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Dive into the research topics where Tom A. Pfeifer is active.

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Featured researches published by Tom A. Pfeifer.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2011

Synergistic Drug Combinations for Tuberculosis Therapy Identified by a Novel High-Throughput Screen

Santiago Ramón-García; Carol Ng; Hilary J. Anderson; Joseph D. Chao; Xingji Zheng; Tom A. Pfeifer; Yossef Av-Gay; Michel Roberge; Charles J. Thompson

ABSTRACT Therapeutic options for tuberculosis (TB) are limited and notoriously ineffective despite the wide variety of potent antibiotics available for treating other bacterial infections. We investigated an approach that enables an expansion of TB therapeutic strategies by using synergistic combinations of drugs. To achieve this, we devised a high-throughput synergy screen (HTSS) of chemical libraries having known pharmaceutical properties, including thousands that are clinically approved. Spectinomycin was used to test the concept that clinically available antibiotics with limited efficacy against Mycobacterium tuberculosis might be used for TB treatment when coadministered with a synergistic partner compound used as a sensitizer. Screens using Mycobacterium smegmatis revealed many compounds in our libraries that acted synergistically with spectinomycin. Among them, several families of antimicrobial compounds, including macrolides and azoles, were also synergistic against M. tuberculosis in vitro and in a macrophage model of M. tuberculosis infection. Strikingly, each sensitizer identified for synergy with spectinomycin uniquely enhanced the activities of other clinically used antibiotics, revealing a remarkable number of unexplored synergistic drug combinations. HTSS also revealed a novel activity for bromperidol, a butyrophenone used as an antipsychotic drug, which was discovered to be bactericidal and greatly enhanced the activities of several antibiotics and drug combinations against M. tuberculosis. Our results suggest that many compounds in the currently available pharmacopoeia could be readily mobilized for TB treatment, including disease caused by multi- and extensively drug-resistant strains for which there are no effective therapies.


PLOS Genetics | 2013

An evolutionarily conserved synthetic lethal interaction network identifies FEN1 as a broad-spectrum target for anticancer therapeutic development.

Derek M. van Pel; Irene J. Barrett; Yoko Shimizu; Babu V. Sajesh; Brent J. Guppy; Tom A. Pfeifer; Kirk J. McManus; Philip Hieter

Harnessing genetic differences between cancerous and noncancerous cells offers a strategy for the development of new therapies. Extrapolating from yeast genetic interaction data, we used cultured human cells and siRNA to construct and evaluate a synthetic lethal interaction network comprised of chromosome instability (CIN) genes that are frequently mutated in colorectal cancer. A small number of genes in this network were found to have synthetic lethal interactions with a large number of cancer CIN genes; these genes are thus attractive targets for anticancer therapeutic development. The protein product of one highly connected gene, the flap endonuclease FEN1, was used as a target for small-molecule inhibitor screening using a newly developed fluorescence-based assay for enzyme activity. Thirteen initial hits identified through in vitro biochemical screening were tested in cells, and it was found that two compounds could selectively inhibit the proliferation of cultured cancer cells carrying inactivating mutations in CDC4, a gene frequently mutated in a variety of cancers. Inhibition of flap endonuclease activity was also found to recapitulate a genetic interaction between FEN1 and MRE11A, another gene frequently mutated in colorectal cancers, and to lead to increased endogenous DNA damage. These chemical-genetic interactions in mammalian cells validate evolutionarily conserved synthetic lethal interactions and demonstrate that a cross-species candidate gene approach is successful in identifying small-molecule inhibitors that prove effective in a cell-based cancer model.


Molecular Pain | 2015

Small organic molecule disruptors of Cav3.2 - USP5 interactions reverse inflammatory and neuropathic pain.

Vinicius M. Gadotti; Agustin Garcia Caballero; N. Daniel Berger; Clare M Gladding; Lina Chen; Tom A. Pfeifer; Gerald W. Zamponi

BACKGROUND Cav3.2 channels facilitate nociceptive transmission and are upregulated in DRG neurons in response to nerve injury or peripheral inflammation. We reported that this enhancement of Cav3.2 currents in afferent neurons is mediated by deubiquitination of the channels by the deubiquitinase USP5, and that disrupting USP5/Cav3.2 channel interactions protected from inflammatory and neuropathic pain. RESULTS Here we describe the development of a small molecule screening assay for USP5-Cav3.2 disruptors, and report on two hits of a ~5000 compound screen - suramin and the flavonoid gossypetin. In mouse models of inflammatory pain and neuropathic pain, both suramin and gossypetin produced dose-dependent and long-lasting mechanical anti-hyperalgesia that was abolished or greatly attenuated in Cav3.2 null mice. Suramin and Cav3.2/USP5 Tat-disruptor peptides were also tested in models of diabetic neuropathy and visceral pain, and provided remarkable protection. CONCLUSIONS Overall, our findings provide proof of concept for a new class of analgesics that target T-type channel deubiquitination.BackgroundCav3.2 channels facilitate nociceptive transmission and are upregulated in DRG neurons in response to nerve injury or peripheral inflammation. We reported that this enhancement of Cav3.2 currents in afferent neurons is mediated by deubiquitination of the channels by the deubiquitinase USP5, and that disrupting USP5/Cav3.2 channel interactions protected from inflammatory and neuropathic pain.ResultsHere we describe the development of a small molecule screening assay for USP5-Cav3.2 disruptors, and report on two hits of a ~5000 compound screen - suramin and the flavonoid gossypetin. In mouse models of inflammatory pain and neuropathic pain, both suramin and gossypetin produced dose-dependent and long-lasting mechanical anti-hyperalgesia that was abolished or greatly attenuated in Cav3.2 null mice. Suramin and Cav3.2/USP5 Tat-disruptor peptides were also tested in models of diabetic neuropathy and visceral pain, and provided remarkable protection.ConclusionsOverall, our findings provide proof of concept for a new class of analgesics that target T-type channel deubiquitination.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Inhibitors of the Influenza A Virus M2 Proton Channel Discovered Using a High-Throughput Yeast Growth Restoration Assay

Aruna D. Balgi; Jun Wang; Daphne Y. H. Cheng; Chunlong Ma; Tom A. Pfeifer; Yoko Shimizu; Hilary J. Anderson; Lawrence H. Pinto; Robert A. Lamb; William F. DeGrado; Michel Roberge

The M2 proton channel of the influenza A virus is the target of the anti-influenza drugs amantadine and rimantadine. The effectiveness of these drugs has been dramatically limited by the rapid spread of drug resistant mutations, mainly at sites S31N, V27A and L26F in the pore of the channel. Despite progress in designing inhibitors of V27A and L26F M2, there are currently no drugs targeting these mutated channels in clinical trials. Progress in developing new drugs has been hampered by the lack of a robust assay with sufficient throughput for discovery of new active chemotypes among chemical libraries and sufficient sensitivity to provide the SAR data essential for their improvement and development as drugs. In this study we adapted a yeast growth restoration assay, in which expression of the M2 channel inhibits yeast growth and exposure to an M2 channel inhibitor restores growth, into a robust and sensitive high-throughput screen for M2 channel inhibitors. A screen of over 250,000 pure chemicals and semi-purified fractions from natural extracts identified 21 active compounds comprising amantadine, rimantadine, 13 related adamantanes and 6 non-adamantanes. Of the non-adamantanes, hexamethylene amiloride and a triazine derivative represented new M2 inhibitory chemotypes that also showed antiviral activity in a plaque reduction assay. Of particular interest is the fact that the triazine derivative was not sufficiently potent for detection as an inhibitor in the traditional two electrode voltage clamp assay for M2 channel activity, but its discovery in the yeast assay led to testing of analogues of which one was as potent as amantadine.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2015

Development of fluorescent peptide substrates and assays for the key autophagy-initiating cysteine protease enzyme, ATG4B.

Lubomir Vezenkov; Nicolette S. Honson; Nag Sharwan Kumar; Damien Bosc; Suzana Kovacic; Thanh G. Nguyen; Tom A. Pfeifer; Robert N. Young

An efficient assay for monitoring the activity of the key autophagy-initiating enzyme ATG4B based on a small peptide substrate has been developed. A number of putative small fluorogenic peptide substrates were prepared and evaluated and optimized compounds showed reasonable rates of cleavage but required high enzyme concentrations which limited their value. A modified peptide substrate incorporating a less sterically demanding self-immolative element was designed and synthesized and was shown to have enhanced properties useful for evaluating inhibitors of ATG4B. Substrate cleavage was readily monitored and was linear for up to 4h but enzyme concentrations of about ten-fold higher were required compared to assays using protein substrate LC3 or analogs thereof (such as FRET-LC3). Several known inhibitors of ATG4B were evaluated using the small peptide substrate and gave IC50 values 3-7 fold higher than previously obtained values using the FRET-LC3 substrate.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2014

Identification of a Putative Tdp1 Inhibitor (CD00509) by in Vitro and Cell-Based Assays

Richard A. Dean; Hok Khim Fam; Jianghong An; Kunho Choi; Yoko Shimizu; Steven J.M. Jones; Cornelius F. Boerkoel; Heidrun Interthal; Tom A. Pfeifer

Mutations of DNA repair pathways contribute to tumorigenesis and provide a therapeutic target for synthetic lethal interactions in tumor cells. Given that tyrosyl-DNA phosphodiesterase 1 (Tdp1) repairs stalled topoisomerase-I DNA complexes, we hypothesized that inhibition of Tdp1 has synthetic lethal effects in some cancers. To test this, we screened tumor arrays for Tdp1 expression and observed that Tdp1 is expressed in many tumors, including more than 90% of human breast tumors. Subsequent chemical screening identified putative Tdp1 inhibitors. Treatment of control human mammary epithelial cells and the breast cancer cell line MCF-7 with compound CD00509 preferentially sensitized MCF-7 cells to camptothecin and decreased cell proliferation 25% more than camptothecin treatment alone. This suggests that CD00509 specifically targeted Tdp1 in vitro, and CD00509 increased the sensitivity of wild-type murine embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) to camptothecin to a degree comparable to that of Tdp1−/− MEFs. In addition, consistent with poly ADP-ribose polymerase-1 (PARP-1) collaborating with Tdp1 in DNA repair, combined Tdp1 and PARP-1 inhibition was more detrimental to MCF-7 cells than either treatment alone, whereas the combination was not additively harmful to control mammary cells. We conclude that targeting Tdp1 in anticancer therapy preferentially enhances the sensitivity of some breast cancer cells to camptothecin and may be an effective adjuvant for breast cancer therapy.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2016

Novel small molecules potentiate premature termination codon readthrough by aminoglycosides

Alireza Baradaran-Heravi; Aruna D. Balgi; Carla Zimmerman; Kunho Choi; Fahimeh S. Shidmoossavee; Jason Tan; Célia Bergeaud; Alexandra Krause; Stephane Flibotte; Yoko Shimizu; Hilary J. Anderson; Vincent Mouly; Eric Jan; Tom A. Pfeifer; James Brian Jaquith; Michel Roberge

Nonsense mutations introduce premature termination codons and underlie 11% of genetic disease cases. High concentrations of aminoglycosides can restore gene function by eliciting premature termination codon readthrough but with low efficiency. Using a high-throughput screen, we identified compounds that potentiate readthrough by aminoglycosides at multiple nonsense alleles in yeast. Chemical optimization generated phthalimide derivative CDX5-1 with activity in human cells. Alone, CDX5-1 did not induce readthrough or increase TP53 mRNA levels in HDQ-P1 cancer cells with a homozygous TP53 nonsense mutation. However, in combination with aminoglycoside G418, it enhanced readthrough up to 180-fold over G418 alone. The combination also increased readthrough at all three nonsense codons in cancer cells with other TP53 nonsense mutations, as well as in cells from rare genetic disease patients with nonsense mutations in the CLN2, SMARCAL1 and DMD genes. These findings open up the possibility of treating patients across a spectrum of genetic diseases caused by nonsense mutations.


Molecular Pharmacology | 2015

Identification and Characterization of a Selective Allosteric Antagonist of Human P2X4 Receptor Channels

Ariel R. Ase; Nicolette S. Honson; Helmi Zaghdane; Tom A. Pfeifer; Philippe Séguéla

P2X4 is an ATP-gated nonselective cation channel highly permeable to calcium. There is increasing evidence that this homomeric purinoceptor, which is expressed in several neuronal and immune cell types, is involved in chronic pain and inflammation. The current paucity of unambiguous pharmacological tools available to interrogate or modulate P2X4 function led us to pursue the search for selective antagonists. In the high-throughput screen of a compound library, we identified the phenylurea BX430 (1-(2,6-dibromo-4-isopropyl-phenyl)-3-(3-pyridyl)urea, molecular weight = 413), with antagonist properties on human P2X4-mediated calcium uptake. Patch-clamp electrophysiology confirmed direct inhibition of P2X4 currents by extracellular BX430, with submicromolar potency (IC50 = 0.54 µM). BX430 is highly selective, having virtually no functional impact on all other P2X subtypes, namely, P2X1–P2X3, P2X5, and P2X7, at 10–100 times its IC50. Unexpected species differences were noticed, as BX430 is a potent antagonist of zebrafish P2X4 but has no effect on rat and mouse P2X4 orthologs. The concentration-response curve for ATP on human P2X4 in the presence of BX430 shows an insurmountable blockade, indicating a noncompetitive allosteric mechanism of action. Using a fluorescent dye uptake assay, we observed that BX430 also effectively suppresses ATP-evoked and ivermectin-potentiated membrane permeabilization induced by P2X4 pore dilation. Finally, in single-cell calcium imaging, we validated its selective inhibitory effects on native P2X4 channels at the surface of human THP-1 cells that were differentiated into macrophages. In summary, this ligand provides a novel molecular probe to assess the specific role of P2X4 in inflammatory and neuropathic conditions, where ATP signaling has been shown to be dysfunctional.


Journal of Lipid Research | 2013

Hormonal modulators of glial ABCA1 and apoE levels

Jianjia Fan; Yoko Shimizu; Jeniffer Chan; Anna Wilkinson; Ayaka Ito; Peter Tontonoz; Edie Dullaghan; Liisa A.M. Galea; Tom A. Pfeifer; Cheryl L. Wellington

Apolipoprotein E (apoE) is the major lipid carrier in the central nervous system. As apoE plays a major role in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer disease (AD) and also mediates repair pathways after several forms of acute brain injury, modulating the expression, secretion, or function of apoE may provide potential therapeutic approaches for several neurological disorders. Here we show that progesterone and a synthetic progestin, lynestrenol, significantly induce apoE secretion from human CCF-STTG1 astrocytoma cells, whereas estrogens and the progesterone metabolite allopregnanolone have negligible effects. Intriguingly, lynestrenol also increases expression of the cholesterol transporter ABCA1 in CCF-STTG1 astrocytoma cells, primary murine glia, and immortalized murine astrocytes that express human apoE3. The progesterone receptor inhibitor RU486 attenuates the effect of progestins on apoE expression in CCF-STTG1 astrocytoma cells but has no effect on ABCA1 expression in all glial cell models tested, suggesting that the progesterone receptor (PR) may participate in apoE but does not affect ABCA1 regulation.These results suggest that selective reproductive steroid hormones have the potential to influence glial lipid homeostasis through liver X receptor-dependent and progesterone receptor-dependent pathways.


Journal of Natural Products | 2015

Tyrosyl-DNA Phosphodiesterase I Inhibitors from the Australian Plant Macropteranthes leichhardtii

Li-Wen Tian; Yunjiang Feng; Trong Duc Tran; Yoko Shimizu; Tom A. Pfeifer; Paul I. Forster; Ronald J. Quinn

Mass-directed isolation of the CH2Cl2/MeOH extract from the bark of an Australian plant, Macropteranthes leichhardtii, resulted in the purification of a new phenylpropanoid glucoside, macropteranthol (1), together with four known analogues (2-5). The structure of compound 1 was elucidated by NMR and MS data analyses and quantum chemical calculations. Compounds 3 and 5 showed inhibitory activity against tyrosyl-DNA phosphodiesterase I with IC50 values of ∼1.0 μM.

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Cheryl L. Wellington

University of British Columbia

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Michel Roberge

University of British Columbia

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Aruna D. Balgi

University of British Columbia

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Hilary J. Anderson

University of British Columbia

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Jianjia Fan

University of British Columbia

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Kunho Choi

University of British Columbia

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