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Dive into the research topics where Thomas A. Kirkland is active.

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Featured researches published by Thomas A. Kirkland.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2015

NanoBRET--A Novel BRET Platform for the Analysis of Protein-Protein Interactions.

Thomas Machleidt; Carolyn C. Woodroofe; Marie K. Schwinn; Jacqui Mendez; Matthew B. Robers; Kris Zimmerman; Paul Otto; Danette L. Daniels; Thomas A. Kirkland; Keith V. Wood

Dynamic interactions between proteins comprise a key mechanism for temporal control of cellular function and thus hold promise for development of novel drug therapies. It remains technically challenging, however, to quantitatively characterize these interactions within the biologically relevant context of living cells. Although, bioluminescence resonance energy transfer (BRET) has often been used for this purpose, its general applicability has been hindered by limited sensitivity and dynamic range. We have addressed this by combining an extremely bright luciferase (Nanoluc) with a means for tagging intracellular proteins with a long-wavelength fluorophore (HaloTag). The small size (19 kDa), high emission intensity, and relatively narrow spectrum (460 nm peak intensity) make Nanoluc luciferase well suited as an energy donor. By selecting an efficient red-emitting fluorophore (635 nm peak intensity) for attachment onto the HaloTag, an overall spectral separation exceeding 175 nm was achieved. This combination of greater light intensity with improved spectral resolution results in substantially increased detection sensitivity and dynamic range over current BRET technologies. Enhanced performance is demonstrated using several established model systems, as well as the ability to image BRET in individual cells. The capabilities are further exhibited in a novel assay developed for analyzing the interactions of bromodomain proteins with chromatin in living cells.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2016

NanoLuc Complementation Reporter Optimized for Accurate Measurement of Protein Interactions in Cells.

Andrew S. Dixon; Marie K. Schwinn; Mary P. Hall; Kris Zimmerman; Paul Otto; Thomas Lubben; Braeden L. Butler; Brock F. Binkowski; Thomas Machleidt; Thomas A. Kirkland; Monika G. Wood; Christopher T. Eggers; Lance P. Encell; Keith V. Wood

Protein-fragment complementation assays (PCAs) are widely used for investigating protein interactions. However, the fragments used are structurally compromised and have not been optimized nor thoroughly characterized for accurately assessing these interactions. We took advantage of the small size and bright luminescence of NanoLuc to engineer a new complementation reporter (NanoBiT). By design, the NanoBiT subunits (i.e., 1.3 kDa peptide, 18 kDa polypeptide) weakly associate so that their assembly into a luminescent complex is dictated by the interaction characteristics of the target proteins onto which they are appended. To ascertain their general suitability for measuring interaction affinities and kinetics, we determined that their intrinsic affinity (KD = 190 μM) and association constants (kon = 500 M(-1) s(-1), koff = 0.2 s(-1)) are outside of the ranges typical for protein interactions. The accuracy of NanoBiT was verified under defined biochemical conditions using the previously characterized interaction between SME-1 β-lactamase and a set of inhibitor binding proteins. In cells, NanoBiT fusions to FRB/FKBP produced luminescence consistent with the linear characteristics of NanoLuc. Response dynamics, evaluated using both protein kinase A and β-arrestin-2, were rapid, reversible, and robust to temperature (21-37 °C). Finally, NanoBiT provided a means to measure pharmacology of kinase inhibitors known to induce the interaction between BRAF and CRAF. Our results demonstrate that the intrinsic properties of NanoBiT allow accurate representation of protein interactions and that the reporter responds reliably and dynamically in cells.


Nature Communications | 2015

Target engagement and drug residence time can be observed in living cells with BRET

Matthew B. Robers; Melanie Dart; Carolyn C. Woodroofe; Chad Zimprich; Thomas A. Kirkland; Thomas Machleidt; Kevin R. Kupcho; Sergiy Levin; James Robert Hartnett; Kristopher Zimmerman; Andrew L. Niles; Rachel Friedman Ohana; Danette L. Daniels; Michael R. Slater; Monika G. Wood; Mei Cong; Yi-Qiang Cheng; Keith V. Wood

The therapeutic action of drugs is predicated on their physical engagement with cellular targets. Here we describe a broadly applicable method using bioluminescence resonance energy transfer (BRET) to reveal the binding characteristics of a drug with selected targets within intact cells. Cell-permeable fluorescent tracers are used in a competitive binding format to quantify drug engagement with the target proteins fused to Nanoluc luciferase. The approach enabled us to profile isozyme-specific engagement and binding kinetics for a panel of histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors. Our analysis was directed particularly to the clinically approved prodrug FK228 (Istodax/Romidepsin) because of its unique and largely unexplained mechanism of sustained intracellular action. Analysis of the binding kinetics by BRET revealed remarkably long intracellular residence times for FK228 at HDAC1, explaining the protracted intracellular behaviour of this prodrug. Our results demonstrate a novel application of BRET for assessing target engagement within the complex milieu of the intracellular environment.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2011

A Bioluminogenic HDAC Activity Assay: Validation and Screening

Francoise Halley; Jeanette Reinshagen; Bernhard Ellinger; Markus Wolf; Andrew L. Niles; Nathan J. Evans; Thomas A. Kirkland; Julia M. Wagner; Manfred Jung; Philip Gribbon; Sheraz Gul

Histone deacetylase (HDAC) enzymes modify the acetylation state of histones and other important proteins. Aberrant HDAC enzyme function has been implicated in many diseases, and the discovery and development of drugs targeting these enzymes is becoming increasingly important. In this article, the authors report the evaluation of homogeneous, single-addition, bioluminogenic HDAC enzyme activity assays that offer less assay interference by compounds in comparison to fluorescence-based formats. The authors assessed the key operational assay properties including sensitivity, scalability, reproducibility, signal stability, robustness (Z′), DMSO tolerance, and pharmacological response to standard inhibitors against HDAC-1, HDAC-3/NcoR2, HDAC-6, and SIRT-1 enzymes. These assays were successfully miniaturized to a 10 µL assay volume, and their suitability for high-throughput screening was tested in validation experiments using 640 drugs approved by the Food and Drug Administration and the Hypha Discovery MycoDiverse natural products library, which is a collection of 10 049 extracts and fractions from fermentations of higher fungi and contains compounds that are of low molecular weight and wide chemical diversity. Both of these screening campaigns confirmed that the bioluminogenic assay was high-throughput screening compatible and yielded acceptable performance in confirmation, counter, and compound/extract and fraction concentration-response assays.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2015

Deciphering the Cellular Targets of Bioactive Compounds Using a Chloroalkane Capture Tag

Rachel Friedman Ohana; Thomas A. Kirkland; Carolyn C. Woodroofe; Sergiy Levin; H. Tetsuo Uyeda; Paul Otto; Matthew B. Robers; Kris Zimmerman; Lance P. Encell; Keith V. Wood

Phenotypic screening of compound libraries is a significant trend in drug discovery, yet success can be hindered by difficulties in identifying the underlying cellular targets. Current approaches rely on tethering bioactive compounds to a capture tag or surface to allow selective enrichment of interacting proteins for subsequent identification by mass spectrometry. Such methods are often constrained by ineffective capture of low affinity and low abundance targets. In addition, these methods are often not compatible with living cells and therefore cannot be used to verify the pharmacological activity of the tethered compounds. We have developed a novel chloroalkane capture tag that minimally affects compound potency in cultured cells, allowing binding interactions with the targets to occur under conditions relevant to the desired cellular phenotype. Subsequent isolation of the interacting targets is achieved through rapid lysis and capture onto immobilized HaloTag protein. Exchanging the chloroalkane tag for a fluorophore, the putative targets identified by mass spectrometry can be verified for direct binding to the compound through resonance energy transfer. Using the interaction between histone deacetylases (HDACs) and the inhibitor, Vorinostat (SAHA), as a model system, we were able to identify and verify all the known HDAC targets of SAHA as well as two previously undescribed targets, ADO and CPPED1. The discovery of ADO as a target may provide mechanistic insight into a reported connection between SAHA and Huntingtons disease.


BioTechniques | 2011

A bioluminescent assay for the sensitive detection of proteases.

Donna Leippe; Duy Nguyen; Min Zhou; Troy Good; Thomas A. Kirkland; Mike Scurria; Laurent Bernad; Tim Ugo; Jolanta Vidugiriene; James J. Cali; Dieter Klaubert; Martha O'Brien

A bioluminescent general protease assay was developed using a combination of five luminogenic peptide substrates. The peptide-conjugated luciferin substrates were combined with luciferase to form a homogeneous, coupled-enzyme assay. This single-reagent format minimized backgrounds, gave stable signals, and reached peak sensitivity within 30 min. The bioluminescent assay was used to detect multiple proteases representing serine, cysteine, and metalloproteinase classes. The range of proteases detected was broader and the sensitivity greater, when compared with a standard fluorescent assay based on cleavage of the whole protein substrate casein. Fifteen of twenty proteases tested had signal-to-background ratios >10 with the bioluminescent method, compared with only seven proteases with the fluorescent approach. The bioluminescent assay also achieved lower detection limits (≤100 pg) than fluorescent methods. During protein purification processes, especially for therapeutic proteins, even trace levels of contamination can impact the proteins stability and activity. This sensitive, bioluminescent, protease assay should be useful for applications in which contaminating proteases are detrimental and protein purity is essential.


Chemistry & Biology | 2017

Quantitative, Wide-Spectrum Kinase Profiling in Live Cells for Assessing the Effect of Cellular ATP on Target Engagement

James D. Vasta; Cesear Corona; Jennifer Wilkinson; Chad Zimprich; James Robert Hartnett; Morgan R. Ingold; Kristopher Zimmerman; Thomas Machleidt; Thomas A. Kirkland; Kristin Huwiler; Rachel Friedman Ohana; Michael R. Slater; Paul Otto; Mei Cong; Carrow Wells; Benedict-Tilman Berger; Thomas Hanke; Carina Glas; Ke Ding; David H. Drewry; Kilian Huber; Timothy M. Willson; Stefan Knapp; Susanne Müller; Poncho Meisenheimer; Frank Fan; Keith V. Wood; Matthew B. Robers

Summary For kinase inhibitors, intracellular target selectivity is fundamental to pharmacological mechanism. Although a number of acellular techniques have been developed to measure kinase binding or enzymatic inhibition, such approaches can fail to accurately predict engagement in cells. Here we report the application of an energy transfer technique that enabled the first broad-spectrum, equilibrium-based approach to quantitatively profile target occupancy and compound affinity in live cells. Using this method, we performed a selectivity profiling for clinically relevant kinase inhibitors against 178 full-length kinases, and a mechanistic interrogation of the potency offsets observed between cellular and biochemical analysis. For the multikinase inhibitor crizotinib, our approach accurately predicted cellular potency and revealed improved target selectivity compared with biochemical measurements. Due to cellular ATP, a number of putative crizotinib targets are unexpectedly disengaged in live cells at a clinically relevant drug dose.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2016

Three Efficient Methods for Preparation of Coelenterazine Analogues

Anton Shakhmin; Mary P. Hall; Joel R. Walker; Thomas Machleidt; Brock F. Binkowski; Keith V. Wood; Thomas A. Kirkland

The growing popularity of bioluminescent assays has highlighted the need for coelenterazine analogues possessing properties tuned for specific applications. However, the structural diversity of known coelenterazine analogues has been limited by current syntheses. Known routes for the preparation of coelenterazine analogues employ harsh reaction conditions that limit access to many substituents and functional groups. Novel synthetic routes reported here establish simple and robust methods for synthesis and investigation of structurally diverse marine luciferase substrates. Specifically, these new routes allow synthesis of coelenterazine analogues containing various heterocyclic motifs and substituted aromatic groups with diverse electronic substituents at the R(2) position. Interesting analogues described herein were characterized by their physicochemical properties, bioluminescent half-life, light output, polarity and cytotoxicity. Some of the analogues represent leads that can be utilized in the development of improved bioluminescent systems.


Nature Communications | 2018

Click beetle luciferase mutant and near infrared naphthyl-luciferins for improved bioluminescence imaging

Mary P. Hall; Carolyn C. Woodroofe; Monika G. Wood; Ivo Que; Moniek van’t Root; Yanto Ridwan; Ce Shi; Thomas A. Kirkland; Lance P. Encell; Keith V. Wood; Clemens Löwik; Laura Mezzanotte

The sensitivity of bioluminescence imaging in animals is primarily dependent on the amount of photons emitted by the luciferase enzyme at wavelengths greater than 620 nm where tissue penetration is high. This area of work has been dominated by firefly luciferase and its substrate, D-luciferin, due to the system’s peak emission (~ 600 nm), high signal to noise ratio, and generally favorable biodistribution of D-luciferin in mice. Here we report on the development of a codon optimized mutant of click beetle red luciferase that produces substantially more light output than firefly luciferase when the two enzymes are compared in transplanted cells within the skin of black fur mice or in deep brain. The mutant enzyme utilizes two new naphthyl-luciferin substrates to produce near infrared emission (730 nm and 743 nm). The stable luminescence signal and near infrared emission enable unprecedented sensitivity and accuracy for performing deep tissue multispectral tomography in mice.Red-shifted bioluminescence emission is needed to improve deep tissue imaging resolution. Here, the authors develop a click beetle red luciferase mutant and two naphthyl-luciferin substrates, and show the ability of the new luciferin/luciferase pairing for deep tissue multispectral tomography in mice.


Cancer Research | 2014

Abstract 4784: Selective bioluminogenic HDAC activity assays for profiling HDAC inhibitors

Kevin R. Kupcho; Nathan J. Evans; Andrew L. Niles; Thomas A. Kirkland; Dan Lazar

Proceedings: AACR Annual Meeting 2014; April 5-9, 2014; San Diego, CA Histone deacetylases (HDACs) play critical roles in the regulation of gene transcription and cell signaling events by deacetylating histones and other important non-histone substrates. Aberrant increases in HDAC enzyme activities are therefore implicated in a number of human infirmities, including cancers, metabolic disease and neurodegeneration. Fortunately, HDAC enzymes represent attractive pharmacological targets because they are readily tractable with small molecule inhibitors. In fact, several HDAC inhibitors (HDACi) have recently proceeded through (or are near) the FDA approval process for the treatment of hematologic malignancies. However, the promise of clinical HDACi therapy has been hampered by significant dose-limiting toxicities. These off-target effects have led to a renewed focus on basic HDAC biology and the development of isoenzyme-specific HDAC inhibitors which could avoid off-target effects. To help facilitate the discovery of compounds with better defined selectivity profiles, we have developed lysine deacetylase assays that selectively measure specific isoenzyme activities in cells, extracts, or purified recombinant preparations. These assays are based on substrates that are selective due to a combination of extended peptide sequence and novel chemical modifications. Deacetylase activity is measured by delivering a single, pro-luminogenic, homogeneous assay reagent to assay wells, resulting in luminescence proportional to HDAC activity. In addition to being isoenzyme selective, these novel substrates are cell permeable allowing for lytic and non-lytic cell-based HDAC assays. Lastly, these assays are also fully compatible with fluorescent viability and/or cytotoxicity assays. This provides additional flexibility for multiplexed formats which examine not only selective HDAC inhibition, but the functional consequences they exert on cell health. Citation Format: Kevin R. Kupcho, Nathan J. Evans, Andrew L. Niles, Thomas A. Kirkland, Dan F. Lazar. Selective bioluminogenic HDAC activity assays for profiling HDAC inhibitors. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 105th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2014 Apr 5-9; San Diego, CA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2014;74(19 Suppl):Abstract nr 4784. doi:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2014-4784

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