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Dive into the research topics where Seth F. Harris is active.

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Featured researches published by Seth F. Harris.


Journal of Virology | 2006

Selection and Characterization of Replicon Variants Dually Resistant to Thumb- and Palm-Binding Nonnucleoside Polymerase Inhibitors of the Hepatitis C Virus

Sophie Le Pogam; Hyunsoon Kang; Seth F. Harris; Vincent Leveque; Anthony M. Giannetti; Samir Ali; Wen-Rong Jiang; Sonal Rajyaguru; Gisele Tavares; Connie Oshiro; Than Hendricks; Klaus Klumpp; Julian A. Symons; Michelle F. Browner; Nick Cammack; Isabel Najera

ABSTRACT Multiple nonnucleoside inhibitor binding sites have been identified within the hepatitis C virus (HCV) polymerase, including in the palm and thumb domains. After a single treatment with a thumb site inhibitor (thiophene-2-carboxylic acid NNI-1), resistant HCV replicon variants emerged that contained mutations at residues Leu419, Met423, and Ile482 in the polymerase thumb domain. Binding studies using wild-type (WT) and mutant enzymes and structure-based modeling showed that the mechanism of resistance is through the reduced binding of the inhibitor to the mutant enzymes. Combined treatment with a thumb- and a palm-binding polymerase inhibitor had a dramatic impact on the number of replicon colonies able to replicate in the presence of both inhibitors. A more exact characterization through molecular cloning showed that 97.7% of replicons contained amino acid substitutions that conferred resistance to either of the inhibitors. Of those, 65% contained simultaneously multiple amino acid substitutions that conferred resistance to both inhibitors. Double-mutant replicons Met414Leu and Met423Thr were predominantly selected, which showed reduced replication capacity compared to the WT replicon. These findings demonstrate the selection of replicon variants dually resistant to two NS5B polymerase inhibitors binding to different sites of the enzyme. Additionally, these findings provide initial insights into the in vitro mutational threshold of the HCV NS5B polymerase and the potential impact of viral fitness on the selection of multiple-resistant mutants.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Discovery of highly potent, selective, and brain-penetrable leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 (LRRK2) small molecule inhibitors.

Anthony A. Estrada; Xingrong Liu; Charles Baker-Glenn; Alan Beresford; Daniel J. Burdick; Mark Stuart Chambers; Bryan K. Chan; Huifen Chen; Xiao Ding; Antonio G. DiPasquale; Sara L. Dominguez; Jennafer Dotson; Jason Drummond; Michael Flagella; Sean P. Flynn; Reina N. Fuji; Andrew Gill; Janet Gunzner-Toste; Seth F. Harris; Timothy P. Heffron; Tracy Kleinheinz; Donna W. Lee; Claire E. Le Pichon; Joseph P. Lyssikatos; Andrew D. Medhurst; John Moffat; Susmith Mukund; Kevin Nash; Kimberly Scearce-Levie; Zejuan Sheng

There is a high demand for potent, selective, and brain-penetrant small molecule inhibitors of leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 (LRRK2) to test whether inhibition of LRRK2 kinase activity is a potentially viable treatment option for Parkinsons disease patients. Herein we disclose the use of property and structure-based drug design for the optimization of highly ligand efficient aminopyrimidine lead compounds. High throughput in vivo rodent cassette pharmacokinetic studies enabled rapid validation of in vitro-in vivo correlations. Guided by this data, optimal design parameters were established. Effective incorporation of these guidelines into our molecular design process resulted in the discovery of small molecule inhibitors such as GNE-7915 (18) and 19, which possess an ideal balance of LRRK2 cellular potency, broad kinase selectivity, metabolic stability, and brain penetration across multiple species. Advancement of GNE-7915 into rodent and higher species toxicity studies enabled risk assessment for early development.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Slow binding inhibition and mechanism of resistance of non-nucleoside polymerase inhibitors of hepatitis C virus.

Julie Qi Hang; Yanli Yang; Seth F. Harris; Vincent Leveque; Hannah J. Whittington; Sonal Rajyaguru; Gloria Ao-Ieong; Matthew F. McCown; April Wong; Anthony M. Giannetti; Sophie Le Pogam; Francisco Xavier Talamas; Nick Cammack; Isabel Najera; Klaus Klumpp

The binding affinity of four palm and thumb site representative non-nucleoside inhibitors (NNIs) of HCV polymerase NS5B to wild-type and resistant NS5B polymerase proteins was determined, and the influence of RNA binding on NNI binding affinity was investigated. NNIs with high binding affinity potently inhibited HCV RNA polymerase activity and replicon replication. Among the compounds tested, HCV-796 showed slow binding kinetics to NS5B. The binding affinity of HCV-796 to NS5B increased 27-fold over a 3-h incubation period with an equilibrium Kd of 71 ± 2 nm. Slow binding kinetics of HCV-796 was driven by slow dissociation from NS5B with a koff of 4.9 ± 0.5 × 10−4 s−1. NS5B bound a long, 378-nucleotide HCV RNA oligonucleotide with high affinity (Kd = 6.9 ± 0.3 nm), whereas the binding affinity was significantly lower for a short, 21-nucleotide RNA (Kd = 155.1 ± 16.2 nm). The formation of the NS5B-HCV RNA complex did not affect the slow binding kinetics profile and only slightly reduced NS5B binding affinity of HCV-796. The magnitude of reduction of NNI binding affinity for the NS5B proteins with various resistance mutations in the palm and thumb binding sites correlated well with resistance -fold shifts in NS5B polymerase activity and replicon assays. Co-crystal structures of NS5B-Con1 and NS5B-BK with HCV-796 revealed a deep hydrophobic binding pocket at the palm region of NS5B. HCV-796 interaction with the induced binding pocket on NS5B is consistent with slow binding kinetics and loss of binding affinity with mutations at amino acid position 316.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

Design of annulated pyrazoles as inhibitors of HIV-1 reverse transcriptase

Zachary Kevin Sweeney; Seth F. Harris; Nidhi Arora; Hassan Javanbakht; Yu Li; Jennifer Fretland; James Edward Paul Davidson; J. Roland Billedeau; Shelley K. Gleason; Donald Roy Hirschfeld; Joshua Kennedy-Smith; Taraneh Mirzadegan; Ralf Roetz; Mark A. Smith; Sarah Sperry; Judy M. Suh; Jeffrey C. Wu; Stan Tsing; Armando G. Villaseñor; Amber Paul; Guoping Su; Gabrielle Heilek; Julie Q. Hang; Amy S. Zhou; Jesper A. Jernelius; Fang‐Jie Zhang; Klaus Klumpp

Non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs) are recommended components of preferred combination antiretroviral therapies used for the treatment of HIV. These regimens are extremely effective in suppressing virus replication. Structure-based optimization of diaryl ether inhibitors led to the discovery of a new series of pyrazolo[3,4-c]pyridazine NNRTIs that bind the reverse transcriptase enzyme of human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-RT) in an expanded volume relative to most other inhibitors in this class.The binding mode maintains the beta13 and beta14 strands bearing Pro236 in a position similar to that in the unliganded reverse transcriptase structure, and the distribution of interactions creates the opportunity for substantial resilience to single point mutations. Several pyrazolopyridazine NNRTIs were found to be highly effective against wild-type and NNRTI-resistant viral strains in cell culture.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008

Fragment-based discovery of hepatitis C virus NS5b RNA polymerase inhibitors.

Stephen Suresh Antonysamy; Brandon E. Aubol; Jeff Blaney; Michelle F. Browner; Anthony M. Giannetti; Seth F. Harris; Normand Hebert; Jorg Hendle; Stephanie Hopkins; Elizabeth A. Jefferson; C. R. Kissinger; Vincent Leveque; David Marciano; Ethel McGee; Isabel Najera; Brian Nolan; Masaki Tomimoto; Eduardo Torres; Tobi Wright

Non-nucleoside inhibitors of HCV NS5b RNA polymerase were discovered by a fragment-based lead discovery approach, beginning with crystallographic fragment screening. The NS5b binding affinity and biochemical activity of fragment hits and inhibitors was determined by surface plasmon resonance (Biacore) and an enzyme inhibition assay, respectively. Crystallographic fragment screening hits with approximately 1-10mM binding affinity (K(D)) were iteratively optimized to give leads with approximately 200nM biochemical activity and low microM cellular activity in a Replicon assay.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Discovery of piperidin-4-yl-aminopyrimidines as HIV-1 reverse transcriptase inhibitors. N-benzyl derivatives with broad potency against resistant mutant viruses.

Denis John Kertesz; Christine E. Brotherton-Pleiss; Minmin Yang; Zhanguo Wang; Xianfeng Lin; Zongxing Qiu; Donald Roy Hirschfeld; Shelley K. Gleason; Taraneh Mirzadegan; Pete Dunten; Seth F. Harris; Armando G. Villaseñor; Julie Qi Hang; Gabrielle Heilek; Klaus Klumpp

An analysis of the binding motifs of known HIV-1 non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors has led to discovery of novel piperidine-linked aminopyrimidine derivatives with broad activity against wild-type as well as drug-resistant mutant viruses. Notably, the series retains potency against the K103N/Y181C and Y188L mutants, among others. Thus, the N-benzyl compound 5k has a particularly attractive profile. Synthesis and SAR are presented and discussed, as well as crystal structures relating to the binding motifs.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Discovery of Highly Potent, Selective, and Brain-Penetrant Aminopyrazole Leucine-Rich Repeat Kinase 2 (LRRK2) Small Molecule Inhibitors

Anthony A. Estrada; Bryan K. Chan; Charles Baker-Glenn; Alan Beresford; Daniel J. Burdick; Mark Stuart Chambers; Huifen Chen; Sara L. Dominguez; Jennafer Dotson; Jason Drummond; Michael Flagella; Reina N. Fuji; Andrew Gill; Jason S. Halladay; Seth F. Harris; Timothy P. Heffron; Tracy Kleinheinz; Donna W. Lee; Claire E. Le Pichon; Xingrong Liu; Joseph P. Lyssikatos; Andrew D. Medhurst; John Moffat; Kevin Nash; Kimberly Scearce-Levie; Zejuan Sheng; Daniel Shore; Susan Wong; Shuo Zhang; Xiaolin Zhang

Leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 (LRRK2) has drawn significant interest in the neuroscience research community because it is one of the most compelling targets for a potential disease-modifying Parkinsons disease therapy. Herein, we disclose structurally diverse small molecule inhibitors suitable for assessing the implications of sustained in vivo LRRK2 inhibition. Using previously reported aminopyrazole 2 as a lead molecule, we were able to engineer structural modifications in the solvent-exposed region of the ATP-binding site that significantly improve human hepatocyte stability, rat free brain exposure, and CYP inhibition and induction liabilities. Disciplined application of established optimal CNS design parameters culminated in the rapid identification of GNE-0877 (11) and GNE-9605 (20) as highly potent and selective LRRK2 inhibitors. The demonstrated metabolic stability, brain penetration across multiple species, and selectivity of these inhibitors support their use in preclinical efficacy and safety studies.


Nature | 2015

MAP4K4 regulates integrin-FERM binding to control endothelial cell motility

Philip Vitorino; Stacey Yeung; Ailey Crow; Jesse Bakke; Tanya Smyczek; Kristina West; Erin McNamara; Jeffrey Eastham-Anderson; Stephen Jay Gould; Seth F. Harris; Chudi Ndubaku; Weilan Ye

Cell migration is a stepwise process that coordinates multiple molecular machineries. Using in vitro angiogenesis screens with short interfering RNA and chemical inhibitors, we define here a MAP4K4–moesin–talin–β1-integrin molecular pathway that promotes efficient plasma membrane retraction during endothelial cell migration. Loss of MAP4K4 decreased membrane dynamics, slowed endothelial cell migration, and impaired angiogenesis in vitro and in vivo. In migrating endothelial cells, MAP4K4 phosphorylates moesin in retracting membranes at sites of focal adhesion disassembly. Epistasis analyses indicated that moesin functions downstream of MAP4K4 to inactivate integrin by competing with talin for binding to β1-integrin intracellular domain. Consequently, loss of moesin (encoded by the MSN gene) or MAP4K4 reduced adhesion disassembly rate in endothelial cells. Additionally, α5β1-integrin blockade reversed the membrane retraction defects associated with loss of Map4k4 in vitro and in vivo. Our study uncovers a novel aspect of endothelial cell migration. Finally, loss of MAP4K4 function suppressed pathological angiogenesis in disease models, identifying MAP4K4 as a potential therapeutic target.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008

Discovery and optimization of pyridazinone non-nucleoside inhibitors of HIV-1 reverse transcriptase.

Zachary Kevin Sweeney; James Patrick Dunn; Yu Li; Gabrielle Heilek; Pete Dunten; Todd R. Elworthy; Xiaochun Han; Seth F. Harris; Donald Roy Hirschfeld; J. Heather Hogg; Walter Huber; Ann C. Kaiser; Denis John Kertesz; Woongki Kim; Taraneh Mirzadegan; Michael Garret Roepel; Y. David Saito; Tania Silva; Steven Swallow; Jahari Laurant Tracy; Armando G. Villaseñor; Harit Vora; Amy S. Zhou; Klaus Klumpp

A series of benzyl pyridazinones were evaluated as HIV-1 non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs). Several members of this series showed good activity against the wild-type virus and NNRTI-resistant viruses. The binding of inhibitor 5a to HIV-RT was analyzed by surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy. Pharmacokinetic studies of 5a in rat and dog demonstrated that this compound has good oral bioavailability in animal species. The crystal structure of a complex between HIV-RT and inhibitor 4c is also described.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Cyclic amide bioisosterism: strategic application to the design and synthesis of HCV NS5B polymerase inhibitors.

Hanbiao Yang; Robert Than Hendricks; Nidhi Arora; Dov Nitzan; Calvin Yee; Matthew C. Lucas; Yanli Yang; Amy Fung; Sonal Rajyaguru; Seth F. Harris; Vincent Leveque; Julie Q. Hang; Sophie Le Pogam; Deborah Carol Reuter; Gisele Tavares

Conformational modeling has been successfully applied to the design of cyclic bioisosteres used to replace a conformationally rigid amide bond in a series of thiophene carboxylate inhibitors of HCV NS5B polymerase. Select compounds were equipotent with the original amide series. Single-point mutant binding studies, in combination with inhibition structure-activity relationships, suggest this new series interacts at the Thumb-II domain of NS5B. Inhibitor binding at the Thumb-II site was ultimately confirmed by solving a crystal structure of 8b complexed with NS5B.

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