Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Stephanie Chaousis is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Stephanie Chaousis.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Rational design and synthesis of an orally bioavailable peptide guided by NMR amide temperature coefficients

Conan K. Wang; Susan E. Northfield; Barbara Colless; Stephanie Chaousis; Ingrid Hamernig; Rink-Jan Lohman; Daniel S. Nielsen; Christina I. Schroeder; Spiros Liras; David A. Price; David P. Fairlie; David J. Craik

Significance Peptides are valuable leads for drug development, offering advantages over other molecular classes. Specifically, they can bind potently and selectively to drug targets, including protein–protein interactions that are too challenging for small-molecule therapeutics. However, peptides are poor drugs because of their low in vivo stability and poor oral bioavailability. We propose a strategy for improving the oral bioavailability of peptides by identifying appropriate amides for chemical modification using temperature coefficients measured by NMR. The modified peptides have improved solvation properties, making them more membrane permeable. This approach for identifying sites for modification is a rapid method for guiding peptide drug design. Enhancing the oral bioavailability of peptide drug leads is a major challenge in drug design. As such, methods to address this challenge are highly sought after by the pharmaceutical industry. Here, we propose a strategy to identify appropriate amides for N-methylation using temperature coefficients measured by NMR to identify exposed amides in cyclic peptides. N-methylation effectively caps these amides, modifying the overall solvation properties of the peptides and making them more membrane permeable. The approach for identifying sites for N-methylation is a rapid alternative to the elucidation of 3D structures of peptide drug leads, which has been a commonly used structure-guided approach in the past. Five leucine-rich peptide scaffolds are reported with selectively designed N-methylated derivatives. In vitro membrane permeability was assessed by parallel artificial membrane permeability assay and Caco-2 assay. The most promising N-methylated peptide was then tested in vivo. Here we report a novel peptide (15), which displayed an oral bioavailability of 33% in a rat model, thus validating the design approach. We show that this approach can also be used to explain the notable increase in oral bioavailability of a somatostatin analog.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2014

Cyclic Penta- and Hexaleucine Peptides without N-Methylation Are Orally Absorbed

Timothy A. Hill; Rink-Jan Lohman; Huy N. Hoang; Daniel S. Nielsen; Conor C. G. Scully; W. Mei Kok; Ligong Liu; Andrew J. Lucke; Martin J. Stoermer; Christina I. Schroeder; Stephanie Chaousis; Barbara Colless; Paul V. Bernhardt; David J. Edmonds; David A. Griffith; Charles J. Rotter; Roger Benjamin Ruggeri; David A. Price; Spiros Liras; David J. Craik; David P. Fairlie

Development of peptide-based drugs has been severely limited by lack of oral bioavailability with less than a handful of peptides being truly orally bioavailable, mainly cyclic peptides with N-methyl amino acids and few hydrogen bond donors. Here we report that cyclic penta- and hexa-leucine peptides, with no N-methylation and five or six amide NH protons, exhibit some degree of oral bioavailability (4-17%) approaching that of the heavily N-methylated drug cyclosporine (22%) under the same conditions. These simple cyclic peptides demonstrate that oral bioavailability is achievable for peptides that fall outside of rule-of-five guidelines without the need for N-methylation or modified amino acids.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2016

Interaction of Tarantula Venom Peptide ProTx-II with Lipid Membranes is a Prerequisite for its Inhibition of Human Voltage-gated Sodium Channel NaV1.7

Sónia Troeira Henriques; Evelyne Deplazes; Nicole Lawrence; Olivier Cheneval; Stephanie Chaousis; Marco Inserra; Panumart Thongyoo; Glenn F. King; Alan E. Mark; Irina Vetter; David J. Craik; Christina I. Schroeder

ProTx-II is a disulfide-rich peptide toxin from tarantula venom able to inhibit the human voltage-gated sodium channel 1.7 (hNaV1.7), a channel reported to be involved in nociception, and thus it might have potential as a pain therapeutic. ProTx-II acts by binding to the membrane-embedded voltage sensor domain of hNaV1.7, but the precise peptide channel-binding site and the importance of membrane binding on the inhibitory activity of ProTx-II remain unknown. In this study, we examined the structure and membrane-binding properties of ProTx-II and several analogues using NMR spectroscopy, surface plasmon resonance, fluorescence spectroscopy, and molecular dynamics simulations. Our results show a direct correlation between ProTx-II membrane binding affinity and its potency as an hNaV1.7 channel inhibitor. The data support a model whereby a hydrophobic patch on the ProTx-II surface anchors the molecule at the cell surface in a position that optimizes interaction of the peptide with the binding site on the voltage sensor domain. This is the first study to demonstrate that binding of ProTx-II to the lipid membrane is directly linked to its potency as an hNaV1.7 channel inhibitor.


ChemBioChem | 2014

Anticancer and toxic properties of cyclotides are dependent on phosphatidylethanolamine phospholipid targeting

Sónia Troeira Henriques; Yen-Hua Huang; Stephanie Chaousis; Conan K. Wang; David J. Craik

Cyclotides, ultrastable disulfide‐rich cyclic peptides, can be engineered to bind and inhibit specific cancer targets. In addition, some cyclotides are toxic to cancer cells, though not much is known about their mechanisms of action. Here we delineated the potential mode of action of cyclotides towards cancer cells. A novel set of analogues of kalata B1 (the prototypic cyclotide) and kalata B2 and cycloviolacin O2 were examined for their membrane‐binding affinity and selectivity towards cancer cells. By using solution‐state NMR, surface plasmon resonance, flow cytometry and bioassays we show that cyclotides are toxic against cancer and non‐cancerous cells and their toxicity correlates with their ability to target and disrupt lipid bilayers that contain phosphatidylethanolamine phospholipids. Our results suggest that the potential of cyclotides as anticancer therapeutics might best be realised by combining their amenability to epitope engineering with their ability to bind cancer cell membranes.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Mirror images of antimicrobial peptides provide reflections on their functions and amyloidogenic properties

Conan K. Wang; Gordon J. King; Anne C. Conibear; Mariana C. Ramos; Stephanie Chaousis; Sónia Troeira Henriques; David J. Craik

Enantiomeric forms of BTD-2, PG-1, and PM-1 were synthesized to delineate the structure and function of these β-sheet antimicrobial peptides. Activity and lipid-binding assays confirm that these peptides act via a receptor-independent mechanism involving membrane interaction. The racemic crystal structure of BTD-2 solved at 1.45 Å revealed a novel oligomeric form of β-sheet antimicrobial peptides within the unit cell: an antiparallel trimer, which we suggest might be related to its membrane-active form. The BTD-2 oligomer extends into a larger supramolecular state that spans the crystal lattice, featuring a steric-zipper motif that is common in structures of amyloid-forming peptides. The supramolecular structure of BTD-2 thus represents a new mode of fibril-like assembly not previously observed for antimicrobial peptides, providing structural evidence linking antimicrobial and amyloid peptides.


Biopolymers | 2016

Approaches to the stabilization of bioactive epitopes by grafting and peptide cyclization

Anne C. Conibear; Stephanie Chaousis; Thomas Durek; David J. Craik; Christina I. Schroeder

Peptides are attracting increasing interest from the pharmaceutical industry because of their specificity and ability to address novel targets, including protein–protein interactions. However, typically they require stabilization for therapeutic applications owing to their susceptibility to degradation by proteases. Advances in the ability to chemically synthesize peptides and the development of new side‐chain and backbone ligation strategies provide new tools to stabilize bioactive peptide epitopes. Two such epitopes are LyP1, a nine residue peptide that localizes to tumor cells and has potential as an anticancer therapeutic, and RGDS, a tetrapeptide shown to bind to survivin and induce apoptosis. Here we applied a variety of strategies for the stabilization of LyP1 and RGDS, including side‐chain cyclization using “click” chemistry and “grafting” the epitopes into two naturally occurring cyclic peptide scaffolds, i.e., θ‐defensins and cyclotides. NMR data showed that the three‐disulfide θ‐defensin and cyclotide scaffolds accommodated the LyP1 and RGDS epitopes but that scaffolds with fewer disulfide bonds were structurally compromised by inclusion of the LyP1 epitope. LyP1, LyP1‐, and RGDS‐grafted peptides that were largely unstructured also had reduced resistance to degradation in human serum, showing that grafting into a stable cyclic scaffold is an effective strategy for increasing the stability of a bioactive peptide epitope. Overall, the study demonstrates several methods for stabilizing peptide epitopes using side‐chain or backbone cyclization and illustrates their potential in peptide drug design.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2017

Redesigned spider peptide with improved antimicrobial and anticancer properties

Sónia Troeira Henriques; Nicole Lawrence; Stephanie Chaousis; Anjaneya S. Ravipati; Olivier Cheneval; Aurélie H. Benfield; Alysha G. Elliott; Angela M. Kavanagh; Matthew A. Cooper; Lai Yue Chan; Yen-Hua Huang; David J. Craik

Gomesin, a disulfide-rich antimicrobial peptide produced by the Brazilian spider Acanthoscurria gomesiana, has been shown to be potent against Gram-negative bacteria and to possess selective anticancer properties against melanoma cells. In a recent study, a backbone cyclized analogue of gomesin was shown to be as active but more stable than its native form. In the current study, we were interested in improving the antimicrobial properties of the cyclic gomesin, understanding its selectivity toward melanoma cells and elucidating its antimicrobial and anticancer mode of action. Rationally designed analogues of cyclic gomesin were examined for their antimicrobial potency, selectivity toward cancer cells, membrane-binding affinity, and ability to disrupt cell and model membranes. We improved the activity of cyclic gomesin by ∼10-fold against tested Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria without increasing toxicity to human red blood cells. In addition, we showed that gomesin and its analogues are more toxic toward melanoma and leukemia cells than toward red blood cells and act by selectively targeting and disrupting cancer cell membranes. Preference toward some cancer types is likely dependent on their different cell membrane properties. Our findings highlight the potential of peptides as antimicrobial and anticancer leads and the importance of selectively targeting cancer cell membranes for drug development.


Protein Science | 2015

Delineating toxin:lipid:ion channel interactions for rationally sodium channel inhibitors design

Christina I. Schroeder; Sónia Troeira Henriques; Mehdi Mobli; Stephanie Chaousis; Phillip Walsh; Panumart Thongyoo; David J. Craik

Reference EPFL-CONF-214088doi:10.1002/pro.2823View record in Web of Science Record created on 2015-12-02, modified on 2017-05-12


Journal of Peptide Science | 2014

Cyclotides use specific lipids as a switch to internalize inside cells

Sónia Troeira Henriques; Y-H. Huang; Stephanie Chaousis; David J. Craik

No abstract is available for this article.


European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015

Exploring experimental and computational markers of cyclic peptides: charting islands of permeability

Conan K. Wang; Susan E. Northfield; Joakim E. Swedberg; Barbara Colless; Stephanie Chaousis; David A. Price; Spiros Liras; David J. Craik

Collaboration


Dive into the Stephanie Chaousis's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David J. Craik

University of Queensland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Conan K. Wang

University of Queensland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yen-Hua Huang

University of Queensland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge