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Dive into the research topics where Victoria A. Assimon is active.

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Featured researches published by Victoria A. Assimon.


Current Pharmaceutical Design | 2012

Hsp70 protein complexes as drug targets.

Victoria A. Assimon; Anne T. Gillies; Jennifer N. Rauch; Jason E. Gestwicki

Heat shock protein 70 (Hsp70) plays critical roles in proteostasis and is an emerging target for multiple diseases. However, competitive inhibition of the enzymatic activity of Hsp70 has proven challenging and, in some cases, may not be the most productive way to redirect Hsp70 function. Another approach is to inhibit Hsp70s interactions with important co-chaperones, such as J proteins, nucleotide exchange factors (NEFs) and tetratricopeptide repeat (TPR) domain-containing proteins. These co-chaperones normally bind Hsp70 and guide its many diverse cellular activities. Complexes between Hsp70 and co-chaperones have been shown to have specific functions, including roles in pro-folding, pro-degradation and pro-trafficking pathways. Thus, a promising strategy may be to block protein- protein interactions between Hsp70 and its co-chaperones or to target allosteric sites that disrupt these contacts. Such an approach might shift the balance of Hsp70 complexes and re-shape the proteome and it has the potential to restore healthy proteostasis. In this review, we discuss specific challenges and opportunities related to these goals. By pursuing Hsp70 complexes as drug targets, we might not only develop new leads for therapeutic development, but also discover new chemical probes for use in understanding Hsp70 biology.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015

Isoform-selective Genetic Inhibition of Constitutive Cytosolic Hsp70 Activity Promotes Client Tau Degradation Using an Altered Co-chaperone Complement

Sarah N. Fontaine; Jennifer N. Rauch; Bryce A. Nordhues; Victoria A. Assimon; Andrew R. Stothert; Umesh K. Jinwal; Jonathan J. Sabbagh; Lyra Chang; Stanley M. Stevens; Erik R. P. Zuiderweg; Jason E. Gestwicki; Chad A. Dickey

Background: High levels of constitutive heat shock protein 70 (Hsc70) preserve Tau levels, possibly contributing to neuropathology. Results: A dominant negative Hsc70 (DN-Hsc70) variant mimics small-molecule inhibition and facilitates Tau clearance by altering the associated interactome. Conclusion: DN-Hsc70 recruits a pro-degradation chaperome complement to the Tau-Hsc70 complex. Significance: Selective Hsc70 inhibition could have a therapeutic benefit in tauopathies including Alzheimer disease. The constitutively expressed heat shock protein 70 kDa (Hsc70) is a major chaperone protein responsible for maintaining proteostasis, yet how its structure translates into functional decisions regarding client fate is still unclear. We previously showed that Hsc70 preserved aberrant Tau, but it remained unknown if selective inhibition of the activity of this Hsp70 isoform could facilitate Tau clearance. Using single point mutations in the nucleotide binding domain, we assessed the effect of several mutations on the functions of human Hsc70. Biochemical characterization revealed that one mutation abolished both Hsc70 ATPase and refolding activities. This variant resembled the ADP-bound conformer at all times yet remained able to interact with cofactors, nucleotides, and substrates appropriately, resembling a dominant negative Hsc70 (DN-Hsc70). We then assessed the effects of this DN-Hsc70 on its client Tau. DN-Hsc70 potently facilitated Tau clearance via the proteasome in cells and brain tissue, in contrast to wild type Hsc70 that stabilized Tau. Thus, DN-Hsc70 mimics the action of small molecule pan Hsp70 inhibitors with regard to Tau metabolism. This shift in Hsc70 function by a single point mutation was the result of a change in the chaperome associated with Hsc70 such that DN-Hsc70 associated more with Hsp90 and DnaJ proteins, whereas wild type Hsc70 was more associated with other Hsp70 isoforms. Thus, isoform-selective targeting of Hsc70 could be a viable therapeutic strategy for tauopathies and possibly lead to new insights in chaperone complex biology.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

The Molecular Chaperone Hsp70 Activates Protein Phosphatase 5 (PP5) by Binding the Tetratricopeptide Repeat (TPR) Domain

Jamie Connarn; Victoria A. Assimon; Rebecca A. Reed; Eric Tse; Daniel R. Southworth; Erik R. P. Zuiderweg; Jason E. Gestwicki; Duxin Sun

Background: Heat shock proteins bind TPR-containing proteins to facilitate client folding. Results: The TPR domain of PP5 and the C-terminal IEEVD of Hsp70 are important for binding. Conclusion: Hsp70 binds through the TPR domain and activates PP5 phosphatase activity. Significance: Small molecules to inhibit Hsp70-PP5 interaction may be an alternative approach for cancer therapy. Protein phosphatase 5 (PP5) is auto-inhibited by intramolecular interactions with its tetratricopeptide repeat (TPR) domain. Hsp90 has been shown to bind PP5 to activate its phosphatase activity. However, the functional implications of binding Hsp70 to PP5 are not yet clear. In this study, we find that both Hsp90 and Hsp70 bind to PP5 using a luciferase fragment complementation assay. A fluorescence polarization assay shows that Hsp90 (MEEVD motif) binds to the TPR domain of PP5 almost 3-fold higher affinity than Hsp70 (IEEVD motif). However, Hsp70 binding to PP5 stimulates higher phosphatase activity of PP5 than the binding of Hsp90. We find that PP5 forms a stable 1:1 complex with Hsp70, but the interaction appears asymmetric with Hsp90, with one PP5 binding the dimer. Solution NMR studies reveal that Hsc70 and PP5 proteins are dynamically independent in complex, tethered by a disordered region that connects the Hsc70 core and the IEEVD-TPR contact area. This tethered binding is expected to allow PP5 to carry out multi-site dephosphorylation of Hsp70-bound clients with a range of sizes and shapes. Together, these results demonstrate that Hsp70 recruits PP5 and activates its phosphatase activity which suggests dual roles for PP5 that might link chaperone systems with signaling pathways in cancer and development.


Chemistry & Biology | 2016

Stabilizing the Hsp70-Tau Complex Promotes Turnover in Models of Tauopathy

Zapporah T. Young; Jennifer N. Rauch; Victoria A. Assimon; Umesh K. Jinwal; Misol Ahn; Xiaokai Li; Bryan M. Dunyak; Atta Ahmad; George A. Carlson; Sharan R. Srinivasan; Erik R. P. Zuiderweg; Chad A. Dickey; Jason E. Gestwicki

Heat shock protein 70 (Hsp70) is a chaperone that normally scans the proteome and initiates the turnover of some proteins (termed clients) by linking them to the degradation pathways. This activity is critical to normal protein homeostasis, yet it appears to fail in diseases associated with abnormal protein accumulation. It is not clear why Hsp70 promotes client degradation under some conditions, while sparing that protein under others. Here, we used a combination of chemical biology and genetic strategies to systematically perturb the affinity of Hsp70 for the model client, tau. This approach revealed that tight complexes between Hsp70 and tau were associated with enhanced turnover while transient interactions favored tau retention. These results suggest that client affinity is one important parameter governing Hsp70-mediated quality control.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2015

The active Hsc70/tau complex can be exploited to enhance tau turnover without damaging microtubule dynamics

Sarah N. Fontaine; Mackenzie D. Martin; Elias Akoury; Victoria A. Assimon; Sergiy I. Borysov; Bryce A. Nordhues; Jonathan J. Sabbagh; Matt Cockman; Jason E. Gestwicki; Markus Zweckstetter; Chad A. Dickey

The pathological accumulation of abnormally hyperphosphorylated and aggregated tau, a neuronal microtubule (MT)-associated protein that functions to maintain MT stability, is implicated in a number of hereditary and sporadic neurodegenerative diseases including frontotemporal dementia and Alzheimers disease. Targeting tau for the treatment of these diseases is an area of intense interest and toward that end, modulation of cellular molecular chaperones is a potential therapeutic target. In particular, the constitutive Hsp70 isoform, Hsc70, seems highly interconnected with tau, preserving tau protein levels and synergizing with it to assemble MTs. But the relationship between tau and Hsc70, as well as the impact of this interaction in neurons and its therapeutic implications remain unknown. Using a human dominant negative Hsc70 that resembles isoform selective inhibition of this important chaperone, we found for the first time that Hsc70 activity is required to stimulate MT assembly in cells and brain. However, surprisingly, active Hsc70 also requires active tau to regulate MT assembly in vivo, suggesting that tau acts in some ways as a co-chaperone for Hsc70 to coordinate MT assembly. This was despite tau binding to Hsc70 as substrate, as determined biochemically. Moreover, we show that while chronic Hsc70 inhibition damaged MT dynamics, intermittent treatment with a small molecule Hsp70 inhibitor lowered tau in brain tissue without disrupting MT integrity. Thus, in tauopathies, where MT injury would be detrimental to neurons, the unique relationship of tau with the Hsc70 machinery can be exploited to deplete tau levels without damaging MT networks.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2018

Mapping interactions with the chaperone network reveals factors that protect against tau aggregation.

Sue-Ann Mok; Carlo Condello; Rebecca Freilich; Anne T. Gillies; Taylor Arhar; Javier Oroz; Harindranath Kadavath; Olivier Julien; Victoria A. Assimon; Jennifer N. Rauch; Bryan M. Dunyak; Jungsoon Lee; Francis T.F. Tsai; Mark R. Wilson; Markus Zweckstetter; Chad A. Dickey; Jason E. Gestwicki

A network of molecular chaperones is known to bind proteins (‘clients’) and balance their folding, function and turnover. However, it is often unclear which chaperones are critical for selective recognition of individual clients. It is also not clear why these key chaperones might fail in protein-aggregation diseases. Here, we utilized human microtubule-associated protein tau (MAPT or tau) as a model client to survey interactions between ~30 purified chaperones and ~20 disease-associated tau variants (~600 combinations). From this large-scale analysis, we identified human DnaJA2 as an unexpected, but potent, inhibitor of tau aggregation. DnaJA2 levels were correlated with tau pathology in human brains, supporting the idea that it is an important regulator of tau homeostasis. Of note, we found that some disease-associated tau variants were relatively immune to interactions with chaperones, suggesting a model in which avoiding physical recognition by chaperone networks may contribute to disease.The effects of chaperones on the aggregation of different tau variants are examined in a large-scale study. Among other findings, the work reveals that DnaJA2 can inhibit tau aggregation, a role that is supported by analysis of samples from human brains.


Protein Journal | 2014

A Novel Glucose 6-Phosphate Isomerase from Listeria monocytogenes

David L. Cech; Pan Fen Wang; Melissa C. Holt; Victoria A. Assimon; Jeffrey M. Schaub; Tod P. Holler; Ronald W. Woodard

Abstractd-Arabinose 5-phosphate isomerases (APIs) catalyze the interconversion of d-ribulose 5-phosphate and d-arabinose 5-phosphate (A5P). A5P is an intermediate in the biosynthesis of 3-deoxy-d-manno-octulosonate (Kdo), an essential component of lipopolysaccharide, the lipopolysaccharide found in the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria. The genome of the Gram-positive pathogen Listeria monocytogenes contains a gene encoding a putative sugar isomerase domain API, Q723E8, with significant similarity to c3406, the only one of four APIs from Escherichia coli CFT073 that lacks a cystathionine-β-synthase domain. However, L. monocytogenes lacks genes encoding any of the other enzymes of the Kdo biosynthesis pathway. Realizing that the discovery of an API in a Gram-positive bacterium could provide insight into an alternate physiological role of A5P in the cell, we prepared and purified recombinant Q723E8. We found that Q723E8 does not possess API activity, but instead is a novel GPI (d-glucose 6-phosphate isomerase). However, the GPI activity of Q723E8 is weak compared with previously described GPIs. L. monocytogenes contains an ortholog of the well-studied two-domain bacterial GPI, so this maybe redundant. Based on this evidence glucose utilization is likely not the primary physiological role of Q723E8.


MedChemComm | 2015

Concise synthesis of spergualin-inspired molecules with broad-spectrum antibiotic activity

Victoria A. Assimon; Hao Shao; Sylvie Garneau-Tsodikova; Jason E. Gestwicki

There is a growing need to identify new, broad-spectrum antibiotics. The natural product spergualin was previously shown to have promising anti-bacterial activity and a privileged structure, but its challenging synthesis had limited further exploration. For example, syntheses of spergualin and its analogs have been reported in approximately 10 linear steps, with overall yields between 0.3 and 18%. Using the Ugi multi-component reaction, we assembled spergualin-inspired molecules in a single step, dramatically improving the overall yield (20% to 96%). Using this strategy, we generated 43 new analogs and tested them for anti-bacterial activity against two Gram-negative and four Gram-positive strains. We found that the most potent analogue, compound 6, had MIC values between 4 and 32 μg/mL against the six strains, which is a significant improvement on spergualin (MIC ∼ 6.25 to 50 μg/mL). These studies provide a concise route to a broad-spectrum antibiotic with a novel chemical scaffold.


bioRxiv | 2018

Proteome-scale detection of drug-target interactions using correlations in transcriptomic perturbations

Nicolas A Pabon; Yan Xia; Samuel K. Estabrooks; Zhaofeng Ye; Amanda K. Herbrand; Evelyn Sub; Ricardo M. Biondi; Victoria A. Assimon; Jason E. Gestwicki; Jeffrey L. Brodsky; Carlos J. Camacho; Ziv Bar-Joseph

Systems biology seeks to understand how normal and disease protein networks respond when specific interactions are disrupted. A first step towards this goal is identifying the molecular target(s) of bioactive compounds. Here, we hypothesize that inhibitory drugs should produce network-level effects similar to silencing the inhibited gene and show that drug-protein interactions are encoded in mRNA expression profile correlations. We use machine learning to classify correlations between drug- and knockdown-induced expression signatures and enrich our predictions through a structure-based screen. Interactions manifest both as direct correlations between drug and target knockdowns, and as indirect correlations with up/downstream knockdowns. Cross-validation on 152 FDA-approved drugs and 3104 potential targets achieved top 10/100 prediction accuracies of 26/41%. We apply our method to 1680 bioactive compounds and experimentally validate five previously unknown interactions. Our pipeline can accelerate drug discovery by matching existing compounds to new therapeutic targets while informing on network and multi-target effects.The development of an expanded chemical space for screening is an essential step in the challenge of identifying chemical probes for new, genomic-era protein targets. However, the difficulty of identifying targets for novel compounds leads to the prioritization of synthesis linked to known active scaffolds that bind familiar protein families, slowing the exploration of available chemical space. To change this paradigm, we validated a new pipeline capable of identifying compound-protein interactions even for compounds with no similarity to known drugs. Based on differential mRNA profiles from drug treatments and gene knockdowns across multiple cell types, we show that drugs cause gene regulatory network effects that correlate with those produced by silencing their target protein-coding gene. Applying supervised machine learning to exploit compound-knockdown signature correlations and enriching our predictions using an orthogonal structure-based screen, we achieved top-10/top-100 target prediction accuracies of 26%/41%, respectively, on a validation set 152 FDA-approved drugs and 3104 potential targets. We further predicted targets for 1680 compounds and validated a total of seven novel interactions with four difficult targets, including non-covalent modulators of HRAS and KRAS. We found that drug-target interactions manifest as gene expression correlations between drug treatment and both target gene knockdown and up/down-stream knockdowns. These correlations provide biologically relevant insight on the cell-level impact of disrupting protein interactions, highlighting the complex genetic phenotypes of drug treatments. Our pipeline can accelerate the identification and development of novel chemistries with potential to become drugs by screening for compound-target interactions in the full human interactome.


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.

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Chad A. Dickey

University of South Florida

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Bryce A. Nordhues

University of South Florida

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Hao Shao

University of California

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Sarah N. Fontaine

University of South Florida

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