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Dive into the research topics where Steven W. Millward is active.

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Featured researches published by Steven W. Millward.


Angewandte Chemie | 2009

Iterative in situ click chemistry creates antibody-like protein-capture agents

Heather D. Agnew; Rosemary D. Rohde; Steven W. Millward; Arundhati Nag; Woon-Seok Yeo; Jason E. Hein; Suresh M. Pitram; Abdul Ahad Tariq; Vanessa M. Burns; Russell John Krom; Valery V. Fokin; K. Barry Sharpless; James R. Heath

Special agents for protein capture: Iterative in situ click chemistry (see scheme for the tertiary ligand screen) and the one-bead-one-compound method for the creation of a peptide library enable the fragment-based assembly of selective high-affinity protein-capture agents. The resulting ligands are water-soluble and stable chemically, biochemically, and thermally. They can be produced in gram quantities through copper(I)-catalyzed cycloaddition.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Iterative in Situ Click Chemistry Assembles a Branched Capture Agent and Allosteric Inhibitor for Akt1

Steven W. Millward; Ryan K. Henning; Gabriel A. Kwong; Suresh M. Pitram; Heather D. Agnew; Kaycie M. Deyle; Arundhati Nag; Jason E. Hein; Su Seong Lee; Jaehong Lim; Jessica A. Pfeilsticker; K. Barry Sharpless; James R. Heath

We describe the use of iterative in situ click chemistry to design an Akt-specific branched peptide triligand that is a drop-in replacement for monoclonal antibodies in multiple biochemical assays. Each peptide module in the branched structure makes unique contributions to affinity and/or specificity resulting in a 200 nM affinity ligand that efficiently immunoprecipitates Akt from cancer cell lysates and labels Akt in fixed cells. Our use of a small molecule to preinhibit Akt prior to screening resulted in low micromolar inhibitory potency and an allosteric mode of inhibition, which is evidenced through a series of competitive enzyme kinetic assays. To demonstrate the efficiency and selectivity of the protein-templated in situ click reaction, we developed a novel QPCR-based methodology that enabled a quantitative assessment of its yield. These results point to the potential for iterative in situ click chemistry to generate potent, synthetically accessible antibody replacements with novel inhibitory properties.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Serum Stable Natural Peptides Designed by mRNA Display

Shannon M. Howell; Stephen V. Fiacco; Terry T. Takahashi; Farzad Jalali-Yazdi; Steven W. Millward; Biliang Hu; Pin Wang; Richard W. Roberts

Peptides constructed with the 20 natural amino acids are generally considered to have little therapeutic potential because they are unstable in the presence of proteases and peptidases. However, proteolysis cleavage can be idiosyncratic, and it is possible that natural analogues of functional sequences exist that are highly resistant to cleavage. Here, we explored this idea in the context of peptides that bind to the signaling protein Gαi1. To do this, we used a two-step in vitro selection process to simultaneously select for protease resistance while retaining function–first by degrading the starting library with protease (chymotrypsin), followed by positive selection for binding via mRNA display. Starting from a pool of functional sequences, these experiments revealed peptides with 100–400 fold increases in protease resistance compared to the parental library. Surprisingly, selection for chymotrypsin resistance also resulted in similarly improved stability in human serum (~100 fold). Mechanistically, the decreases in cleavage results from both a lower rate of cleavage (kcat) and a weaker interaction with the protease (Km). Overall, our results demonstrate that the hydrolytic stability of functional, natural peptide sequences can be improved by two orders of magnitude simply by optimizing the primary sequence.


Integrative Biology | 2013

In situ click chemistry: from small molecule discovery to synthetic antibodies

Steven W. Millward; Heather D. Agnew; Bert Lai; Su Seong Lee; Jaehong Lim; Arundhati Nag; Suresh M. Pitram; Rosemary D. Rohde; James R. Heath

Advances in the fields of proteomics, molecular imaging, and therapeutics are closely linked to the availability of affinity reagents that selectively recognize their biological targets. Here we present a review of Iterative Peptide In Situ Click Chemistry (IPISC), a novel screening technology for designing peptide multiligands with high affinity and specificity. This technology builds upon in situ click chemistry, a kinetic target-guided synthesis approach where the protein target catalyzes the conjugation of two small molecules, typically through the azide-alkyne Huisgen cycloaddition. Integrating this methodology with solid phase peptide libraries enables the assembly of linear and branched peptide multiligands we refer to as Protein Catalyzed Capture Agents (PCC Agents). The resulting structures can be thought of as analogous to the antigen recognition site of antibodies and serve as antibody replacements in biochemical and cell-based applications. In this review, we discuss the recent progress in ligand design through IPISC and related approaches, focusing on the improvements in affinity and specificity as multiligands are assembled by target-catalyzed peptide conjugation. We compare the IPISC process to small molecule in situ click chemistry with particular emphasis on the advantages and technical challenges of constructing antibody-like PCC Agents.


Cell Death and Disease | 2015

ARHI (DIRAS3)-mediated autophagy-associated cell death enhances chemosensitivity to cisplatin in ovarian cancer cell lines and xenografts

Michele N. Washington; Grace K. Suh; Aaron Orozco; Margie N. Sutton; Hailing Yang; Ying Nai Wang; Weiqun Mao; Steven W. Millward; Argentina Ornelas; Neely Atkinson; Warren S L Liao; Robert C. Bast; Zhen Lu

Autophagy can sustain or kill tumor cells depending upon the context. The mechanism of autophagy-associated cell death has not been well elucidated and autophagy has enhanced or inhibited sensitivity of cancer cells to cytotoxic chemotherapy in different models. ARHI (DIRAS3), an imprinted tumor suppressor gene, is downregulated in 60% of ovarian cancers. In cell culture, re-expression of ARHI induces autophagy and ovarian cancer cell death within 72 h. In xenografts, re-expression of ARHI arrests cell growth and induces autophagy, but does not kill engrafted cancer cells. When ARHI levels are reduced after 6 weeks, dormancy is broken and xenografts grow promptly. In this study, ARHI-induced ovarian cancer cell death in culture has been found to depend upon autophagy and has been linked to G1 cell-cycle arrest, enhanced reactive oxygen species (ROS) activity, RIP1/RIP3 activation and necrosis. Re-expression of ARHI enhanced the cytotoxic effect of cisplatin in cell culture, increasing caspase-3 activation and PARP cleavage by inhibiting ERK and HER2 activity and downregulating XIAP and Bcl-2. In xenografts, treatment with cisplatin significantly slowed the outgrowth of dormant autophagic cells after reduction of ARHI, but the addition of chloroquine did not further inhibit xenograft outgrowth. Taken together, we have found that autophagy-associated cancer cell death and autophagy-enhanced sensitivity to cisplatin depend upon different mechanisms and that dormant, autophagic cancer cells are still vulnerable to cisplatin-based chemotherapy.


Angewandte Chemie | 2013

A chemical epitope-targeting strategy for protein capture agents: the serine 474 epitope of the kinase Akt2.

Arundhati Nag; Samir Das; Mary Beth Yu; Kaycie M. Deyle; Steven W. Millward; James R. Heath

Target and click: Peptide ligands targeted to the C-terminal motif of the kinase Akt2 were obtained by combining phosphate recognition of a dinuclear zinc(II) complex with in situ click chemistry to target this epitope. The peptide ligands (shown as XXXXX) selectively bind the C-terminal polypeptide of Akt2, and are selective for Akt2 relative to the Akt1 and Akt3 isoforms. The ligands differentially modulate Akt2 activity.


Nature Chemistry | 2015

A protein-targeting strategy used to develop a selective inhibitor of the E17K point mutation in the PH domain of Akt1

Kaycie M. Deyle; Blake Farrow; Ying Qiao Hee; Jeremy Work; Michelle Wong; Bert Lai; Aiko Umeda; Steven W. Millward; Arundhati Nag; Samir Das; James R. Heath

Ligands that can selectively bind to proteins with single amino acid point mutations offer the potential to detect or treat an abnormal protein in the presence of the wildtype. However, it is difficult to develop a selective ligand if the point mutation is not associated with an addressable location, such as a binding pocket. Here we report an all-chemical, synthetic epitope-targeting strategy which we used to discover a 5-mer peptide with selectivity for the E17K transforming point mutation in the Pleckstrin Homology Domain of the Akt1 oncoprotein. A fragment of Akt1 containing the E17K mutation and a I19[Propargylglycine] substitution was synthesized to form an addressable synthetic epitope. Azide-presenting peptides that covalently clicked onto this alkyne-presenting epitope were selected from a library using in situ screening. One peptide exhibits a 10:1 in vitro selectivity for the oncoprotein relative to wildtype, with a similar selectivity in cells. This 5-mer peptide was expanded into a larger ligand that selectively blocks the E17K Akt1 interaction with its PIP3 substrate.


PLOS ONE | 2013

A Catalyzing Phantom for Reproducible Dynamic Conversion of Hyperpolarized [1-13C]-Pyruvate

Christopher M. Walker; Jae-Hyuk Lee; Marc S. Ramirez; Dawid Schellingerhout; Steven W. Millward; James A. Bankson

In vivo real time spectroscopic imaging of hyperpolarized 13C labeled metabolites shows substantial promise for the assessment of physiological processes that were previously inaccessible. However, reliable and reproducible methods of measurement are necessary to maximize the effectiveness of imaging biomarkers that may one day guide personalized care for diseases such as cancer. Animal models of human disease serve as poor reference standards due to the complexity, heterogeneity, and transient nature of advancing disease. In this study, we describe the reproducible conversion of hyperpolarized [1-13C]-pyruvate to [1-13C]-lactate using a novel synthetic enzyme phantom system. The rate of reaction can be controlled and tuned to mimic normal or pathologic conditions of varying degree. Variations observed in the use of this phantom compare favorably against within-group variations observed in recent animal studies. This novel phantom system provides crucial capabilities as a reference standard for the optimization, comparison, and certification of quantitative imaging strategies for hyperpolarized tracers.


Cancer and Metastasis Reviews | 2017

Beyond COX-1: the effects of aspirin on platelet biology and potential mechanisms of chemoprevention

Argentina Ornelas; Niki Zacharias-Millward; David G. Menter; Jennifer S. Davis; Lenard M. Lichtenberger; David H. Hawke; Ernest T. Hawk; Eduardo Vilar; Pratip Bhattacharya; Steven W. Millward

After more than a century, aspirin remains one of the most commonly used drugs in western medicine. Although mainly used for its anti-thrombotic, anti-pyretic, and analgesic properties, a multitude of clinical studies have provided convincing evidence that regular, low-dose aspirin use dramatically lowers the risk of cancer. These observations coincide with recent studies showing a functional relationship between platelets and tumors, suggesting that aspirin’s chemopreventive properties may result, in part, from direct modulation of platelet biology and biochemistry. Here, we present a review of the biochemistry and pharmacology of aspirin with particular emphasis on its cyclooxygenase-dependent and cyclooxygenase-independent effects in platelets. We also correlate the results of proteomic-based studies of aspirin acetylation in eukaryotic cells with recent developments in platelet proteomics to identify non-cyclooxygenase targets of aspirin-mediated acetylation in platelets that may play a role in its chemopreventive mechanism.


ChemBioChem | 2016

Directed Evolution of Scanning Unnatural-Protease-Resistant (SUPR) Peptides for in Vivo Applications.

Stephen V. Fiacco; Lindsay E. Kelderhouse; Amanda Hardy; Yonatan Peleg; Biliang Hu; Argentina Ornelas; Peiying Yang; Seth T. Gammon; Shannon M. Howell; Pin Wang; Terry T. Takahashi; Steven W. Millward; Richard W. Roberts

Peptides typically have poor biostabilities, and natural sequences cannot easily be converted into drug‐like molecules without extensive medicinal chemistry. We have adapted mRNA display to drive the evolution of highly stable cyclic peptides while preserving target affinity. To do this, we incorporated an unnatural amino acid in an mRNA display library that was subjected to proteolysis prior to selection for function. The resulting “SUPR (scanning unnatural protease resistant) peptide” showed ≈500‐fold improvement in serum stability (t 1/2 =160 h) and up to 3700‐fold improvement in protease resistance versus the parent sequence. We extended this approach by carrying out SUPR peptide selections against Her2‐positive cells in culture. The resulting SUPR4 peptide showed low‐nanomolar affinity toward Her2, excellent specificity, and selective tumor uptake in vivo. These results argue that this is a general method to design potent and stable peptides for in vivo imaging and therapy.

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James R. Heath

California Institute of Technology

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Richard W. Roberts

California Institute of Technology

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Argentina Ornelas

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Arundhati Nag

California Institute of Technology

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Lindsay E. Kelderhouse

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Heather D. Agnew

California Institute of Technology

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Stephen V. Fiacco

University of Southern California

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Terry T. Takahashi

University of Southern California

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Kaycie M. Deyle

California Institute of Technology

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Rosemary D. Rohde

California Institute of Technology

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