Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Tomoko Komiyama is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Tomoko Komiyama.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2013

Activation of Hsp70 reduces neurotoxicity by promoting polyglutamine protein degradation

Adrienne M. Wang; Yoshinari Miyata; Susan Klinedinst; Hwei Ming Peng; Jason P. Chua; Tomoko Komiyama; Xiaokai Li; Yoshihiro Morishima; Diane E. Merry; William B. Pratt; Yoichi Osawa; Catherine A. Collins; Jason E. Gestwicki; Andrew P. Lieberman

We sought novel strategies to reduce levels of the polyglutamine androgen receptor (polyQ AR) and achieve therapeutic benefits in models of spinobulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA), a protein aggregation neurodegenerative disorder. Proteostasis of the polyQ AR is controlled by the Hsp90/Hsp70-based chaperone machinery, but mechanisms regulating the protein’s turnover are incompletely understood. We demonstrate that overexpression of Hip, a co-chaperone that enhances binding of Hsp70 to its substrates, promotes client protein ubiquitination and polyQ AR clearance. Furthermore, we identify a small molecule that acts similarly to Hip by allosterically promoting Hsp70 binding to unfolded substrates. Like Hip, this synthetic co-chaperone enhances client protein ubiquitination and polyQ AR degradation. Both genetic and pharmacologic approaches targeting Hsp70 alleviate toxicity in a Drosophila model of SBMA. These findings highlight the therapeutic potential of allosteric regulators of Hsp70, and provide new insights into the role of the chaperone machinery in protein quality control.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Inhibition of Furin/Proprotein Convertase-catalyzed Surface and Intracellular Processing by Small Molecules

Tomoko Komiyama; Julia M. Coppola; Martha J. Larsen; Marcian E. Van Dort; Brian D. Ross; Robert Day; Alnawaz Rehemtulla; Robert S. Fuller

Furin is a ubiquitously expressed proprotein convertase (PC) that plays a vital role in numerous disease processes including cancer metastasis, bacterial toxin activation (e.g. anthrax and Pseudomonas), and viral propagation (e.g. avian influenza and human immunodeficiency virus). To identify small molecule inhibitors of furin and related processing enzymes, we performed high-throughput screens of chemical diversity libraries utilizing both enzyme-based and cell-based assays. The screens identified partially overlapping sets of compounds that were further characterized for affinity, mechanism, and efficacy in additional cellular processing assays. Dicoumarols were identified as a class of compounds that inhibited furin non-competitively and reversibly with Ki values in the micromolar range. These compounds inhibited furin/furin-like activity both at the cell surface (protecting against anthrax toxin) and in the secretory pathway (blocking processing of the metastasis factor membrane-type 1 matrix metalloproteinase/MT1-MMP) at concentrations close to Ki values. Compounds tested exhibited distinct patterns of inhibition of other furin-family PCs (rat PACE4, human PC5/6 and human PC7), showing that dicoumarol derivatives might be developed as either generic or selective inhibitors of the PCs. The extensive clinical use, high bioavailability and relatively low toxicity of dicoumarols suggests that the dicoumarol structure will be a good starting point for development of drug-like inhibitors of furin and other PCs that can act both intracellularly and at the cell surface.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Optimization of protease-inhibitor interactions by randomizing adventitious contacts

Tomoko Komiyama; Bryan VanderLugt; Martin Fugère; Robert W. Day; Randal J. Kaufman; Robert S. Fuller

Polypeptide protease inhibitors are often found to inhibit targets with which they did not coevolve, as in the case of high-affinity inhibition of bacterial subtilisin by the leech inhibitor eglin c. Two kinds of contacts exist in such complexes: (i) reactive site loop-active site contacts and (ii) interactions outside of these that form the broader enzyme-inhibitor interface. We hypothesized that the second class of “adventitious” contacts could be optimized to generate significant increases in affinity for a target enzyme or discrimination of an inhibitor for closely related target proteases. We began with a modified eglin c, Arg-42–Arg-45–eglin, in which the reactive site loop had been optimized for subtilisin-related processing proteases of the Kex2/furin family. We randomized 10 potential adventitious contact residues and screened for inhibition of soluble human furin. Substitutions at one of these sites, Y49, were also screened against yeast Kex2 and human PC7. These screens identified not only variants that exhibited increased affinity (up to 20-fold), but also species that exhibited enhanced selectivity, that is, increased discrimination between the target enzymes (up to 41-fold for furin versus PC7 and 20-fold for PC7 versus furin). One variant, Asp-49–Arg-42–Arg-45–eglin, exhibited a Ki of 310 pM for furin and blocked furin-dependent processing of von Willebrand factor in COS-1 cells when added to the culture medium of the cells. The exploitation of adventitious contact sites may provide a versatile technique for developing potent, selective inhibitors for newly discovered proteases and could in principle be applied to optimize numerous protein–protein interactions.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2013

Inhibitors of Difficult Protein–Protein Interactions Identified by High-Throughput Screening of Multiprotein Complexes

Laura C. Cesa; Srikanth Patury; Tomoko Komiyama; Atta Ahmad; Erik R. P. Zuiderweg; Jason E. Gestwicki

Protein-protein interactions (PPIs) are important in all aspects of cellular function, and there is interest in finding inhibitors of these contacts. However, PPIs with weak affinities and/or large interfaces have traditionally been more resistant to the discovery of inhibitors, partly because it is more challenging to develop high-throughput screening (HTS) methods that permit direct measurements of these physical interactions. Here, we explored whether the functional consequences of a weak PPI might be used as a surrogate for binding. As a model, we used the bacterial ATPase DnaK and its partners DnaJ and GrpE. Both DnaJ and GrpE bind DnaK and catalytically accelerate its ATP cycling, so we used stimulated nucleotide turnover to indirectly report on these PPIs. In pilot screens, we identified compounds that block activation of DnaK by either DnaJ or GrpE. Interestingly, at least one of these molecules blocked binding of DnaK to DnaJ, while another compound disrupted allostery between DnaK and GrpE without altering the physical interaction. These findings suggest that the activity of a reconstituted multiprotein complex might be used in some cases to identify allosteric inhibitors of challenging PPIs.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2005

Protection from Anthrax Toxin-Mediated Killing of Macrophages by the Combined Effects of Furin Inhibitors and Chloroquine

Tomoko Komiyama; Joel A. Swanson; Robert S. Fuller

ABSTRACT Cell surface proteolytic processing of anthrax protective antigen by furin or other furin-related proteases is required for its oligomerization, endocytosis, and function as a translocon for anthrax lethal and edema factors. Countering toxin lethality is essential to developing effective chemotherapies for anthrax infections that have proceeded beyond the stage at which antibiotics are effective. The primary target for toxin is the macrophage, which can be killed by lethal factor via both necrotic and apoptotic pathways. Here we show that three high-affinity inhibitors of furin efficiently blocked killing of murine J774A.1 macrophages by recombinant protective antigen plus lethal factor: RRD-eglin and RRDG-eglin, developed by engineering the protein protease inhibitor eglin c, and the peptide boronic acid inhibitor acetyl-Arg-Glu-Lys-boroArg pinanediol. Inhibition of killing was dose dependent and correlated with prevention of protective antigen processing. Previous studies have shown that weak bases, such as chloroquine, which neutralize acidic compartments, also interfere with toxin-dependent killing. Here we show that combining furin inhibitors and chloroquine strongly augments the inhibition of toxin-dependent killing, suggesting that combined use of antifurin drugs and chloroquine might provide enhanced therapeutic benefits. Reversible furin inhibitors protected against anthrax toxin killing for at least 5 h, but by 8 h, toxin-dependent killing resumed even though furin inhibitors were still active. An irreversible chloromethylketone inhibitor did not exhibit this loss of protection.


ChemBioChem | 2002

Protease inhibitors formed in situ from copper and tridentate chelates: a generalized approach towards metal-based pharmaceuticals.

Christopher J. Brinkerhoff; Paul Podsiadlo; Tomoko Komiyama; Robert S. Fuller; Ofer Blum

Metal-based pharmaceuticals are expected to bind to their targets with high affinity, which may translate to reduced drug intake and safer treatment. Their distinct mode of action suggests they have excellent prospects in therapy against drug-resistant pathogens. By their sheer number, they vastly increase the pool from which new drugs can be chosen. Metal compounds find wide use in medical diagnostics. However, these compounds are coordinatively saturated and unable to bind biological molecules and bring about therapeutic effects. Of the few metallodrugs currently in use, most target DNA. We therefore set out to develop a generalized methodology to obtain protein-targeted, metal-based drugs. To eliminate any fear of toxicity associated with ingesting metals, our strategy involves a prodrug intended to extract the metal from within the patients body. Our in vitro model for this new approach involves the in situ formation of a ternary complex containing a chelate (the prodrug), a metal, and the target enzyme. We now report that the readily available tridentate chelates 2,2 :6 ,2TM-terpyridine (TERPY), 2-methyl-1-[methyl(2-pyridine-2-yl-ethyl)amino]-propane-2-thiol (PATH), and 1-[2-pyridyl]-piperazine (PyPP) coordinate Cu ions in situ to enhance the potency of Kex2


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2018

High Throughput Screen for Inhibitors of Protein-Protein Interactions in a Reconstituted Heat Shock Protein 70 (Hsp70) Complex

Isabelle R. Taylor; Bryan M. Dunyak; Tomoko Komiyama; Hao Shao; Xu Ran; Victoria A. Assimon; Chakrapani Kalyanaraman; Jennifer N. Rauch; Matthew P. Jacobson; Erik R. P. Zuiderweg; Jason E. Gestwicki

Protein–protein interactions (PPIs) are an important category of putative drug targets. Improvements in high-throughput screening (HTS) have significantly accelerated the discovery of inhibitors for some categories of PPIs. However, methods suitable for screening multiprotein complexes (e.g. those composed of three or more different components) have been slower to emerge. Here, we explored an approach that uses reconstituted multiprotein complexes (RMPCs). As a model system, we chose heat shock protein 70 (Hsp70), which is an ATP-dependent molecular chaperone that interacts with co-chaperones, including DnaJA2 and BAG2. The PPIs between Hsp70 and its co-chaperones stimulate nucleotide cycling. Thus, to re-create this ternary protein system, we combined purified human Hsp70 with DnaJA2 and BAG2 and then screened 100,000 diverse compounds for those that inhibited co-chaperone–stimulated ATPase activity. This HTS campaign yielded two compounds with promising inhibitory activity. Interestingly, one inhibited the PPI between Hsp70 and DnaJA2, whereas the other seemed to inhibit the Hsp70–BAG2 complex. Using secondary assays, we found that both compounds inhibited the PPIs through binding to allosteric sites on Hsp70, but neither affected Hsp70s intrinsic ATPase activity. Our RMPC approach expands the toolbox of biochemical HTS methods available for studying difficult-to-target PPIs in multiprotein complexes. The results may also provide a starting point for new chemical probes of the Hsp70 system.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Predicting the reactivity of proteins from their sequence alone: Kazal family of protein inhibitors of serine proteinases

Stephen M. Lu; Wuyuan Lu; M. A. Qasim; Stephen R. Anderson; Izydor Apostol; Wojciech Ardelt; Theresa L. Bigler; Yi Wen Chiang; James Cook; Michael N. G. James; Ikunoshin Kato; Clyde Kelly; William Kohr; Tomoko Komiyama; Tiao-Yin Lin; Michio Ogawa; Jacek Otlewski; Soon-Jae Park; Sabiha Qasim; Michael Ranjbar; Misao Tashiro; Nicholas Warne; Harry Whatley; Anna Wieczorek; Maciej Wieczorek; Tadeusz Wilusz; Richard Wynn; Wenlei Zhang; Michael Laskowski


Biochemistry | 2000

Engineered eglin c variants inhibit yeast and human proprotein processing proteases, Kex2 and furin.

Tomoko Komiyama; Robert S. Fuller


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

Furin inhibition by compounds of copper and zinc

Paul Podsiadlo; Tomoko Komiyama; Robert S. Fuller; Ofer Blum

Collaboration


Dive into the Tomoko Komiyama's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Diane E. Merry

Thomas Jefferson University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hwei Ming Peng

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ofer Blum

University of Michigan

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge