Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Toni Kline is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Toni Kline.


Cell Host & Microbe | 2008

An inhibitor of gram-negative bacterial virulence protein secretion.

Heather B. Felise; Hai V. Nguyen; Richard A. Pfuetzner; Kathleen C. Barry; Stona R. Jackson; Marie Pierre Blanc; Philip A. Bronstein; Toni Kline; Samuel I. Miller

Bacterial virulence mechanisms are attractive targets for antibiotic development because they are required for the pathogenesis of numerous global infectious disease agents. The bacterial secretion systems used to assemble the surface structures that promote adherence and deliver protein virulence effectors to host cells could comprise one such therapeutic target. In this study, we developed and performed a high-throughput screen of small molecule libraries and identified one compound, a 2-imino-5-arylidene thiazolidinone that blocked secretion and virulence functions of a wide array of animal and plant Gram-negative bacterial pathogens. This compound inhibited type III secretion-dependent functions, with the exception of flagellar motility, and type II secretion-dependent functions, suggesting that its target could be an outer membrane component conserved between these two secretion systems. This work provides a proof of concept that compounds with a broad spectrum of activity against Gram-negative bacterial secretion systems could be developed to prevent and treat bacterial diseases.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2006

Molecular Validation of LpxC as an Antibacterial Drug Target in Pseudomonas aeruginosa

Khisimuzi Mdluli; Pamela R. Witte; Toni Kline; Adam W. Barb; Alice L. Erwin; Bryce E. Mansfield; Amanda L. McClerren; Michael C. Pirrung; L. Nathan Tumey; Paul Warrener; Christian R. H. Raetz; C. Kendall Stover

ABSTRACT LpxC [UDP-3-O-(R-3-hydroxymyristoyl)-GlcNAc deacetylase] is a metalloamidase that catalyzes the first committed step in the biosynthesis of the lipid A component of lipopolysaccharide. A previous study (H. R. Onishi, B. A. Pelak, L. S. Gerckens, L. L. Silver, F. M. Kahan, M. H. Chen, A. A. Patchett, S. M. Galloway, S. A. Hyland, M. S. Anderson, and C. R. H. Raetz, Science 274:980-982, 1996) identified a series of synthetic LpxC-inhibitory molecules that were bactericidal for Escherichia coli. These molecules did not inhibit the growth of Pseudomonas aeruginosa and were therefore not developed further as antibacterial drugs. The inactivity of the LpxC inhibitors for P. aeruginosa raised the possibility that LpxC activity might not be essential for all gram-negative bacteria. By placing the lpxC gene of P. aeruginosa under tight control of an arabinose-inducible promoter, we demonstrated the essentiality of LpxC activity for P. aeruginosa. It was found that compound L-161,240, the most potent inhibitor from the previous study, was active against a P. aeruginosa construct in which the endogenous lpxC gene was inactivated and in which LpxC activity was supplied by the lpxC gene from E. coli. Conversely, an E. coli construct in which growth was dependent on the P. aeruginosa lpxC gene was resistant to the compound. The differential activities of L-161,240 against the two bacterial species are thus the result primarily of greater potency toward the E. coli enzyme rather than of differences in the intrinsic resistance of the bacteria toward antibacterial compounds due to permeability or efflux. These data validate P. aeruginosa LpxC as a target for novel antibiotic drugs and should help direct the design of inhibitors against clinically important gram-negative bacteria.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

Substituted 2-Imino-5-arylidenethiazolidin-4-one Inhibitors of Bacterial Type III Secretion

Toni Kline; Heather B. Felise; Kathleen C. Barry; Stona R. Jackson; Hai V. Nguyen; Samuel I. Miller

Diverse species of pathogenic Gram-negative bacteria use secretion systems to export a variety of protein toxins and virulence factors that help establish and maintain infection. Disruption of such secretion systems is a potentially effective therapeutic strategy. We developed a high-throughput screen and identified a tris-aryl substituted 2-imino-5-arylidenethiazolidin-4-one, compound 1, as an inhibitor of the type III secretion system. Expansion of this chemotype enabled us to define the essential pharmacophore for type III secretion inhibition by this structural class. A synthetic diversity set helped us identify N-3 as the most permissive locus and led to the design of a panel of novel N-3-dipeptide-modified congeners with improved activity and physiochemical properties. We now report on the synthesis of these compounds, including a novel solid phase approach to the rapid generation of the dipeptide-thiazolidinone hybrids, and their in vitro characterization as inhibitors of type III secretion in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Tethered thiazolidinone dimers as inhibitors of the bacterial type III secretion system.

Toni Kline; Kathleen C. Barry; Stona R. Jackson; Heather B. Felise; Hai V. Nguyen; Samuel I. Miller

Disruption of protein-protein interactions by small molecules is achievable but presents significant hurdles for effective compound design. In earlier work we identified a series of thiazolidinone inhibitors of the bacterial type III secretion system (T3SS) and demonstrated that this scaffold had the potential to be expanded into molecules with broad-spectrum anti-Gram negative activity. We now report on one series of thiazolidinone analogs in which the heterocycle is presented as a dimer at the termini of a series of linkers. Many of these dimers inhibited the T3SS-dependent secretion of a virulence protein at concentrations lower than that of the original monomeric compound identified in our screen.


Nucleosides, Nucleotides & Nucleic Acids | 2008

Design and Synthesis of bis-carbamate Analogs of Cyclic bis-(3′-5′)-Diguanylic Acid (c-di-GMP) and the Acyclic Dimer PGPG

Toni Kline; Stona R. Jackson; Wei Deng; Christophe L. M. J. Verlinde; Samuel I. Miller

The bacterial second messenger cyclic bis-(3′-5′)-diguanylic acid (c-di-GMP) regulates diverse Gram-negative bacterial virulence functions. The pathways that control, or are controlled by, c-di-GMP suggest that c-di-GMP signaling systems may encompass potential drug targets. It is presently undetermined, however, whether up- or down-modulation of c-di-GMP signaling would be the desired therapeutic state. We addressed potential drug target validation by synthesizing nonhydrolysable carbamate analogs of both the cyclic dinucleotide and the acyclic (seco) dinucleotide. A molecular docking simulation of the carbamate isostere suggests that this analog is capable of assuming the correct conformation and pose at a c-di-GMP binding site.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008

Synthesis of and evaluation of lipid A modification by 4-substituted 4-deoxy arabinose analogs as potential inhibitors of bacterial polymyxin resistance

Toni Kline; M. S. Trent; C. M. Stead; M. S. Lee; Marcelo C. Sousa; Heather B. Felise; Hai V. Nguyen; Samuel I. Miller

Three sets of novel 4-deoxy-l-arabinose analogs were synthesized and evaluated as potential inhibitors of the bacterial resistance mechanism in which lipid A, on the outer membrane, is modified with 4-amino-4-deoxy-l-arabinose (l-Ara4N). One compound diminished the transfer of l-Ara4N onto lipid A. These results suggest that small molecules might be designed that would effect the same reversal of bacterial resistance observed in genetic knockouts.


Current Drug Targets | 2012

The type III secretion system as a source of novel antibacterial drug targets.

Toni Kline; Heather B. Felise; Sarah Sanowar; Samuel I. Miller

Type III Secretion Systems (T3SSs) are highly organized multi-protein nanomachines which translocate effector proteins from the bacterial cytosol directly into host cells. These systems are required for the pathogenesis of a wide array of Gram-negative bacterial pathogens, and thus have attracted attention as potential antibacterial drug targets. A decade of research has enabled the identification of natural products, conventional small molecule drug-like structures, and proteins that inhibit T3SSs. The mechanism(s) of action and molecular target(s) of the majority of these inhibitors remain to be determined. At the same time, structural biology methods are providing an increasingly detailed picture of the functional arrangement of the T3SS component proteins. The confluence of these two research areas may ultimately identify non-classical drug targets and facilitate the development of novel therapeutics.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2007

Chloramphenicol Is a Substrate for a Novel Nitroreductase Pathway in Haemophilus influenzae

Arnold L. Smith; Alice L. Erwin; Toni Kline; William C. T. Unrath; Kevin L. Nelson; Allan Weber; William N. Howald

ABSTRACT The p-nitroaromatic antibiotic chloramphenicol has been used extensively to treat life-threatening infections due to Haemophilus influenzae and Neisseria meningitidis; its mechanism of action is the inhibition of protein synthesis. We found that during incubation with H. influenzae cells and lysates, chloramphenicol is converted to a 4-aminophenyl allylic alcohol that lacks antibacterial activity. The allylic alcohol moiety undergoes facile re-addition of water to restore the 1,3-diol, as well as further dehydration driven by the aromatic amine to form the iminoquinone. Several Neisseria species and most chloramphenicol-susceptible Haemophilus species, but not Escherichia coli or other gram-negative or gram-positive bacteria we examined, were also found to metabolize chloramphenicol. The products of chloramphenicol metabolism by species other than H. influenzae have not yet been characterized. The strains reducing the antibiotic were chloramphenicol susceptible, indicating that the pathway does not appear to mediate chloramphenicol resistance. The role of this novel nitroreductase pathway in the physiology of H. influenzae and Neisseria species is unknown. Further understanding of the H. influenzae chloramphenicol reduction pathway will contribute to our knowledge of the diversity of prokaryotic nitroreductase mechanisms.


bioRxiv | 2018

Identification of Small Molecule Modulators of Diguanylate Cyclase by FRET-based High-Throughput-Screening

Matthias Christen; Cassandra Kamischke; Hemantha D. Kulasekara; Kathleen C. Olivas; Bridget R. Kulasekara; Beat Christen; Toni Kline; Samuel I. Miller

The bacterial second messenger cyclic diguanosine monophosphate (c-di-GMP) is a key regulator of cellular motility, the cell cycle, and biofilm formation with its resultant antibiotic tolerance, which may make chronic infections difficult to treat. Therefore, diguanylate cyclases, which regulate the spatiotemporal production of c-di-GMP, may be attractive drug targets to control biofilm formation that is part of chronic infections. In this paper, we present a FRET-based biochemical high-throughput screening approach coupled with detailed structure-activity studies to identify synthetic small molecule modulators of the diguanylate cyclase, DgcA, from Caulobacter crescentus. We identified a set of 7 small molecules that in the low µM range regulate DgcA enzymatic activity. Subsequent structure activity studies on selected scaffolds revealed a remarkable diversity of modulatory behaviors, including slight chemical substitutions that revert the effects from allosteric enzyme inhibition to activation. The compounds identified represent novel chemotypes and are potentially developable into chemical genetic tools for the dissection of c-di-GMP signaling networks and alteration of c-di-GMP associated phenotypes. In sum, our studies underline the importance for detailed mechanism of action studies for inhibitors of c-di-GMP signaling and demonstrate the complex interplay between synthetic small molecules and the regulatory mechanisms that control the activity of diguanylate cyclases.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2006

Development and Properties of β-Glucuronide Linkers for Monoclonal Antibody−Drug Conjugates

Scott C. Jeffrey; Jamie B. Andreyka; Starr X. Bernhardt; Kim M. Kissler; Toni Kline; Joel S. Lenox; Ruth Moser; Minh T. Nguyen; Nicole M. Okeley; Ivan Stone; Xinqun Zhang; Peter D. Senter

Collaboration


Dive into the Toni Kline's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Rajeev S. Bhide

University of Wisconsin-Madison

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge