Rosemary S. Harrison
University of Queensland
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Featured researches published by Rosemary S. Harrison.
Reviews of Physiology Biochemistry and Pharmacology | 2007
Rosemary S. Harrison; Philip C. Sharpe; Yogendra Singh; David P. Fairlie
Amyloids are filamentous protein deposits ranging in size from nanometres to microns and composed of aggregated peptide beta-sheets formed from parallel or anti-parallel alignments of peptide beta-strands. Amyloid-forming proteins have attracted a great deal of recent attention because of their association with over 30 diseases, notably neurodegenerative conditions like Alzheimers, Huntingtons, Parkinsons, Creutzfeldt-Jacob and prion disorders, but also systemic diseases such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (Lou Gehrigs disease) and type II diabetes. These diseases are all thought to involve important conformational changes in proteins, sometimes termed misfolding, that usually produce beta-sheet structures with a strong tendency to aggregate into water-insoluble fibrous polymers. Reasons for such conformational changes in vivo are still unclear. Intermediate aggregated state(s), rather than precipitated insoluble polymeric aggregates, have recently been implicated in cellular toxicity and may be the source of aberrant pathology in amyloid diseases. Numerous in vitro studies of short and medium length peptides that form amyloids have provided some clues to amyloid formation, with an alpha-helix to beta-sheet folding transition sometimes implicated as an intermediary step leading to amyloid formation. More recently, quite a few non-pathological amyloidogenic proteins have also been identified and physiological properties have been ascribed, challenging previous implications that amyloids were always disease causing. This article summarises a great deal of current knowledge on the occurrence, structure, folding pathways, chemistry and biology associated with amyloidogenic peptides and proteins and highlights some key factors that have been found to influence amyloidogenesis.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010
Rosemary S. Harrison; Nicholas E. Shepherd; Huy N. Hoang; Gloria Ruiz-Gómez; Timothy A. Hill; Russell W. Driver; Vishal S. Desai; Paul R. Young; Giovanni Abbenante; David P. Fairlie
Recombinant proteins are important therapeutics due to potent, highly specific, and nontoxic actions in vivo. However, they are expensive medicines to manufacture, chemically unstable, and difficult to administer with low patient uptake and compliance. Small molecule drugs are cheaper and more bioavailable, but less target-specific in vivo and often have associated side effects. Here we combine some advantages of proteins and small molecules by taking short amino acid sequences that confer potency and selectivity to proteins, and fixing them as small constrained molecules that are chemically and structurally stable and easy to make. Proteins often use short α-helices of just 1–4 helical turns (4–15 amino acids) to interact with biological targets, but peptides this short usually have negligible α-helicity in water. Here we show that short peptides, corresponding to helical epitopes from viral, bacterial, or human proteins, can be strategically fixed in highly α-helical structures in water. These helix-constrained compounds have similar biological potencies as proteins that bear the same helical sequences. Examples are (i) a picomolar inhibitor of Respiratory Syncytial Virus F protein mediated fusion with host cells, (ii) a nanomolar inhibitor of RNA binding to the transporter protein HIV-Rev, (iii) a submicromolar inhibitor of Streptococcus pneumoniae growth induced by quorum sensing pheromone Competence Stimulating Peptide, and (iv) a picomolar agonist of the GPCR pain receptor opioid receptor like receptor ORL-1. This approach can be generally applicable to downsizing helical regions of proteins with broad applications to biology and medicine.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009
Guoping Ren; Daniel Stephan; Zhaohui Xu; Ying Zheng; Danming Tang; Rosemary S. Harrison; Mareike Kurz; Russell Jarrott; Stephen R. Shouldice; Annie Hiniker; Jennifer L. Martin; Begoña Heras; James C. A. Bardwell
The ubiquitous thioredoxin fold proteins catalyze oxidation, reduction, or disulfide exchange reactions depending on their redox properties. They also play vital roles in protein folding, redox control, and disease. Here, we have shown that a single residue strongly modifies both the redox properties of thioredoxin fold proteins and their ability to interact with substrates. This residue is adjacent in three-dimensional space to the characteristic CXXC active site motif of thioredoxin fold proteins but distant in sequence. This residue is just N-terminal to the conservative cis-proline. It is isoleucine 75 in the case of thioredoxin. Our findings support the conclusion that a very small percentage of the amino acid residues of thioredoxin-related proteins are capable of dictating the functions of these proteins.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010
Rosemary S. Harrison; Gloria Ruiz-Gómez; Timothy A. Hill; Shiao Y. Chow; Nicholas E. Shepherd; Rink-Jan Lohman; Giovanni Abbenante; Huy N. Hoang; David P. Fairlie
The nociceptin opioid peptide receptor (NOP, NOR, ORL-1) is a GPCR that recognizes nociceptin, a 17-residue peptide hormone. Nociceptin regulates pain transmission, learning, memory, anxiety, locomotion, cardiovascular and respiratory stress, food intake, and immunity. Nociceptin was constrained using an optimized helix-inducing cyclization strategy to produce the most potent NOP agonist (EC50 = 40 pM) and antagonist (IC50 = 7.5 nM) known. Alpha helical structures were measured in water by CD and 2D (1)H NMR spectroscopy. Agonist and antagonist potencies, evaluated by ERK phosphorylation in mouse neuroblastoma cells natively expressing NOR, increased 20-fold and 5-fold, respectively, over nociceptin. Helix-constrained peptides with key amino acid substitutions had much higher in vitro activity, serum stability, and thermal analgesic activity in mice, without cytotoxicity. The most potent agonist increased hot plate contact time from seconds up to 60 min; the antagonist prevented this effect. Such helix-constrained peptides may be valuable physiological probes and therapeutics for treating some forms of pain.
Angewandte Chemie | 2016
Huy N. Hoang; Russell W. Driver; Renee L. Beyer; Timothy A. Hill; Aline Dantas de Araujo; Fabien Plisson; Rosemary S. Harrison; Lena Goedecke; Nicholas E. Shepherd; David P. Fairlie
Cyclic pentapeptides (e.g. Ac-(cyclo-1,5)-[KAXAD]-NH2 ; X=Ala, 1; Arg, 2) in water adopt one α-helical turn defined by three hydrogen bonds. NMR structure analysis reveals a slight distortion from α-helicity at the C-terminal aspartate caused by torsional restraints imposed by the K(i)-D(i+4) lactam bridge. To investigate this effect on helix nucleation, the more water-soluble 2 was appended to N-, C-, or both termini of a palindromic peptide ARAARAARA (≤5 % helicity), resulting in 67, 92, or 100 % relative α-helicity, as calculated from CD spectra. From the C-terminus of peptides, 2 can nucleate at least six α-helical turns. From the N-terminus, imperfect alignment of the Asp5 backbone amide in 2 reduces helix nucleation, but is corrected by a second unit of 2 separated by 0-9 residues from the first. These cyclic peptides are extremely versatile helix nucleators that can be placed anywhere in 5-25 residue peptides, which correspond to most helix lengths in protein-protein interactions.
Current Drug Targets | 2012
Nicholas E. Shepherd; Rosemary S. Harrison; David P. Fairlie
Bacterial resistance to antibiotics is now a serious problem, with traditional classes of antibiotics having gradually become ineffective. New drugs are therefore needed to target and inhibit novel pathways that affect the growth of bacteria. An important feature in the survival of bacteria is that they coordinate their efforts together as a colony via secreted auto-inducing molecules. Competence stimulating peptides (CSPs) are among the quorum sensing pheromones involved in this coordination. These peptides activate a two-component system in gram-negative bacteria, binding to and activating a histidine kinase receptor called ComD, which phosphorylates a response regulator called ComE, leading to gene expression and induction of competence. Competent bacteria are able to take up exogenous DNA and incorporate it into their own genome. By this mechanism bacteria are able to acquire and share genes encoding antibiotic resistance. Despite having been studied for over 30 years, this pathway has only recently begun to be explored as a novel approach to modulating bacterial growth. Antagonists of ComD might block the signaling cascade that leads to competence, while overstimulation of ComD might also reduce bacterial growth. One possible approach to inhibiting ComD is to examine peptide sequences of CSPs that activate ComD and attempt to constrain them to bioactive conformations, likely to have higher affinity due to pre-organization for recognition by the receptor. Thus, small molecules that mimic an alpha helical epitope of CSPs, the putative ComD binding domain, have been shown here to inhibit growth of bacteria such as S. pneumoniae. Such alpha helix mimetics may be valuable clues to antibacterial chemotherapeutic agents that utilize a new mechanism to control bacterial growth.
Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry | 2016
Nicholas E. Shepherd; Rosemary S. Harrison; Gloria Ruiz-Gómez; Giovanni Abbenante; Jody M. Mason; David P. Fairlie
Bcl2 Homology (BH) proteins can either trigger or prevent programmed cell death or apoptosis. Deregulation of the BH protein family network leads to evasion of apoptosis, uncontrolled proliferation and is a hallmark of cancer. Inhibition of pro-survival BH proteins is a promising chemotherapeutic strategy for certain cancers. We have examined whether helix-constrained peptides based on the BAD BH3 domain (residues 103-127) can be downsized to much smaller more drug-like peptides. We report the preparation, structural characterisation, in vitro Bcl-xL inhibition and leukemic T-cell killing ability of 45 linear, mono-, bi- and tricyclic helical peptidomimetics between 8- and 19-residues in length. We show that the BAD BH3 can be downsized to 8-14 residues and still maintain appreciable affinity for Bcl-xL. In addition, the binding efficiency indices (BEI) of the downsized mimetics are significantly higher than the BAD BH3 and similar stapled BH3 mimetics, approaching drug-like molecules. This suggests that bicyclic and monocyclic mimetics based on BH3 domains are much more efficient binding ligands than the longer peptides which they mimic.
Vitamins and Hormones Series | 2015
Rink-Jan Lohman; Rosemary S. Harrison; Gloria Ruiz-Gómez; Huy N. Hoang; Nicholas E. Shepherd; Shiao Chow; Timothy A. Hill; Praveen K. Madala; David P. Fairlie
Nociceptin (orphanin FQ) is a 17-residue neuropeptide hormone with roles in both nociception and analgesia. It is an opioid-like peptide that binds to and activates the G-protein-coupled receptor opioid receptor-like-1 (ORL-1, NOP, orphanin FQ receptor, kappa-type 3 opioid receptor) on central and peripheral nervous tissue, without activating classic delta-, kappa-, or mu-opioid receptors or being inhibited by the classic opioid antagonist naloxone. The three-dimensional structure of ORL-1 was recently published, and the activation mechanism is believed to involve capture by ORL-1 of the high-affinity binding, prohelical C-terminus. This likely anchors the receptor-activating N-terminus of nociception nearby for insertion in the membrane-spanning helices of ORL-1. In search of higher agonist potency, two lysine and two aspartate residues were strategically incorporated into the receptor-binding C-terminus of the nociceptin sequence and two Lys(i)→Asp(i+4) side chain-side chain condensations were used to generate lactam cross-links that constrained nociceptin into a highly stable α-helix in water. A cell-based assay was developed using natively expressed ORL-1 receptors on mouse neuroblastoma cells to measure phosphorylated ERK as a reporter of agonist-induced receptor activation and intracellular signaling. Agonist activity was increased up to 20-fold over native nociceptin using a combination of this helix-inducing strategy and other amino acid modifications. An NMR-derived three-dimensional solution structure is described for a potent ORL-1 agonist derived from nociceptin, along with structure-activity relationships leading to the most potent known α-helical ORL-1 agonist (EC₅₀ 40 pM, pERK, Neuro-2a cells) and antagonist (IC₅₀ 7 nM, pERK, Neuro-2a cells). These α-helix-constrained mimetics of nociceptin(1-17) had enhanced serum stability relative to unconstrained peptide analogues and nociceptin itself, were not cytotoxic, and displayed potent thermal analgesic and antianalgesic properties in rats (ED₅₀ 70 pmol, IC₅₀ 10 nmol, s.c.), suggesting promising uses in vivo for the treatment of pain and other ORL-1-mediated responses.
Tetrahedron | 2014
Rosemary S. Harrison; Nicholas E. Shepherd; Huy N. Hoang; Renee L. Beyer; Gloria Ruiz-Gómez; Michael J. Kelso; W. Mei Kok; Timothy A. Hill; Giovanni Abbenante; David P. Fairlie
Archive | 2009
Rosemary S. Harrison