Susan Bane
Binghamton University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Susan Bane.
Analytical Biochemistry | 2003
Donna M. Barron; Sabarni K. Chatterjee; Rudravajhala Ravindra; Rebecca Roof; Erkan Baloglu; David G. I. Kingston; Susan Bane
With the advent of combinatorial chemistry and the extensive libraries of potential drugs produced from it, there is a growing need for rapid sensitive, high-throughput screening for drug potency. Microtubules are important targets for anticancer agents, and new antimicrotubule compounds are of continued interest in drug development. The in vitro potency of antimicrotubule drugs may be evaluated by measuring the extent of tubulin assembly. The extent of polymerization is proportional to the turbidity of the solution, which usually has been measured as apparent absorption. The turbidity method has inherent problems that hinder its adaptation to a high-throughput format, such as a requirement for high protein concentrations and a high coefficient of variation. We present here a high-throughput assay for antimicrotubule activity in which fluorescence is used to monitor microtubule assembly. Both assembly-inhibiting and assembly-promoting compounds can be evaluated. The assay is rapid and easy to perform, and the data are reliable, with good accuracy and reproducibility.
Cell Cycle | 2005
David G. I. Kingston; Susan Bane; James P. Snyder
Different approaches to developing an accurate model of the binding conformation ofpaclitaxel (TaxolTM, PTX) on ?-tubulin are discussed. Electron crystallography, molecularmodeling, NMR and synthetic studies all point to the T-Taxol conformation as the bioactiveform. The range of molecular designs represented by synthetic taxoids prepared to test the latter,with an emphasis on internally bridged analogs, is summarized. Key implications andconclusions derived from the retrospective are presented.
Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2011
Adam R. Blanden; Kamalika Mukherjee; Ozlem Dilek; Maura Loew; Susan Bane
Hydrazone formation and similar reactions are highly versatile and specific, but their application to biological systems has been limited by their characteristically slow reaction kinetics at neutral pH. Catalysis of these reactions through imine formation with aromatic amines such as aniline has broadened the applicability of these reactions to biomolecular labeling. High concentrations of the catalyst are necessary, which may be incompatible with the native structure of certain proteins. In this study, we investigated the utility of 4-aminophenylalanine (4a-Phe) as a catalyst for these reactions. We find that 4a-Phe is nearly as effective as aniline in catalyzing hydrazone formation between the reactive amino acid 3-formyltyrosine (3f-Tyr) and hydrazine-containing fluorophores, both free in solution and incorporated into the protein tubulin. The catalyst 4a-Phe maintains ∼70% of the catalytic efficacy of aniline and is less detrimental to the native structure of tubulin. Examination of the temperature dependence of imine formation between 3f-Tyr and 4a-Phe shows an increase in imine concentration accompanying a decrease in temperature, confirming the exothermic nature of the equilibrium reaction. Interestingly, decreasing the temperature of the 4a-Phe-catalyzed hydrazone reaction between 3f-Tyr and the fluorophore 7-hydrazinyl-4-methylcoumarin increases the overall rate of the reaction. This result indicates that the temperature dependence of the catalyst-aldehyde equilibrium is greater than the temperature dependence of the rate constant for hydrazone formation from this intermediate, and that the rate of hydrazone formation a direct function of the concentration of the intermediate imine. These results provide a platform for conducting nucleophilic catalysis under conditions that are more compatible with biomolecular targets than previously demonstrated, thereby expanding the utility of hydrazone ligations in biological systems.
ACS Chemical Biology | 2010
Abhijit Banerjee; Timothy D. Panosian; Kamalika Mukherjee; Rudravajhala Ravindra; Susannah Gal; Dan L. Sackett; Susan Bane
A fluorescent probe has been attached to the carboxy terminus of the alpha-subunit of alpha,beta-tubulin by an enzymatic reaction followed by a chemical reaction. The unnatural amino acid 3-formyltyrosine is attached to the carboxy terminus of alpha-tubulin through the use of the enzyme tubulin tyrosine ligase. The aromatic aldehyde of the unnatural amino acid serves as an orthogonal electrophile that specifically reacts with a fluorophore containing an aromatic hydrazine functional group, which in this case is 7-hydrazino-4-methyl coumarin. Conditions for covalent bond formation between the unnatural amino acid and the fluorophore are mild, allowing fluorescently labeled tubulin to retain its ability to assemble into microtubules. A key feature of the labeling reaction is that it produces a red shift in the fluorophores absorption and emission maxima, accompanied by an increase in its quantum yield; thus, fluorescently labeled protein can be observed in the presence of unreacted fluorophore. Both the enzymatic and coupling reaction can occur in living cells. The approach presented here should be applicable to a wide variety of in vitro systems.
Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry | 2003
Martin E. Kuehne; William G. Bornmann; István E. Markó; Yong Qin; Karen L. LeBoulluec; Deborah A. Frasier; Feng Xu; Tshilundu Mulamba; Carol L. Ensinger; Linda S. Borman; Anne E. Huot; Christopher Exon; Fred T. Bizzarro; Julia B. Cheung; Susan Bane
Sixty-two congeners of vinblastine (VLB), primarily with modifications of the piperidine ring in the carbomethoxycleavamine moiety of the binary alkaloid, were synthesized and evaluated for cytotoxicity against murine L1210 leukemia and RCC-2 rat colon cancer cells, and for their ability to inhibit polymerization of microtubular protein at < 10(-6) M, and for induction of spiralization of microtubular protein, and for microtubular disassembly at 10(-4) M concentrations. An ID50 range of >10(7) M concentrations was found for L1210 inhibition by these compounds, with the most active 1000x as potent as vinblastine.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009
Ozlem Dilek; Susan Bane
Sulfur-containing 3,5-disubstituted boron dipyrromethene (Bodipy) fluorescent probes with improved water solubility were synthesized. A dicarboxylic acid derivative that can be excited by the 543 nm HeNe laser line is very soluble in aqueous solution and retains high fluorescence quantum yield of the unionizable parent molecule. Conversion of the dicarboxylic acid to the succimidyl or sulfosuccinimidyl diester produces molecules capable of labeling proteins with a bright and stable fluorescence signal.
Journal of Fluorescence | 2011
Natasha Shanker; Ozlem Dilek; Kamalika Mukherjee; Dennis W. McGee; Susan Bane
Aurones, derivatives of 2-benylidenebenzofuran-3(2H)-one, are natural products that serve as plant pigments. There have been reports that some of these substances fluoresce, but little information about their optical properties is in the literature. In this report, series of aurone derivatives were synthesized as possible fluorescent probes that can be excited by visible light. We found that an amine substituent shifted the lowest energy absorption band from the near-UV to the visible region of the electromagnetic spectrum. Four amine-substituted aurone derivatives were synthesized to explore the effect of this substituent on the absorption and emission properties of the aurone chromophore. The emission maxima and intensities of the molecules are strongly dependent on the nature of the substituent and the solvent polarity. Overall, the emission intensity increases and the maximum wavelength decreases in less polar solvents; thus, the aurones may be useful probes for hydrophobic sites on biological molecules. A limited investigation with model protein, nucleic acid and fixed cells supports this idea. It is known that the sulfur analog of aurone can undergo photo-induced E/Z isomerization. This possibility was investigated for one of the aminoaurones, which was observed to reversible photoisomerize. The two isomers have similar absorption spectra, but the emission properties are distinct. We conclude that appropriately substituted aurones are potentially useful as biological probes and photoswitches.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2001
Erkan Baloglu; David G. I. Kingston; Pruthvi Patel; Sabarni K. Chatterjee; Susan Bane
The preparation of two new fluorescent derivatives of paclitaxel in which the fluorophore is bonded to paclitaxel at the C-10 position is reported. Both analogues, 10-deacetyl-10-(m-aminobenzoyl)paclitaxel (1, BTax) and 10-deacetyl-10-[7-(diethylamino) coumarin-3-carbonyl]paclitaxel (2, CTax) retain good activity as promoters of in vitro tubulin assembly. Microtubule binding enhances the emission intensity of both probes.
Archiv Der Pharmazie | 2012
Mohamed Abdel-Aziz; Omar M. Aly; Sabine S. Khan; Kamalika Mukherjee; Susan Bane
A series of novel 1‐(3′,4′,5′‐trimethoxybenzoyl)‐3,5‐diarylpyrazoline derivatives were synthesized and evaluated for their cytotoxic properties on different cancer cell lines and tubulin polymerization inhibitory activity. Compounds 6d and 6e exhibited remarkable cytotoxic activity against different cancer cell lines with good tubulin polymerization inhibitory activity. Compound 6d exhibited moderate selectivity toward renal cancer and breast cancer subpanels with selectivity ratios of 3.06 and 5.11, respectively, at the cytostatic activity (TGI) level. Compounds 6e and 6d achieved good tubulin polymerization inhibitory activity with IC50 values of 17 and 40 µM, respectively. The photomicrographs made for compounds 6d and 6e on cellular microtubules indicated that the cytotoxicity of these compounds can be attributed to their ability to interfere with microtubule assembly. Molecular modeling studies involving compound 6e with the colchicine binding site of α,β‐tubulin revealed hydrogen‐bonding and hydrophobic interactions with several amino acids in the colchicine binding site of β‐tubulin.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009
Mathis Hodge; Qiao-Hong Chen; Susan Bane; Shubhada Sharma; Maura Loew; Abhijit Banerjee; Ana A. Alcaraz; James P. Snyder; David G. I. Kingston
A knowledge of the bioactive tubulin-binding conformation of paclitaxel (Taxol()) is crucial to a full understanding of the bioactivity of this important anticancer drug, and potentially also to the design of simplified analogs. The bioactive conformation has been shown to be best approximated by the T-Taxol conformation. As a further test of this conclusion, the paclitaxel analog 4 was designed as a compound which has all the chemical functionality necessary for activity, but which cannot adopt the T-Taxol conformation. The synthesis and bioassay of 4 confirmed its lack of activity, and thus provided further support for the T-Taxol conformation as the bioactive tubulin-binding conformation.