Stephen V. Frye
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
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Featured researches published by Stephen V. Frye.
Cancer Cell | 2011
Wei Xu; Hui Yang; Ying Liu; Ying Yang; Ping Wang; Se Hee Kim; Shinsuke Ito; Chen Yang; Pu Wang; Meng Tao Xiao; Li Xia Liu; Wen Qing Jiang; Jing Liu; Jin Ye Zhang; Bin Wang; Stephen V. Frye; Yi Zhang; Yanhui Xu; Qun Ying Lei; Kun-Liang Guan; Shimin Zhao; Yue Xiong
IDH1 and IDH2 mutations occur frequently in gliomas and acute myeloid leukemia, leading to simultaneous loss and gain of activities in the production of α-ketoglutarate (α-KG) and 2-hydroxyglutarate (2-HG), respectively. Here we demonstrate that 2-HG is a competitive inhibitor of multiple α-KG-dependent dioxygenases, including histone demethylases and the TET family of 5-methlycytosine (5mC) hydroxylases. 2-HG occupies the same space as α-KG does in the active site of histone demethylases. Ectopic expression of tumor-derived IDH1 and IDH2 mutants inhibits histone demethylation and 5mC hydroxylation. In glioma, IDH1 mutations are associated with increased histone methylation and decreased 5-hydroxylmethylcytosine (5hmC). Hence, tumor-derived IDH1 and IDH2 mutations reduce α-KG and accumulate an α-KG antagonist, 2-HG, leading to genome-wide histone and DNA methylation alterations.
Nature Chemical Biology | 2011
Masoud Vedadi; Dalia Barsyte-Lovejoy; Feng Liu; Sylvie Rival-Gervier; Abdellah Allali-Hassani; Viviane Labrie; Tim J. Wigle; Peter A. DiMaggio; Gregory A. Wasney; Alena Siarheyeva; Aiping Dong; Wolfram Tempel; Sun Chong Wang; Xin Chen; Irene Chau; Thomas J. Mangano; Xi Ping Huang; Catherine Simpson; Samantha G. Pattenden; Jacqueline L. Norris; Dmitri Kireev; Ashutosh Tripathy; A. Edwards; Bryan L. Roth; William P. Janzen; Benjamin A. Garcia; Arturas Petronis; James Ellis; Peter J. Brown; Stephen V. Frye
Protein lysine methyltransferases G9a and GLP modulate the transcriptional repression of a variety of genes via dimethylation of Lys9 on histone H3 (H3K9me2) as well as dimethylation of non-histone targets. Here we report the discovery of UNC0638, an inhibitor of G9a and GLP with excellent potency and selectivity over a wide range of epigenetic and non-epigenetic targets. UNC0638 treatment of a variety of cell lines resulted in lower global H3K9me2 levels, equivalent to levels observed for small hairpin RNA knockdown of G9a and GLP with the functional potency of UNC0638 being well separated from its toxicity. UNC0638 markedly reduced the clonogenicity of MCF7 cells, reduced the abundance of H3K9me2 marks at promoters of known G9a-regulated endogenous genes and disproportionately affected several genomic loci encoding microRNAs. In mouse embryonic stem cells, UNC0638 reactivated G9a-silenced genes and a retroviral reporter gene in a concentration-dependent manner without promoting differentiation.
Nature Chemical Biology | 2015
C.H. Arrowsmith; James E. Audia; Christopher M. Austin; Jonathan B. Baell; Jonathan Bennett; Julian Blagg; C. Bountra; Paul E. Brennan; Peter J. Brown; Mark Edward Bunnage; Carolyn Buser-Doepner; Robert M. Campbell; Adrian Carter; Philip Cohen; Robert A. Copeland; Ben Cravatt; Jayme L. Dahlin; Dashyant Dhanak; A. Edwards; Mathias Frederiksen; Stephen V. Frye; Nathanael S. Gray; Charles E. Grimshaw; David Hepworth; Trevor Howe; Kilian Huber; Jian Jin; Stefan Knapp; Joanne Kotz; Ryan G. Kruger
Chemical probes are powerful reagents with increasing impacts on biomedical research. However, probes of poor quality or that are used incorrectly generate misleading results. To help address these shortcomings, we will create a community-driven wiki resource to improve quality and convey current best practice.
Nature | 2011
A. Edwards; Ruth Isserlin; Gary D. Bader; Stephen V. Frye; Timothy M. Willson; Frank H. Yu
Most protein research focuses on those known before the human genome was mapped. Work on the slew discovered since, urge Aled M. Edwards and his colleagues.
ACS Chemical Biology | 2013
Kyle D. Konze; Anqi Ma; Fengling Li; Dalia Barsyte-Lovejoy; Trevor Parton; Christopher J. MacNevin; Feng Liu; Cen Gao; Xi Ping Huang; Ekaterina Kuznetsova; Marie Rougie; Alice Jiang; Samantha G. Pattenden; Jacqueline L. Norris; Lindsey I. James; Bryan L. Roth; Peter J. Brown; Stephen V. Frye; C.H. Arrowsmith; Klaus M. Hahn; Gang Greg Wang; Masoud Vedadi; Jian Jin
EZH2 or EZH1 is the catalytic subunit of the polycomb repressive complex 2 that catalyzes methylation of histone H3 lysine 27 (H3K27). The trimethylation of H3K27 (H3K27me3) is a transcriptionally repressive post-translational modification. Overexpression of EZH2 and hypertrimethylation of H3K27 have been implicated in a number of cancers. Several selective inhibitors of EZH2 have been reported recently. Herein we disclose UNC1999, the first orally bioavailable inhibitor that has high in vitro potency for wild-type and mutant EZH2 as well as EZH1, a closely related H3K27 methyltransferase that shares 96% sequence identity with EZH2 in their respective catalytic domains. UNC1999 was highly selective for EZH2 and EZH1 over a broad range of epigenetic and non-epigenetic targets, competitive with the cofactor SAM and non-competitive with the peptide substrate. This inhibitor potently reduced H3K27me3 levels in cells and selectively killed diffused large B cell lymphoma cell lines harboring the EZH2(Y641N) mutant. Importantly, UNC1999 was orally bioavailable in mice, making this inhibitor a valuable tool for investigating the role of EZH2 and EZH1 in chronic animal studies. We also designed and synthesized UNC2400, a close analogue of UNC1999 with potency >1,000-fold lower than that of UNC1999 as a negative control for cell-based studies. Finally, we created a biotin-tagged UNC1999 (UNC2399), which enriched EZH2 in pull-down studies, and a UNC1999-dye conjugate (UNC2239) for co-localization studies with EZH2 in live cells. Taken together, these compounds represent a set of useful tools for the biomedical community to investigate the role of EZH2 and EZH1 in health and disease.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011
John A. Allen; Julianne M. Yost; Vincent Setola; Xin Chen; Maria F. Sassano; Meng Chen; Sean M. Peterson; Prem N. Yadav; Xi Ping Huang; Bo Feng; Niels H. Jensen; Xin Che; Xu Bai; Stephen V. Frye; William C. Wetsel; Marc G. Caron; Jonathan A. Javitch; Bryan L. Roth; Jian Jin
Elucidating the key signal transduction pathways essential for both antipsychotic efficacy and side-effect profiles is essential for developing safer and more effective therapies. Recent work has highlighted noncanonical modes of dopamine D2 receptor (D2R) signaling via β-arrestins as being important for the therapeutic actions of both antipsychotic and antimanic agents. We thus sought to create unique D2R agonists that display signaling bias via β-arrestin–ergic signaling. Through a robust diversity-oriented modification of the scaffold represented by aripiprazole (1), we discovered UNC9975 (2), UNC0006 (3), and UNC9994 (4) as unprecedented β-arrestin–biased D2R ligands. These compounds also represent unprecedented β-arrestin–biased ligands for a Gi-coupled G protein–coupled receptor (GPCR). Significantly, UNC9975, UNC0006, and UNC9994 are simultaneously antagonists of Gi-regulated cAMP production and partial agonists for D2R/β-arrestin-2 interactions. Importantly, UNC9975 displayed potent antipsychotic-like activity without inducing motoric side effects in inbred C57BL/6 mice in vivo. Genetic deletion of β-arrestin-2 simultaneously attenuated the antipsychotic actions of UNC9975 and transformed it into a typical antipsychotic drug with a high propensity to induce catalepsy. Similarly, the antipsychotic-like activity displayed by UNC9994, an extremely β-arrestin–biased D2R agonist, in wild-type mice was completely abolished in β-arrestin-2 knockout mice. Taken together, our results suggest that β-arrestin signaling and recruitment can be simultaneously a significant contributor to antipsychotic efficacy and protective against motoric side effects. These functionally selective, β-arrestin–biased D2R ligands represent valuable chemical probes for further investigations of D2R signaling in health and disease.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2000
Karen Lackey; Michael Cory; Ronda Davis; Stephen V. Frye; Philip A. Harris; Robert Neil Hunter; David K. Jung; O.Bradley McDonald; Robert W. Mcnutt; Michael Robert Peel; Randy D. Rutkowske; James M. Veal; Edgar R. Wood
A series of benzylidene-1H-indol-2-one (oxindole) derivatives was synthesized and evaluated as cRaf-1 kinase inhibitors. The key features of the molecules were the donor/acceptor motif common to kinase inhibitors and a critical acidic phenol flanked by two substitutions. Diverse 5-position substitutions provided compounds with low nanomolar kinase enzyme inhibition and inhibited the intracellular MAPK pathway.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009
Feng Liu; Xin Chen; Abdellah Allali-Hassani; Amy Quinn; Gregory A. Wasney; Aiping Dong; Dalia Barsyte; Ivona Kozieradzki; Guillermo Senisterra; Irene Chau; Alena Siarheyeva; Dmitri Kireev; Ajit Jadhav; J. Martin Herold; Stephen V. Frye; C.H. Arrowsmith; Peter J. Brown; Anton Simeonov; Masoud Vedadi; Jian Jin
SAR exploration of the 2,4-diamino-6,7-dimethoxyquinazoline template led to the discovery of 8 (UNC0224) as a potent and selective G9a inhibitor. A high resolution X-ray crystal structure of the G9a-8 complex, the first cocrystal structure of G9a with a small molecule inhibitor, was obtained. The cocrystal structure validated our binding hypothesis and will enable structure-based design of novel inhibitors. 8 is a useful tool for investigating the biology of G9a and its roles in chromatin remodeling.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010
Feng Liu; Xin Chen; Abdellah Allali-Hassani; Amy Quinn; Tim J. Wigle; Gregory A. Wasney; Aiping Dong; Guillermo Senisterra; Irene Chau; Alena Siarheyeva; Jacqueline L. Norris; Dmitri Kireev; Ajit Jadhav; J. Martin Herold; William P. Janzen; C.H. Arrowsmith; Stephen V. Frye; Peter J. Brown; Anton Simeonov; Masoud Vedadi; Jian Jin
Protein lysine methyltransferase G9a, which catalyzes methylation of lysine 9 of histone H3 (H3K9) and lysine 373 (K373) of p53, is overexpressed in human cancers. Genetic knockdown of G9a inhibits cancer cell growth, and the dimethylation of p53 K373 results in the inactivation of p53. Initial SAR exploration of the 2,4-diamino-6,7-dimethoxyquinazoline template represented by 3a (BIX01294), a selective small molecule inhibitor of G9a and GLP, led to the discovery of 10 (UNC0224) as a potent G9a inhibitor with excellent selectivity. A high resolution X-ray crystal structure of the G9a-10 complex, the first cocrystal structure of G9a with a small molecule inhibitor, was obtained. On the basis of the structural insights revealed by this cocrystal structure, optimization of the 7-dimethylaminopropoxy side chain of 10 resulted in the discovery of 29 (UNC0321) (Morrison K(i) = 63 pM), which is the first G9a inhibitor with picomolar potency and the most potent G9a inhibitor to date.
Nature Chemical Biology | 2013
Lindsey I. James; Dalia Barsyte-Lovejoy; Nan Zhong; Liubov Krichevsky; Victoria K. Korboukh; J. Martin Herold; Christopher J. MacNevin; Jacqueline L. Norris; Cari A. Sagum; Wolfram Tempel; Edyta Marcon; Hongbo Guo; Cen Gao; Xi Ping Huang; Shili Duan; Andrew Emili; Jack Greenblatt; Dmitri Kireev; Jian Jin; William P. Janzen; Peter J. Brown; Mark T. Bedford; C.H. Arrowsmith; Stephen V. Frye
We describe the discovery of UNC1215, a potent and selective chemical probe for the methyl-lysine (Kme) reading function of L3MBTL3, a member of the malignant brain tumor (MBT) family of chromatin interacting transcriptional repressors. UNC1215 binds L3MBTL3 with a Kd of 120 nM, competitively displacing mono- or dimethyl-lysine containing peptides, and is greater than 50-fold selective versus other members of the MBT family while also demonstrating selectivity against more than 200 other reader domains examined. X-ray crystallography identified a novel 2:2 polyvalent mode of interaction. In cells, UNC1215 is non-toxic and binds directly to L3MBTL3 via the Kme-binding pocket of the MBT domains. UNC1215 increases the cellular mobility of GFP-L3MBTL3 fusion proteins and point mutants that disrupt the Kme binding function of GFP-L3MBTL3 phenocopy the effects of UNC1215. Finally, UNC1215 demonstrates a novel Kme-dependent interaction of L3MBTL3 with BCLAF1, a protein implicated in DNA damage repair and apoptosis.