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Dive into the research topics where Rick Gussio is active.

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Featured researches published by Rick Gussio.


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.


Chemistry & Biology | 2000

Chemical synthesis and biological properties of pyridine epothilones

K. C. Nicolaou; Rita Scarpelli; Birgit Bollbuck; Barbara Werschkun; Pereira Mm; Markus Wartmann; Karl-Heinz Altmann; Daniel W. Zaharevitz; Rick Gussio; Paraskevi Giannakakou

BACKGROUND Numerous analogs of the antitumor agents epothilones A and B have been synthesized in search of better pharmacological profiles. Insights into the structure-activity relationships within the epothilone family are still needed and more potent and selective analogs of these compounds are in demand, both as biological tools and as chemotherapeutic agents, especially against drug-resistant tumors. RESULTS A series of pyridine epothilone B analogs were designed, synthesized and screened. The synthesized compounds exhibited varying degrees of tubulin polymerization and cytotoxicity properties against a number of human cancer cell lines depending on the location of the nitrogen atom and the methyl substituent within the pyridine nucleus. CONCLUSIONS The biological screening results in this study established the importance of the nitrogen atom at the ortho position as well as the beneficial effect of a methyl substituent at the 4- or 5-position of the pyridine ring. Two pyridine epothilone B analogs (i.e. compounds 3 and 4) possessing higher potencies against drug-resistant tumor cells than epothilone B, the most powerful of the naturally occurring epothilones, were identified.


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.


Molecular Pharmacology | 2006

Comparison of the activities of the truncated halichondrin B analog NSC 707389 (E7389) with those of the parent compound and a proposed binding site on tubulin.

Donnette A. Dabydeen; James C. Burnett; Ruoli Bai; Pascal Verdier-Pinard; Sarah J. H. Hickford; George R. Pettit; John W. Blunt; Murray H. G. Munro; Rick Gussio; Ernest Hamel

The complex marine natural product halichondrin B was compared with NSC 707389 (E7389), a structurally simplified, synthetic macrocyclic ketone analog, which has been selected for clinical trials in human patients. NSC 707389 was invariably more potent than halichondrin B in its interactions with tubulin. Both compounds inhibited tubulin assembly, inhibited nucleotide exchange on β-tubulin, and were noncompetitive inhibitors of the binding of radiolabeled vinblastine and dolastatin 10 to tubulin. Neither compound seemed to induce an aberrant tubulin assembly reaction, as occurs with vinblastine (tight spirals) or dolastatin 10 (aggregated rings and spirals). We modeled the two compounds into a shared binding site on tubulin consistent with their biochemical properties. Of the two tubulin structures available, we selected for modeling the complex of a stathmin fragment with two tubulin heterodimers with two bound colchicinoid molecules and a single bound vinblastine between the two heterodimers (Nature (Lond) 435:519-522, 2005). Halichondrin B and NSC 707389 fit snugly between the two heterodimers adjacent to the exchangeable site nucleotide. Fitting the compounds into this site, which was also close to the vinblastine site, resulted in enough movement of amino acid residues at the vinblastine site to cause the latter compound to bind less well to tubulin. The model suggests that halichondrin B and NSC 707389 most likely form highly unstable, small aberrant tubulin polymers rather than the massive stable structures observed with vinca alkaloids and antimitotic peptides.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2000

2-Substituted paullones: CDK1/cyclin B-inhibiting property and in vitro antiproliferative activity

Conrad Kunick; Christiane Schultz; Thomas Lemcke; Daniel W. Zaharevitz; Rick Gussio; Ravi K. Jalluri; Edward A. Sausville; Maryse Leost; Laurent Meijer

9-Trifluoromethyl-paullones with a carbon chain in the 2-position were synthesized by palladium-catalyzed coupling reactions of a 2-iodoprecursor with terminal alkenes or alkynes, respectively. The introduction of a 2-cyanoethyl substituent led to a significant enhancement of CDK1/cyclin B inhibiting property and in vitro antiproliferative activity.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Pharmacophore-guided lead optimization: The rational design of a non-zinc coordinating, sub-micromolar inhibitor of the botulinum neurotoxin serotype a metalloprotease

James C. Burnett; Chenbo Wang; Jonathan E. Nuss; Tam Luong Nguyen; Ann R. Hermone; James J. Schmidt; Rick Gussio; Peter Wipf; Sina Bavari

Botulinum neurotoxins, responsible for the neuroparalytic syndrome botulism, are the deadliest of known biological toxins. The work described in this study was based on a three-zone pharmacophore model for botulinum neurotoxin serotype A light chain inhibition. Specifically, the pharmacophore defined a separation between the overlaps of several different, non-zinc(II)-coordinating small molecule chemotypes, enabling the design and synthesis of a new structural hybrid possessing a Ki=600 nM (+/-100 nM).


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

Novel 4-aminoquinolines active against chloroquine-resistant and sensitive P. falciparum strains that also inhibit botulinum serotype A.

Bogdan A. Šolaja; Dejan Opsenica; Kirsten S. Smith; Wilbur K. Milhous; Nataša Terzić; Igor Opsenica; James C. Burnett; Jon Nuss; Rick Gussio; Sina Bavari

We report on the initial result of the coupling of 4-amino-7-chloroquinoline with steroidal and adamantane constituents to provide small molecules with excellent in vitro antimalarial activities (IC90 (W2) down to 6.74 nM). The same entities also inhibit the botulinum neurotoxin serotype A light chain metalloprotease at low micromolar levels (7-31 microM). Interestingly, structural features imparting increased antimalarial activity also provide increased metalloprotease inhibition, thus allowing for simultaneous compound optimizations against distinct targets.


Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling | 2011

Interactions of halichondrin B and eribulin with tubulin.

Ruoli Bai; Tam Luong Nguyen; James C. Burnett; Onur Atasoylu; Murray H. G. Munro; George R. Pettit; Amos B. Smith; Rick Gussio; Ernest Hamel

Compounds that modulate microtubule dynamics include highly effective anticancer drugs, leading to continuing efforts to identify new agents and improve the activity of established ones. Here, we demonstrate that [(3)H]-labeled halichondrin B (HB), a complex, sponge-derived natural product, is bound to and dissociated from tubulin rapidly at one binding site per αβ-heterodimer, with an apparent K(d) of 0.31 μM. We found no HB-induced aggregation of tubulin by high-performance liquid chromatography, even following column equilibration with HB. Binding of [(3)H]HB was competitively inhibited by a newly approved clinical agent, the truncated HB analogue eribulin (apparent K(i), 0.80 μM) and noncompetitively by dolastatin 10 and vincristine (apparent K(i)s, 0.35 and 5.4 μM, respectively). Our earlier studies demonstrated that HB inhibits nucleotide exchange on β-tubulin, and this, together with the results presented here, indicated the HB site is located on β-tubulin. Using molecular dynamics simulations, we determined complementary conformations of HB and β-tubulin that delineated in atomic detail binding interactions of HB with only β-tubulin, with no involvement of the α-subunit in the binding interaction. Moreover, the HB model served as a template for an eribulin binding model that furthered our understanding of the properties of eribulin as a drug. Overall, these results established a mechanistic basis for the antimitotic activity of the halichondrin class of compounds.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2009

Novel Broad-Spectrum Bis-(Imidazolinylindole) Derivatives with Potent Antibacterial Activities against Antibiotic-Resistant Strains

Rekha G. Panchal; Ricky L. Ulrich; Douglas Lane; Michelle M. Butler; Timothy J. Opperman; John D. Williams; Norton P. Peet; Donald T. Moir; Tam Luong Nguyen; Rick Gussio; Terry L. Bowlin; Sina Bavari

ABSTRACT Given the limited number of structural classes of clinically available antimicrobial drugs, the discovery of antibacterials with novel chemical scaffolds is an important strategy in the development of effective therapeutics for both naturally occurring and engineered resistant strains of pathogenic bacteria. In this study, several diarylamidine derivatives were evaluated for their ability to protect macrophages from cell death following infection with Bacillus anthracis, a gram-positive spore-forming bacterium. Four bis-(imidazolinylindole) compounds were identified with potent antibacterial activity as measured by the protection of macrophages and by the inhibition of bacterial growth in vitro. These compounds were effective against a broad range of gram-positive and gram-negative bacterial species, including several antibiotic-resistant strains. Minor structural variations among the four compounds correlated with differences in their effects on bacterial macromolecular synthesis and mechanisms of resistance. In vivo studies revealed protection by two of the compounds of mice lethally infected with B. anthracis, Staphylococcus aureus, or Yersinia pestis. Taken together, these results indicate that the bis-(imidazolinylindole) compounds represent a new chemotype for the development of therapeutics for both gram-positive and gram-negative bacterial species as well as against antibiotic-resistant infections.


ChemBioChem | 2005

Structure‐Aided Optimization of Kinase Inhibitors Derived from Alsterpaullone

Conrad Kunick; Zhihong Zeng; Rick Gussio; Daniel W. Zaharevitz; Maryse Leost; Frank Totzke; Christoph Schächtele; Michael H.G. Kubbutat; Laurent Meijer; Thomas Lemcke

In order to perform computer‐aided design of novel alsterpaullone derivatives, the vicinity of the entrance to the ATP‐binding site was scanned for areas that could be useful as anchoring points for additional protein–ligand interactions. Based on the alignment of alsterpaullone in a CDK1/cyclin B homology model, substituents were attached to the 2‐position of the parent scaffold to enable contacts within the identified areas. Synthesis of the designed structures revealed three derivatives (3–5) with kinase‐inhibitory activity similar to alsterpaullone. The novel 2‐cyanoethylalsterpaullone (7) proved to be the most potent paullone described so far, exhibiting inhibitory concentrations for CDK1/ cyclin B and GSK‐3β in the picomolar range.

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Sina Bavari

United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases

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Daniel W. Zaharevitz

National Institutes of Health

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James C. Burnett

Science Applications International Corporation

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Tam Luong Nguyen

Science Applications International Corporation

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Rekha G. Panchal

United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases

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Connor F. McGrath

Science Applications International Corporation

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Ann R. Hermone

Science Applications International Corporation

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Ernest Hamel

National Institutes of Health

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Conrad Kunick

Braunschweig University of Technology

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Laurent Meijer

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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