribot

United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases

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