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Dive into the research topics where Vickie Brown-Driver is active.

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Featured researches published by Vickie Brown-Driver.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2006

Discovery of FabH/FabF Inhibitors from Natural Products

Katherine Young; Hiranthi Jayasuriya; John G. Ondeyka; Kithsiri Herath; Chaowei Zhang; Srinivas Kodali; Andrew Galgoci; Ronald E. Painter; Vickie Brown-Driver; Robert T. Yamamoto; Lynn L. Silver; Yingcong Zheng; Judith I. Ventura; Janet M. Sigmund; Sookhee Ha; Angela Basilio; Francisca Vicente; José R. Tormo; Fernando Pelaez; Phil Youngman; Doris F. Cully; John F. Barrett; Dennis M. Schmatz; Sheo B. Singh; Jun Wang

ABSTRACT Condensing enzymes are essential in type II fatty acid synthesis and are promising targets for antibacterial drug discovery. Recently, a new approach using a xylose-inducible plasmid to express antisense RNA in Staphylococcus aureus has been described; however, the actual mechanism was not delineated. In this paper, the mechanism of decreased target protein production by expression of antisense RNA was investigated using Northern blotting. This revealed that the antisense RNA acts posttranscriptionally by targeting mRNA, leading to 5′ mRNA degradation. Using this technology, a two-plate assay was developed in order to identify FabF/FabH target-specific cell-permeable inhibitors by screening of natural product extracts. Over 250,000 natural product fermentation broths were screened and then confirmed in biochemical assays, yielding a hit rate of 0.1%. All known natural product FabH and FabF inhibitors, including cerulenin, thiolactomycin, thiotetromycin, and Tü3010, were discovered using this whole-cell mechanism-based screening approach. Phomallenic acids, which are new inhibitors of FabF, were also discovered. These new inhibitors exhibited target selectivity in the gel elongation assay and in the whole-cell-based two-plate assay. Phomallenic acid C showed good antibacterial activity, about 20-fold better than that of thiolactomycin and cerulenin, against S. aureus. It exhibited a spectrum of antibacterial activity against clinically important pathogens including methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, Bacillus subtilis, and Haemophilus influenzae.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2008

In Vitro Activity of TR-700, the Antibacterial Moiety of the Prodrug TR-701, against Linezolid-Resistant Strains

Karen J. Shaw; S. Poppe; R. Schaadt; Vickie Brown-Driver; J. Finn; C. M. Pillar; Dean L. Shinabarger; G. Zurenko

ABSTRACT TR-701 is the orally active prodrug of TR-700, a novel oxazolidinone that demonstrates four- to eightfold-greater activity than linezolid (LZD) against Staphylococcus and Enterococcus spp. In this study evaluating the in vitro sensitivity of LZD-resistant isolates, TR-700 demonstrated 8- to 16-fold-greater potency than LZD against all strains tested, including methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), strains of MRSA carrying the mobile cfr methyltransferase gene, and vancomycin-resistant enterococci. The MIC90 for TR-700 against LZD-resistant S. aureus was 2 μg/ml, demonstrating the utility of TR-700 against LZD-resistant strains. A model of TR-700 binding to 23S rRNA suggests that the increased potency of TR-700 is due to additional target site interactions and that TR-700 binding is less reliant on target residues associated with resistance to LZD.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Tricyclic GyrB/ParE (TriBE) inhibitors: a new class of broad-spectrum dual-targeting antibacterial agents.

Leslie W. Tari; Xiaoming Li; Michael Trzoss; Daniel C. Bensen; Zhiyong Chen; Thanh Lam; Junhu Zhang; Suk Joong Lee; Grayson Hough; Doug Phillipson; Suzanne Akers-Rodriguez; Mark L. Cunningham; Bryan P. Kwan; Kirk J. Nelson; Amanda Castellano; Jeff B. Locke; Vickie Brown-Driver; Timothy M. Murphy; Voon S. Ong; Chris M. Pillar; Dean L. Shinabarger; Jay Nix; Felice C. Lightstone; Sergio E. Wong; Toan B. Nguyen; Karen J. Shaw; John T. Finn

Increasing resistance to every major class of antibiotics and a dearth of novel classes of antibacterial agents in development pipelines has created a dwindling reservoir of treatment options for serious bacterial infections. The bacterial type IIA topoisomerases, DNA gyrase and topoisomerase IV, are validated antibacterial drug targets with multiple prospective drug binding sites, including the catalytic site targeted by the fluoroquinolone antibiotics. However, growing resistance to fluoroquinolones, frequently mediated by mutations in the drug-binding site, is increasingly limiting the utility of this antibiotic class, prompting the search for other inhibitor classes that target different sites on the topoisomerase complexes. The highly conserved ATP-binding subunits of DNA gyrase (GyrB) and topoisomerase IV (ParE) have long been recognized as excellent candidates for the development of dual-targeting antibacterial agents with broad-spectrum potential. However, to date, no natural product or small molecule inhibitors targeting these sites have succeeded in the clinic, and no inhibitors of these enzymes have yet been reported with broad-spectrum antibacterial activity encompassing the majority of Gram-negative pathogens. Using structure-based drug design (SBDD), we have created a novel dual-targeting pyrimidoindole inhibitor series with exquisite potency against GyrB and ParE enzymes from a broad range of clinically important pathogens. Inhibitors from this series demonstrate potent, broad-spectrum antibacterial activity against Gram-positive and Gram-negative pathogens of clinical importance, including fluoroquinolone resistant and multidrug resistant strains. Lead compounds have been discovered with clinical potential; they are well tolerated in animals, and efficacious in Gram-negative infection models.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

Pyrrolopyrimidine inhibitors of DNA gyrase B (GyrB) and topoisomerase IV (ParE), Part II: development of inhibitors with broad spectrum, Gram-negative antibacterial activity.

Micheal Trzoss; Daniel C. Bensen; Xiaoming Li; Zhiyong Chen; Thanh Lam; Junhu Zhang; Christopher J. Creighton; Mark L. Cunningham; Bryan P. Kwan; Mark Stidham; Kirk J. Nelson; Vickie Brown-Driver; Amanda Castellano; Karen J. Shaw; Felice C. Lightstone; Sergio E. Wong; Toan B. Nguyen; John T. Finn; Leslie W. Tari

The structurally related bacterial topoisomerases DNA gyrase (GyrB) and topoisomerase IV (ParE) have long been recognized as prime candidates for the development of broad spectrum antibacterial agents. However, GyrB/ParE targeting antibacterials with spectrum that encompasses robust Gram-negative pathogens have not yet been reported. Using structure-based inhibitor design, we optimized a novel pyrrolopyrimidine inhibitor series with potent, dual targeting activity against GyrB and ParE. Compounds were discovered with broad antibacterial spectrum, including activity against Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Acinetobacter baumannii and Escherichia coli. Herein we describe the SAR of the pyrrolopyrimidine series as it relates to key structural and electronic features necessary for Gram-negative antibacterial activity.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2010

Staphylococcus aureus TargetArray: Comprehensive Differential Essential Gene Expression as a Mechanistic Tool To Profile Antibacterials

H. Howard Xu; John D. Trawick; Robert Haselbeck; R. Allyn Forsyth; Robert T. Yamamoto; Rich Archer; Joe Patterson; Molly Allen; Jamie M. Froelich; Ian A. Taylor; Danny Nakaji; Randy Maile; G C Kedar; Marshall Pilcher; Vickie Brown-Driver; Melissa McCarthy; Amy Files; David Robbins; Paula King; Susan Sillaots; Cheryl L. Malone; Carlos Zamudio; Terry Roemer; Liangsu Wang; Philip J. Youngman; Daniel Wall

ABSTRACT The widespread emergence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria and a lack of new pharmaceutical development have catalyzed a need for new and innovative approaches for antibiotic drug discovery. One bottleneck in antibiotic discovery is the lack of a rapid and comprehensive method to identify compound mode of action (MOA). Since a hallmark of antibiotic action is as an inhibitor of essential cellular targets and processes, we identify a set of 308 essential genes in the clinically important pathogen Staphylococcus aureus. A total of 446 strains differentially expressing these genes were constructed in a comprehensive platform of sensitized and resistant strains. A subset of strains allows either target underexpression or target overexpression by heterologous promoter replacements with a suite of tetracycline-regulatable promoters. A further subset of 236 antisense RNA-expressing clones allows knockdown expression of cognate targets. Knockdown expression confers selective antibiotic hypersensitivity, while target overexpression confers resistance. The antisense strains were configured into a TargetArray in which pools of sensitized strains were challenged in fitness tests. A rapid detection method measures strain responses toward antibiotics. The TargetArray antibiotic fitness test results show mechanistically informative biological fingerprints that allow MOA elucidation.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2011

Regulation of mprF by Antisense RNA Restores Daptomycin Susceptibility to Daptomycin-Resistant Isolates of Staphylococcus aureus

Aileen Rubio; Mary Conrad; Robert Haselbeck; G C Kedar; Vickie Brown-Driver; John Finn; Jared Silverman

ABSTRACT Mutations in mprF have been shown to result in reduced susceptibility to daptomycin and other cationic antibacterials. An mprF antisense-inducible plasmid was constructed and used to demonstrate that depletion of mprF can reestablish susceptibility to daptomycin. Inducing antisense to mprF also resulted in increased susceptibility to vancomycin and gentamicin but, paradoxically, decreased susceptibility to oxacillin. These results suggest that mprF mutations that reduce susceptibility to cationic antibacterials result in a gain-of-function phenotype.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2007

Evaluation of the metS and murB Loci for Antibiotic Discovery Using Targeted Antisense RNA Expression Analysis in Bacillus anthracis

G C Kedar; Vickie Brown-Driver; Daniel R. Reyes; Mark Hilgers; Mark Stidham; Karen Joy Shaw; John Finn; Robert Haselbeck

ABSTRACT The biowarfare-relevant bacterial pathogen Bacillus anthracis contains two paralogs each of the metS and murB genes, which encode the important antibiotic target functions methionyl-tRNA synthetase and UDP-N-acetylenolpyruvoylglucosamine reductase, respectively. Empirical screens were conducted to detect and characterize gene fragments of each of these four genes that could cause growth reduction of B. anthracis when inducibly expressed from a plasmid-borne promoter. Numerous such gene fragments that were overwhelmingly in the antisense orientation were identified for the metS1 and murB2 alleles, while no such orientation bias was seen for the metS2 and murB1 alleles. Gene replacement mutagenesis was used to confirm the essentiality of the metS1 and murB2 alleles, and the nonessentiality of the metS2 and murB1 alleles, for vegetative growth. Induced transcription of RNA from metS1 and murB2 antisense-oriented gene fragments resulted in specific reduction of mRNA of their cognate genes. Attenuation of MetS1 enzyme expression hypersensitized B. anthracis cells to a MetS-specific antimicrobial compound but not to other antibiotics that affect cell wall assembly, fatty acid biosynthesis, protein translation, or DNA replication. Antisense-dependent reduction of MurB2 enzyme expression caused hypersensitivity to beta-lactam antibiotics, a synergistic response that has also been noted for the MurA-specific antibiotic fosfomycin. These experiments form the basis of mode-of-action detection assays that can be used in the discovery of novel MetS- or MurB-specific antibiotic drugs that are effective against B. anthracis or other gram-positive bacterial pathogens.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2008

Comparison of the Essential Cellular Functions of the Two murA Genes of Bacillus anthracis

G C Kedar; Vickie Brown-Driver; Daniel R. Reyes; Mark Hilgers; Mark Stidham; Karen Joy Shaw; John Finn; Robert Haselbeck

ABSTRACT Targeted antisense and gene replacement mutagenesis experiments demonstrate that only the murA1 gene and not the murA2 gene is required for the normal cellular growth of Bacillus anthracis. Antisense-based modulation of murA1 gene expression hypersensitizes cells to the MurA-specific antibiotic fosfomycin despite the normally high resistance of B. anthracis to this drug.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997

Combinatorial Screening and Rational Optimization for Hybridization to Folded Hepatitis C Virus RNA of Oligonucleotides with Biological Antisense Activity

Walt F. Lima; Vickie Brown-Driver; Maureen Fox; Ronnie C. Hanecak; Thomas W. Bruice


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 1996

Inhibition of human cytomegalovirus immediate-early gene expression by an antisense oligonucleotide complementary to immediate-early RNA.

Kevin P. Anderson; Maureen Fox; Vickie Brown-Driver; M J Martin; Raana F. Azad

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