Shawn M. Vogen
Eppley Institute for Research in Cancer and Allied Diseases
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Publication
Featured researches published by Shawn M. Vogen.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002
Shawn M. Vogen; Tali Gidalevitz; Chhanda Biswas; Birgitte B. Simen; Eytan Stein; Funda Gulmen; Yair Argon
GRP94 is a molecular chaperone that carries immunologically relevant peptides from cell to cell, transferring them to major histocompatibility proteins for presentation to T cells. Here we examine the binding of several peptides to recombinant GRP94 and study the regulation and site of peptide binding. We show that GRP94 contains a peptide-binding site in its N-terminal 355 amino acids. A number of peptides bind to this site with low on- and off-rates and with specificity that is distinct from that of another endoplasmic reticulum chaperone, BiP/GRP78. Binding to the N-terminal fragment is sufficient to account for the peptide binding activity of the entire molecule. Peptide binding is inhibited by radicicol, a known inhibitor of the chaperone activities of HSP90-family proteins. However, the peptide-binding site is distinct from the radicicol-binding pocket, because both can bind to the N-terminal fragment simultaneously. Furthermore, peptide binding does not cause the same conformational change as does binding of radicicol. When the latter binds to the N-terminal domain, it induces a conformational change in the downstream, acidic domain of GRP94, as measured by altered gel mobility and loss of an antibody epitope. These results relate the peptide-binding activity of GRP94 to its other function as a chaperone.
Immunity | 2000
David P. Davis; Rosemarie Raffen; Jeanne L. Dul; Shawn M. Vogen; Edward K. Williamson; Fred J. Stevens; Yair Argon
Immunoglobulin light chain (LC) normally is a soluble, secreted protein, but some LC assemble into ordered fibrils whose deposition in tissues results in amyloidosis and organ failure. Here we reconstitute fibril formation in vitro and show that preformed fibrils can nucleate polymerization of soluble LC. This prion-like behavior has important physiological implications, since somatic mutations generate multiple related LC sequences. Furthermore, we demonstrate that fibril formation in vitro and aggregation of whole LC within cells are inhibited by BiP and by a synthetic peptide that is identical to a major LC binding site for BiP. We propose that LC form fibrils via an interprotein loop swap and that the underlying conformational change should be amenable to drug therapy.
British Journal of Pharmacology | 1999
Anna Short; Natalii J Paczkowski; Shawn M. Vogen; Sam D. Sanderson; Stephen M. Taylor
Some in vivo activities of two complement C5a agonist analogues have been evaluated by measuring changes in blood pressure and neutropenia in the rat and comparing the results with their receptor affinities in peritoneal macrophages and polymorphonuclear leucocytes (PMNs). In vitro C5a receptor (C5aR) binding experiments showed that YSFKPMPLaR and YSFKD(NMeNle)PlaR had similar affinities for the macrophage C5aR (IC50 0.2, 0.1 μM respectively). In PMNs, the affinity of YSFKPMPLaR (IC50 0.1 μM) was similar to that in macrophages, whereas the affinity of YSFKD(NMeNle)PLaR for the PMN C5aR was >100 μM. Given i.v., YSFKD(NMeNle)PLaR had similar activity to YSFKPMPLaR on blood pressure but did not cause neutropenia. These results demonstrate selectivity of a new C5a agonist in vitro, which is paralleled in vivo. The results suggest the possibility of developing selective agonists of C5a for in vivo use in humans.
International Immunopharmacology | 2001
Shawn M. Vogen; Natalii J Paczkowski; Leonid Kirnarsky; Anna Short; Jacqueline B Whitmore; Simon A. Sherman; Stephen M. Taylor; Sam D. Sanderson
Analogues of the potent, conformationally biased, decapeptide agonist of human C5a anaphylatoxin, C5a(65-74)Y65,F67,P69,P71,D-Ala73 (YSFKPMPLaR, peptide 54), were synthesized with methyl groups occupying specific amide nitrogen atoms along the peptide backbone. This N-methylation induced crucial extended backbone conformations in a manner similar to the two Pro residues, but without eliminating the contributions made by the side-chain of the residue for which Pro was substituted. The presence of backbone N-methyl groups on peptide 54 analogues had pronounced detrimental effects on the ability to bind and activate C5aRs expressed on human PMNs, but not on the ability to contract smooth muscle of human umbilical artery. Several N-methylated analogues of peptide 54 (peptides 56, 67, 124, 125, and 137) were significantly more selective for smooth muscle contraction, which is mediated by tissue resident macrophages, than for enzyme release from PMNs. Indeed, peptide 67, YSFKDMP(MeL)aR was almost 3000-fold more selective for smooth muscle contraction than for PMN enzyme release. Consistent with these differential activities was the observation that peptide 67 expressed a significantly greater binding affinity to C5aRs expressed on rat macrophages than on rat PMNs. This differential activity was also observed in vivo in the rat where peptide 67 induced a hypotensive response similar to peptide 54 and rhuC5a, but without accompanying neutropenia.
Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2007
Sherry Wanderling; Birgitte B. Simen; Olga Ostrovsky; Noreen T. Ahmed; Shawn M. Vogen; Tali Gidalevitz; Yair Argon
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2001
David P. Davis; Gloria Gallo; Shawn M. Vogen; Jeanne L. Dul; Kimberly L. Sciarretta; Asok Kumar; Rosemarie Raffen; Fred J. Stevens; Yair Argon
Biochemistry | 2000
Leo Kirnarsky; Om Prakash; Shawn M. Vogen; Mitsuharu Nomoto; Michael A. Hollingsworth; Simon A. Sherman
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 1997
Angela M. Finch; Shawn M. Vogen; Simon Sherman; Leonid Kirnarsky; Stephen M. Taylor; Sam D. Sanderson
Journal of Immunology | 1997
Michael A. Hollingsworth; Michael D. Burdick; Angela M. Finch; Stephen M. Taylor; Shawn M. Vogen; Edward L. Morgan; Sam D. Sanderson
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 1995
Sam D. Sanderson; Leonid Kirnarsky; Simon Sherman; Shawn M. Vogen; Om Prakash; Julia A. Ember; Angela M. Finch; Stephen M. Taylor
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Eppley Institute for Research in Cancer and Allied Diseases
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