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Dive into the research topics where Susan Lukas is active.

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Featured researches published by Susan Lukas.


Journal of Immunology | 2013

Circulating Monocytes Are Reduced by Sphingosine-1-Phosphate Receptor Modulators Independently of S1P3

Nuruddeen D. Lewis; Sokol Haxhinasto; Shawn Anderson; Dimitria E. Stefanopoulos; Steven E. Fogal; Prathima Adusumalli; Sudha Desai; Lori Patnaude; Susan Lukas; Kelli Ryan; Anthony J. Slavin; Maryanne L. Brown; Louise K. Modis

Sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) receptors are critical for lymphocyte egress from secondary lymphoid organs, and S1P receptor modulators suppress lymphocyte circulation. However, the role of S1P receptors on monocytes is less clear. To elucidate this, we systematically evaluated monocytes in rats and mice, both in naive and inflammatory conditions, with S1P receptor modulators FTY720 and BAF312. We demonstrate that S1P receptor modulators reduce circulating monocytes in a similar time course as lymphocytes. Furthermore, total monocyte numbers were increased in the spleen and bone marrow, suggesting that S1P receptor modulation restricts egress from hematopoietic organs. Monocytes treated ex vivo with FTY720 had reduced CD40 expression and TNF-α production, suggesting a direct effect on monocyte activation. Similar reductions in protein expression and cytokine production were also found in vivo. Suppression of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis in mice and rats by FTY720 correlated with reduced numbers of lymphocytes and monocytes. These effects on monocytes were independent of S1P3, as treatment with BAF312, a S1P1,4,5 modulator, led to similar results. These data reveal a novel role for S1P receptors on monocytes and offer additional insights on the mechanism of action of S1P receptor modulators in disease.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998

Carboxymethyl-phenylalanine as a replacement for phosphotyrosine in SH2 domain binding.

Liang Tong; Thomas C. Warren; Susan Lukas; Josephine Schembri-King; Raj Betageri; John R. Proudfoot; Scott Jakes

The crystal structure of human p56 lck SH2 domain in complex with an inhibitor containing the singly chargedp-(carboxymethyl)phenylalanine residue (cmF) as a phosphotyrosine (Tyr(P) or pY) replacement has been determined at 1.8 Å resolution. The binding mode of the acetyl-cmF-Glu-Glu-Ile (cmFEEI) inhibitor is very similar to that of the pYEEI inhibitor, confirming that the cmFEEI inhibitor has a similar mechanism of SH2 domain inhibition despite its significantly reduced potency. Observed conformational differences in the side chain of the cmF residue can be interpreted in terms of maintaining similar interactions with the SH2 domain as the Tyr(P) residue. The crystal structure of the free p56 lck SH2 domain has been determined at 1.9 Å resolution and shows an open conformation for the BC loop and an open phosphotyrosine binding pocket, in contrast to earlier studies on the srcSH2 domain that showed mostly closed conformation. The structural information presented here suggests that the carboxymethyl-phenylalanine residue may be a viable Tyr(P) replacement and represents an attractive starting point for the design and development of SH2 domain inhibitors with better pharmaceutical profiles.


PLOS ONE | 2014

A GPBAR1 (TGR5) Small Molecule Agonist Shows Specific Inhibitory Effects on Myeloid Cell Activation In Vitro and Reduces Experimental Autoimmune Encephalitis (EAE) In Vivo

Nuruddeen D. Lewis; Lori Patnaude; Josephine Pelletier; Donald Souza; Susan Lukas; F. James King; Jonathan D. Hill; Dimitria E. Stefanopoulos; Kelli Ryan; Sudha Desai; Donna Skow; Stefan Kauschke; Andre Broermann; Daniel Kuzmich; Christian Harcken; Eugene R. Hickey; Louise K. Modis

GPBAR1 is a G protein-coupled receptor that is activated by certain bile acids and plays an important role in the regulation of bile acid synthesis, lipid metabolism, and energy homeostasis. Recent evidence suggests that GPBAR1 may also have important effects in reducing the inflammatory response through its expression on monocytes and macrophages. To further understand the role of GPBAR1 in inflammation, we generated a novel, selective, proprietary GPBAR1 agonist and tested its effectiveness at reducing monocyte and macrophage activation in vitro and in vivo. We have used this agonist, together with previously described agonists to study agonism of GPBAR1, and shown that they can all induce cAMP and reduce TLR activation-induced cytokine production in human monocytes and monocyte-derived macrophages in vitro. Additionally, through the usage of RNA sequencing (RNA-Seq), we identified a select set of genes that are regulated by GPBAR1 agonism during LPS activation. To further define the in vivo role of GPBAR1 in inflammation, we assessed GPBAR1 expression and found high levels on circulating mouse monocytes. Agonism of GPBAR1 reduced LPS-induced cytokine production in mouse monocytes ex vivo and serum cytokine levels in vivo. Agonism of GPBAR1 also had profound effects in the experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) mouse model of multiple sclerosis, where monocytes play an important role. Mice treated with the GPBAR1 agonist exhibited a significant reduction in the EAE clinical score which correlated with reduced monocyte and microglial activation and reduced trafficking of monocytes and T cells into the CNS. These data confirm the importance of GPBAR1 in controlling monocyte and macrophage activation in vivo and support the rationale for selective agonists of GPBAR1 in the treatment of inflammatory diseases.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2014

No Differences Observed among Multiple Clinical S1P1 Receptor Agonists (Functional Antagonists) in S1P1 Receptor Down-regulation and Degradation

Susan Lukas; Lori Patnaude; Sokol Haxhinasto; Anthony J. Slavin; Melissa Hill-Drzewi; Josh Horan; Louise K. Modis

Sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) is a bioactive metabolite with pleiotropic effects on multiple cellular processes in health and disease. Responses elicited by S1P are a result of binding to five specific G-protein–coupled receptors. We have developed multiple assays to systematically study the downstream signaling of these receptors, including early events such as direct receptor activation (GTPγS) as well as more distal events such as S1P1 receptor degradation. Employing such assays, we have characterized and compared multiple S1P1 agonists that are in clinical development including FTY720, BAF312, CS-0777, and other molecules from the S1P1 patent literature. Our parallel assessment has allowed us to compare their potency against S1P1, their selectivity against the four other S1P receptors, as well as species cross-reactivity. We note that all of the compounds studied signal in an identical manner through S1P1, leading to receptor degradation.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2011

Bioluminescent method for assaying multiple semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidase (SSAO) family members in both 96- and 384-well formats.

Gregory W. Peet; Susan Lukas; Melissa Hill-Drzewi; Leslie Martin; Irina Rybina; Teresa Roma; Alycia Shoultz; Xiang Zhu; Daniela Cazacu; Anthony Kronkaitis; Alistair Baptiste; Brian Christopher Raudenbush; E. Michael August; Louise K. Modis

Vascular adhesion protein–1 (VAP-1), also known as semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidase (SSAO) or copper-containing amine oxidase (AOC3, EC 1.4.3.6), catalyzes oxidative deamination of primary amines. One endogenous substrate has recently been described (Siglec 10), and although its mechanism of action in vivo is not completely understood, it is suggested to play a role in immune cell trafficking, making it a target of interest for autoimmune and inflammatory diseases. Much of the enzymology performed around this target has been conducted with absorbance, fluorescent, or radiometric formats that can have some limitations for high-throughput screening and subsequent compound profiling. The authors present the use of a bioluminescent assay, originally developed for monoamine oxidase enzymes, in a high-throughput format. It can be used for related SSAOs such as AOC1 given their substrate similarity with VAP-1. The authors also demonstrate that it is compatible with different sources of VAP-1, both purified recombinant and VAP-1 overexpressed on live cells.


Biochemistry | 2004

Discovery and characterization of a substrate selective p38α inhibitor

Walter Davidson; Lee Frego; Gregory W. Peet; Rachel R. Kroe; Mark E. Labadia; Susan Lukas; Roger J. Snow; Scott Jakes; Christine A. Grygon; Christopher Pargellis; Brian G. Werneburg


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2002

Discovery of 2-Phenylamino-imidazo[4,5-h]isoquinolin-9-ones: A New Class of Inhibitors of Lck Kinase

Roger J. Snow; Mario G. Cardozo; Tina Morwick; Carl A. Busacca; Yong Dong; Robert J. Eckner; Stephen P. Jacober; Scott Jakes; Suresh R. Kapadia; Susan Lukas; Maret Panzenbeck; Gregory W. Peet; Jeffrey D. Peterson; Anthony S. Prokopowicz; Rosemarie Sellati; Robert M. Tolbert; Matt Aaron Tschantz; Neil Moss


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 1999

Ligands for the tyrosine kinase p56lck SH2 domain: discovery of potent dipeptide derivatives with monocharged, nonhydrolyzable phosphate replacements.

Pierre L. Beaulieu; Dale R. Cameron; Ferland Jm; Jean Gauthier; Elise Ghiro; James Gillard; Gorys; Martin Poirier; Jean Rancourt; Dominik Wernic; Montse Llinas-Brunet; Rajashehar Betageri; Mario G. Cardozo; Eugene R. Hickey; R. H. Ingraham; Scott Jakes; Alisa Kabcenell; Thomas M. Kirrane; Susan Lukas; Usha R. Patel; John R. Proudfoot; Rajiv Sharma; Liang Tong; Neil Moss


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2007

The discovery of carboline analogs as potent MAPKAP-K2 inhibitors.

Jiang-Ping Wu; Ji Wang; Asitha Abeywardane; Denise Andersen; Michel J. Emmanuel; Elda Gautschi; Daniel R. Goldberg; Mohammed A. Kashem; Susan Lukas; Wang Mao; Leslie Martin; Tina Marie Morwick; Neil Moss; Christopher Pargellis; Usha R. Patel; Lori Patnaude; Gregory W. Peet; Donna Skow; Roger J. Snow; Yancey David Ward; Brian Werneburg; Andre White


Biochemistry | 2004

Catalysis and Function of the p38α·MK2a Signaling Complex

Susan Lukas; Rachel R. Kroe; Jessi Wildeson; Gregory W. Peet; Lee Frego; Walter Davidson; Richard H. Ingraham; Christopher Pargellis; Mark E. Labadia; Brian G. Werneburg

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