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Featured researches published by Sijun Pan.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

“Minimalist” Cyclopropene-Containing Photo-Cross-Linkers Suitable for Live-Cell Imaging and Affinity-Based Protein Labeling

Zhengqiu Li; Danyang Wang; Lin Li; Sijun Pan; Zhenkun Na; Chelsea Y. J. Tan; Shao Q. Yao

Target identification of bioactive compounds within the native cellular environment is important in biomedical research and drug discovery, but it has traditionally been carried out in vitro. Information about how such molecules interact with their endogenous targets (on and off) is currently highly limited. An ideal strategy would be one that recapitulates protein-small molecule interactions in situ (e.g., in living cells) and at the same time enables enrichment of these complexes for subsequent proteome-wide target identification. Similarly, small molecule-based imaging approaches are becoming increasingly available for in situ monitoring of a variety of proteins including enzymes. Chemical proteomic strategies for simultaneous bioimaging and target identification of noncovalent bioactive compounds in live mammalian cells, however, are currently not available. This is due to a lack of photoaffinity labels that are minimally modified from their parental compounds, yet chemically tractable using copper-free bioorthogonal chemistry. We have herein developed novel minimalist linkers containing both an alkyl diazirine and a cyclopropene. We have shown chemical probes (e.g., BD-2) made from such linkers could be used for simultaneous in situ imaging and covalent labeling of endogenous BRD-4 (an important epigenetic protein) via a rapid, copper-free, tetrazine-cyclopropene ligation reaction (k2 > 5 M(-1) s(-1)). The key features of our cyclopropenes, with their unique C-1 linkage to BRD-4-targeting moiety, are their tunable reactivity and solubility, relative stability, and synthetic accessibility. BD-2, which is a linker-modified analogue of (+)-JQ1 (a recently discovered nanomolar protein-protein-interaction inhibitor of BRD-4), was subsequently used in a cell-based proteome profiling experiment for large-scale identification of potential off-targets of (+)-JQ1. Several newly identified targets were subsequently confirmed by preliminary validation experiments.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Multiplex Imaging and Cellular Target Identification of Kinase Inhibitors via an Affinity-Based Proteome Profiling Approach

Ying Su; Sijun Pan; Zhengqiu Li; Lin Li; Xiaoyuan Wu; Piliang Hao; Siu Kwan Sze; Shao Q. Yao

MLN8237 is a highly potent and presumably selective inhibitor of Aurora kinase A (AKA) and has shown promising antitumor activities. Like other kinase inhibitors which target the ATP-binding site of kinases, MLN8237 might be expected to have potential cellular off-targets. Herein, we report the first photoaffinity-based, small molecule AKA probe capable of both live-cell imaging of AKA activities and in situ proteome profiling of potential off-targets of MLN8237 (including AKA-associating proteins). By using two mutually compatible, bioorthogonal reactions (copper-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition chemistry and TCO-tetrazine ligation), we demostrate small molecule-based multiplex bioimaging for simultaneous in situ monitoring of two important cell-cycle regulating kinases (AKA and CDK1). A broad range of proteins, as potential off-targets of MLN8237 and AKAs-interacting partners, is subsequently identified by affinity-based proteome profiling coupled with large-scale LC-MS/MS analysis. From these studies, we discover novel AKA interactions which were further validated by cell-based immunoprecipitation (IP) experiments.


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

A Small‐Molecule Protein–Protein Interaction Inhibitor of PARP1 That Targets Its BRCT Domain

Zhenkun Na; Bo Peng; Shukie Ng; Sijun Pan; Jun-Seok Lee; Han-Ming Shen; Shao Q. Yao

Poly(ADP-ribose)polymerase-1 (PARP1) is a BRCT-containing enzyme (BRCT = BRCA1 C-terminus) mainly involved in DNA repair and damage response and a validated target for cancer treatment. Small-molecule inhibitors that target the PARP1 catalytic domain have been actively pursued as anticancer drugs, but are potentially problematic owing to a lack of selectivity. Compounds that are capable of disrupting protein-protein interactions of PARP1 provide an alternative by inhibiting its activities with improved selectivity profiles. Herein, by establishing a high-throughput microplate-based assay suitable for screening potential PPI inhibitors of the PARP1 BRCT domain, we have discovered that (±)-gossypol, a natural product with a number of known biological activities, possesses novel PARP1 inhibitory activity both in vitro and in cancer cells and presumably acts through disruption of protein-protein interactions. As the first known cell-permeable small-molecule PPI inhibitor of PAPR1, we further established that (-)-gossypol was likely the causative agent of PARP1 inhibition by promoting the formation of a 1:2 compound/PARP1 complex by reversible formation of a covalent imine linkage.


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

Discovery of Cell-Permeable Inhibitors That Target the BRCT Domain of BRCA1 Protein by Using a Small-Molecule Microarray†

Zhenkun Na; Sijun Pan; Mahesh Uttamchandani; Shao Q. Yao

BRCTs are phosphoserine-binding domains found in proteins involved in DNA repair, DNA damage response and cell cycle regulation. BRCA1 is a BRCT domain-containing, tumor-suppressing protein expressed in the cells of breast and other human tissues. Mutations in BRCA1 have been found in ca. 50% of hereditary breast cancers. Cell-permeable, small-molecule BRCA1 inhibitors are promising anticancer agents, but are not available currently. Herein, with the assist of microarray-based platforms, we have discovered the first cell-permeable protein-protein interaction (PPI) inhibitors against BRCA1. By targeting the (BRCT)2 domain, we showed compound 15 a and its prodrug 15 b inhibited BRCA1 activities in tumor cells, sensitized these cells to ionizing radiation-induced apoptosis, and showed synergistic inhibitory effect when used in combination with Olaparib (a small-molecule inhibitor of poly-ADP-ribose polymerase) and Etoposide (a small-molecule inhibitor of topoisomerase II). Unlike previously reported peptide-based PPI inhibitors of BRCA1, our compounds are small-molecule-like and could be directly administered to tumor cells, thus making them useful for future studies of BRCA1/PARP-related pathways in DNA damage and repair response, and in cancer therapy.


Angewandte Chemie | 2016

Puromycin Analogues Capable of Multiplexed Imaging and Profiling of Protein Synthesis and Dynamics in Live Cells and Neurons

Jingyan Ge; Cheng-Wu Zhang; Xue Wen Ng; Bo Peng; Sijun Pan; Shubo Du; Danyang Wang; Lin Li; Kah-Leong Lim; Thorsten Wohland; Shao Q. Yao

Newly synthesized proteins constitute an important subset of the proteome involved in every cellular process, yet existing chemical tools used to study them have major shortcomings. Herein we report a suite of cell-permeable puromycin analogues capable of being metabolically incorporated into newly synthesized proteins in different mammalian cells, including neuronal cells. Subsequent labeling with suitable bioorthogonal reporters, in both fixed and live cells, enabled direct imaging and enrichment of these proteins. By taking advantage of the mutually orthogonal reactivity of these analogues, we showed multiplexed labeling of different protein populations, as well as quantitative measurements of protein dynamics by fluorescence correlation spectroscopy, could be achieved in live-cell environments.


Small | 2017

Simultaneous Imaging of Endogenous Survivin mRNA and On-Demand Drug Release in Live Cells by Using a Mesoporous Silica Nanoquencher

Peiyan Yuan; Xin Mao; Jiaqi Fu; Sijun Pan; Shuizhu Wu; Changmin Yu; Shao Q. Yao

The design of multifunctional drug delivery systems capable of simultaneous target detection, imaging, and therapeutics in live mammalian cells is critical for biomedical research. In this study, by using mesoporous silica nanoparticles (MSNs) chemically modified with a small-molecule dark quencher, followed by sequential drug encapsulation, MSN capping with a dye-labeled antisense oligonucleotide, and bioorthogonal surface modification with cell-penetrating poly(disulfide)s, the authors have successfully developed the first mesoporous silica nanoquencher (qMSN), characterized by high drug-loading and endocytosis-independent cell uptake, which is able to quantitatively image endogenous survivin mRNA and release the loaded drug in a manner that depends on the survivin expression level in tumor cells. The authors further show that this novel drug delivery system may be used to minimize potential cytotoxicity encountered by many existing small-molecule drugs in cancer therapy.


Angewandte Chemie | 2018

A Vinyl Sulfone-Based Fluorogenic Probe Capable of Selective Labeling of PHGDH in Live Mammalian Cells

Sijun Pan; Se-Young Jang; Si Si Liew; Jiaqi Fu; Danyang Wang; Jun-Seok Lee; Shao Q. Yao

Chemical probes are powerful tools for interrogating small molecule-target interactions. With additional fluorescence Turn-ON functionality, such probes might enable direct measurements of target engagement in live mammalian cells. DNS-pE (and its terminal alkyne-containing version DNS-pE2) is the first small molecule that can selectively label endogenous 3-phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase (PHGDH) from various mammalian cells. Endowed with an electrophilic vinyl sulfone moiety that possesses fluorescence-quenching properties, DNS-pE/DNS-pE2 became highly fluorescent only upon irreversible covalent modification of PHGDH. With an inhibitory property (in vitro Ki =7.4 μm) comparable to that of known PHGDH inhibitors, our probes thus offer a promising approach to simultaneously image endogenous PHGDH activities and study its target engagement in live-cell settings.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2017

Protein–Protein Interaction Inhibitors of BRCA1 Discovered Using Small Molecule Microarrays

Zhenkun Na; Sijun Pan; Mahesh Uttamchandani; Shao Q. Yao

Microarray screening technology has transformed the life sciences arena over the last decade. The platform is widely used in the area of mapping interaction networks, to molecular fingerprinting and small molecular inhibitor discovery. The technique has significantly impacted both basic and applied research. The microarray platform can likewise enable high-throughput screening and discovery of protein-protein interaction (PPI) inhibitors. Herein we demonstrate the application of microarray-guided PPI inhibitor discovery, using human BRCA1 as an example. Mutations in BRCA1 have been implicated in ~50 % of hereditary breast cancers. By targeting the (BRCT)2 domain, we showed compound 15a and its prodrug 15b inhibited BRCA1 activities in tumor cells. Unlike previously reported peptide-based PPI inhibitors of BRCA1, the compounds identified could be directly administered to tumor cells, thus making them useful in targeting BRCA1/PARP-related pathways involved in DNA damage and repair response, for cancer therapy.


Natural Product Reports | 2016

Target identification of natural products and bioactive compounds using affinity-based probes

Sijun Pan; Hailong Zhang; Chenyu Wang; Samantha C. L. Yao; Shao Q. Yao


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Fluorescent Probes for Single-Step Detection and Proteomic Profiling of Histone Deacetylases

Yusheng Xie; Jingyan Ge; Haipeng Lei; Bo Peng; Huatang Zhang; Danyang Wang; Sijun Pan; Ganchao Chen; Lanfang Chen; Yi Wang; Quan Hao; Shao Q. Yao; Hongyan Sun

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Shao Q. Yao

National University of Singapore

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Danyang Wang

National University of Singapore

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Jun-Seok Lee

Korea Institute of Science and Technology

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Zhenkun Na

National University of Singapore

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Jingyan Ge

Zhejiang University of Technology

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Bo Peng

National University of Singapore

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Lin Li

National University of Singapore

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Si Si Liew

National University of Singapore

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Se-Young Jang

Korea Institute of Science and Technology

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