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Featured researches published by Tuan Tran.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Two-Dimensional Combinatorial Screening Identifies Specific Aminoglycoside−RNA Internal Loop Partners

Matthew D. Disney; Lucas P. Labuda; Dustin J. Paul; Shane G. Poplawski; Alexei Pushechnikov; Tuan Tran; Sai Pradeep Velagapudi; Meilan Wu; Jessica L. Childs-Disney

Herein is described the identification of RNA internal loops that bind to derivatives of neomycin B, neamine, tobramycin, and kanamycin A. RNA loop-ligand partners were identified by a two-dimensional combinatorial screening (2DCS) platform that probes RNA and chemical spaces simultaneously. In 2DCS, an aminoglycoside library immobilized onto an agarose microarray was probed for binding to a 3 x 3 nucleotide RNA internal loop library (81,920 interactions probed in duplicate in a single experiment). RNAs that bound aminoglycosides were harvested from the array via gel excision. RNA internal loop preferences for three aminoglycosides were identified from statistical analysis of selected structures. This provides consensus RNA internal loops that bind these structures and include: loops with potential GA pairs for the neomycin derivative, loops with potential GG pairs for the tobramycin derivative, and pyrimidine-rich loops for the kanamycin A derivative. Results with the neamine derivative show that it binds a variety of loops, including loops that contain potential GA pairs that also recognize the neomycin B derivative. All studied selected internal loops are specific for the aminoglycoside that they were selected to bind. Specificity was quantified for 16 selected internal loops by studying their binding to each of the arrayed aminoglycosides. Specificities ranged from 2- to 80-fold with an average specificity of 20-fold. These studies show that 2DCS is a unique platform to probe RNA and chemical space simultaneously to identify specific RNA motif-ligand interactions.


Nature Communications | 2013

Induction and reversal of myotonic dystrophy type 1 pre-mRNA splicing defects by small molecules

Jessica L. Childs-Disney; Ewa Stepniak-Konieczna; Tuan Tran; Ilyas Yildirim; HaJeung Park; Catherine Z. Chen; Jason Hoskins; Noel Southall; Juan J. Marugan; Samarjit Patnaik; Wei Zheng; Christopher P. Austin; George C. Schatz; Krzysztof Sobczak; Charles A. Thornton; Matthew D. Disney

The ability to control pre-mRNA splicing with small molecules could facilitate the development of therapeutics or cell-based circuits that control gene function. Myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1) is caused by the dysregulation of alternative pre-mRNA splicing due to sequestration of muscleblind-like 1 protein (MBNL1) by expanded, non-coding r(CUG) repeats (r(CUG)exp). Here we report two small molecules that induce or ameliorate alternative splicing dysregulation. The thiophene-containing small molecule (1) inhibits the interaction of MBNL1 with its natural pre-mRNA substrates. Compound (2), a substituted naphthyridine, binds r(CUG)exp and displaces MBNL1. Structural models show that 1 binds MBNL1 in the Zn-finger domain and that 2 interacts with UU loops in r(CUG)exp. This study provides a structural framework for small molecules that target MBNL1 by mimicking r(CUG)exp and shows that targeting MBNL1 causes dysregulation of alternative splicing, suggesting that MBNL1 is thus not a suitable therapeutic target for the treatment of DM1.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2014

Targeting the r(CGG) Repeats That Cause FXTAS with Modularly Assembled Small Molecules and Oligonucleotides

Tuan Tran; Jessica L. Childs-Disney; Biao Liu; Lirui Guan; Suzanne G. Rzuczek; Matthew D. Disney

We designed small molecules that bind the structure of the RNA that causes fragile X-associated tremor ataxia syndrome (FXTAS), an incurable neuromuscular disease. FXTAS is caused by an expanded r(CGG) repeat (r(CGG)exp) that inactivates a protein regulator of alternative pre-mRNA splicing. Our designed compounds modulate r(CGG)exp toxicity in cellular models of FXTAS, and pull-down experiments confirm that they bind r(CGG)expin vivo. Importantly, compound binding does not affect translation of the downstream open reading frame (ORF). We compared molecular recognition properties of our optimal compound to oligonucleotides. Studies show that r(CGG)exp’s self-structure is a significant energetic barrier for oligonucleotide binding. A fully modified 2′-OMethyl phosphorothioate is incapable of completely reversing an FXTAS-associated splicing defect and inhibits translation of the downstream ORF, which could have deleterious effects. Taken together, these studies suggest that a small molecule that recognizes structure may be more well suited for targeting highly structured RNAs that require strand invasion by a complementary oligonucleotide.


ACS central science | 2017

Defining RNA–Small Molecule Affinity Landscapes Enables Design of a Small Molecule Inhibitor of an Oncogenic Noncoding RNA

Sai Pradeep Velagapudi; Yiling Luo; Tuan Tran; Hafeez S. Haniff; Yoshio Nakai; Mohammad Fallahi; Gustavo J. Martinez; Jessica L. Childs-Disney; Matthew D. Disney

RNA drug targets are pervasive in cells, but methods to design small molecules that target them are sparse. Herein, we report a general approach to score the affinity and selectivity of RNA motif–small molecule interactions identified via selection. Named High Throughput Structure–Activity Relationships Through Sequencing (HiT-StARTS), HiT-StARTS is statistical in nature and compares input nucleic acid sequences to selected library members that bind a ligand via high throughput sequencing. The approach allowed facile definition of the fitness landscape of hundreds of thousands of RNA motif–small molecule binding partners. These results were mined against folded RNAs in the human transcriptome and identified an avid interaction between a small molecule and the Dicer nuclease-processing site in the oncogenic microRNA (miR)-18a hairpin precursor, which is a member of the miR-17-92 cluster. Application of the small molecule, Targapremir-18a, to prostate cancer cells inhibited production of miR-18a from the cluster, de-repressed serine/threonine protein kinase 4 protein (STK4), and triggered apoptosis. Profiling the cellular targets of Targapremir-18a via Chemical Cross-Linking and Isolation by Pull Down (Chem-CLIP), a covalent small molecule–RNA cellular profiling approach, and other studies showed specific binding of the compound to the miR-18a precursor, revealing broadly applicable factors that govern small molecule drugging of noncoding RNAs.


Chem | 2018

A Massively Parallel Selection of Small Molecule-RNA Motif Binding Partners Informs Design of an Antiviral from Sequence

Jessica L. Childs-Disney; Tuan Tran; Balayeshwanth R. Vummidi; Sai Pradeep Velagapudi; Hafeez S. Haniff; Yasumasa Matsumoto; Gogce Crynen; Mark R. Southern; Avik Biswas; Zi-Fu Wang; Timothy L. Tellinghuisen; Matthew D. Disney

Many RNAs cause disease; however, RNA is rarely exploited as a small-molecule drug target. Our programmatic focus is to define privileged RNA motif small-molecule interactions to enable the rational design of compounds that modulate RNA biology starting from only sequence. We completed a massive, library-versus-library screen that probed over 50 million binding events between RNA motifs and small molecules. The resulting data provide a rich encyclopedia of small-molecule RNA recognition patterns, defining chemotypes and RNA motifs that confer selective, avid binding. The resulting interaction maps were mined against the entire viral genome of hepatitis C virus (HCV). A small molecule was identified that avidly bound RNA motifs present in the HCV 30 UTR and inhibited viral replication while having no effect on host cells. Collectively, this study represents the first whole-genome pattern recognition between small molecules and RNA folds.


BMC Structural Biology | 2016

Controlled dehydration improves the diffraction quality of two RNA crystals.

HaJeung Park; Tuan Tran; Jun Hyuck Lee; Hyun Park; Matthew D. Disney

BackgroundPost-crystallization dehydration methods, applying either vapor diffusion or humidity control devices, have been widely used to improve the diffraction quality of protein crystals. Despite the fact that RNA crystals tend to diffract poorly, there is a dearth of reports on the application of dehydration methods to improve the diffraction quality of RNA crystals.ResultsWe use dehydration techniques with a Free Mounting System (FMS, a humidity control device) to recover the poor diffraction quality of RNA crystals. These approaches were applied to RNA constructs that model various RNA-mediated repeat expansion disorders.ConclusionThe method we describe herein could serve as a general tool to improve diffraction quality of RNA crystals to facilitate structure determinations.


Cell Reports | 2013

Sequestration of DROSHA and DGCR8 by expanded CGG RNA Repeats Alters microRNA processing in fragile X-associated tremor/ataxia syndrome

Chantal Sellier; Fernande Freyermuth; Ricardos Tabet; Tuan Tran; Fang He; Frank Ruffenach; Violaine Alunni; Hervé Moine; Christelle Thibault; Adeline Page; Flora Tassone; Rob Willemsen; Matthew D. Disney; Paul J. Hagerman; Peter K. Todd; Nicolas Charlet-Berguerand


ACS Chemical Biology | 2012

A Small Molecule That Targets r(CGG)exp and Improves Defects in Fragile X-Associated Tremor Ataxia Syndrome

Matthew D. Disney; Biao Liu; Wang-Yong Yang; Chantal Sellier; Tuan Tran; Nicolas Charlet-Berguerand; Jessica L. Childs-Disney


ACS Chemical Biology | 2014

Structure of the Myotonic Dystrophy Type 2 RNA and Designed Small Molecules That Reduce Toxicity

Jessica L. Childs-Disney; Ilyas Yildirim; HaJeung Park; Jeremy R. Lohman; Lirui Guan; Tuan Tran; Partha S. Sarkar; George C. Schatz; Matthew D. Disney


Biochemistry | 2010

Two-dimensional combinatorial screening of a bacterial rRNA A-site-like motif library: defining privileged asymmetric internal loops that bind aminoglycosides.

Tuan Tran; Matthew D. Disney

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Matthew D. Disney

Scripps Research Institute

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HaJeung Park

Scripps Research Institute

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Hafeez S. Haniff

Scripps Research Institute

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Jeremy R. Lohman

Scripps Research Institute

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Lirui Guan

Scripps Research Institute

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