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Dive into the research topics where Victoria C. Corey is active.

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Featured researches published by Victoria C. Corey.


Nature | 2016

Diversity-oriented synthesis yields novel multistage antimalarial inhibitors

Nobutaka Kato; Eamon Comer; Tomoyo Sakata-Kato; Arvind Sharma; Manmohan Sharma; Micah Maetani; Jessica Bastien; Nicolas M. B. Brancucci; Joshua Bittker; Victoria C. Corey; David C. Clarke; Emily R. Derbyshire; Gillian L. Dornan; Sandra Duffy; Sean Eckley; Maurice A. Itoe; Karin M. J. Koolen; Timothy A. Lewis; Ping S. Lui; Amanda K Lukens; Emily Lund; Sandra March; Elamaran Meibalan; Bennett C. Meier; Jacob A. McPhail; Branko Mitasev; Eli L. Moss; Morgane Sayes; Yvonne Van Gessel; Mathias J. Wawer

Antimalarial drugs have thus far been chiefly derived from two sources—natural products and synthetic drug-like compounds. Here we investigate whether antimalarial agents with novel mechanisms of action could be discovered using a diverse collection of synthetic compounds that have three-dimensional features reminiscent of natural products and are underrepresented in typical screening collections. We report the identification of such compounds with both previously reported and undescribed mechanisms of action, including a series of bicyclic azetidines that inhibit a new antimalarial target, phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetase. These molecules are curative in mice at a single, low dose and show activity against all parasite life stages in multiple in vivo efficacy models. Our findings identify bicyclic azetidines with the potential to both cure and prevent transmission of the disease as well as protect at-risk populations with a single oral dose, highlighting the strength of diversity-oriented synthesis in revealing promising therapeutic targets.


Nature Communications | 2016

A broad analysis of resistance development in the malaria parasite

Victoria C. Corey; Amanda K Lukens; Eva S. Istvan; Marcus C. S. Lee; Virginia Franco; Pamela Magistrado; Olivia Coburn-Flynn; Tomoyo Sakata-Kato; Olivia Fuchs; Nina F. Gnädig; Greg Goldgof; Maria Linares; Maria G. Gomez-Lorenzo; Cristina de Cozar; Maria Jose Lafuente-Monasterio; Sara Prats; Stephan Meister; Olga Tanaseichuk; Melanie Wree; Yingyao Zhou; Paul Willis; Francisco-Javier Gamo; Daniel E. Goldberg; David A. Fidock; Dyann F. Wirth; Elizabeth A. Winzeler

Microbial resistance to chemotherapy has caused countless deaths where malaria is endemic. Chemotherapy may fail either due to pre-existing resistance or evolution of drug-resistant parasites. Here we use a diverse set of antimalarial compounds to investigate the acquisition of drug resistance and the degree of cross-resistance against common resistance alleles. We assess cross-resistance using a set of 15 parasite lines carrying resistance-conferring alleles in pfatp4, cytochrome bc1, pfcarl, pfdhod, pfcrt, pfmdr, pfdhfr, cytoplasmic prolyl t-RNA synthetase or hsp90. Subsequently, we assess whether resistant parasites can be obtained after several rounds of drug selection. Twenty-three of the 48 in vitro selections result in resistant parasites, with time to resistance onset ranging from 15 to 300 days. Our data indicate that pre-existing resistance may not be a major hurdle for novel-target antimalarial candidates, and focusing our attention on fast-killing compounds may result in a slower onset of clinical resistance.


BMC Bioinformatics | 2014

Identification of pathogen genomic variants through an integrated pipeline

Micah J. Manary; Suriya Singhakul; Erika L. Flannery; Selina Bopp; Victoria C. Corey; Andrew Taylor Bright; Case W. McNamara; John R. Walker; Elizabeth A. Winzeler

BackgroundWhole-genome sequencing represents a powerful experimental tool for pathogen research. We present methods for the analysis of small eukaryotic genomes, including a streamlined system (called Platypus) for finding single nucleotide and copy number variants as well as recombination events.ResultsWe have validated our pipeline using four sets of Plasmodium falciparum drug resistant data containing 26 clones from 3D7 and Dd2 background strains, identifying an average of 11 single nucleotide variants per clone. We also identify 8 copy number variants with contributions to resistance, and report for the first time that all analyzed amplification events are in tandem.ConclusionsThe Platypus pipeline provides malaria researchers with a powerful tool to analyze short read sequencing data. It provides an accurate way to detect SNVs using known software packages, and a novel methodology for detection of CNVs, though it does not currently support detection of small indels. We have validated that the pipeline detects known SNVs in a variety of samples while filtering out spurious data. We bundle the methods into a freely available package.


Molecular Microbiology | 2016

CRISPR‐Cas9‐modified pfmdr1 protects Plasmodium falciparum asexual blood stages and gametocytes against a class of piperazine‐containing compounds but potentiates artemisinin‐based combination therapy partner drugs

Caroline L. Ng; Giulia Siciliano; Marcus C. S. Lee; Mariana Justino de Almeida; Victoria C. Corey; Selina Bopp; Lucia Bertuccini; Sergio Wittlin; Rachel G. Kasdin; Amélie Le Bihan; Martine Clozel; Elizabeth A. Winzeler; Pietro Alano; David A. Fidock

Emerging resistance to first‐line antimalarial combination therapies threatens malaria treatment and the global elimination campaign. Improved therapeutic strategies are required to protect existing drugs and enhance treatment efficacy. We report that the piperazine‐containing compound ACT‐451840 exhibits single‐digit nanomolar inhibition of the Plasmodium falciparum asexual blood stages and transmissible gametocyte forms. Genome sequence analyses of in vitro‐derived ACT‐451840‐resistant parasites revealed single nucleotide polymorphisms in pfmdr1, which encodes a digestive vacuole membrane‐bound ATP‐binding cassette transporter known to alter P. falciparum susceptibility to multiple first‐line antimalarials. CRISPR‐Cas9 based gene editing confirmed that PfMDR1 point mutations mediated ACT‐451840 resistance. Resistant parasites demonstrated increased susceptibility to the clinical drugs lumefantrine, mefloquine, quinine and amodiaquine. Stage V gametocytes harboring Cas9‐introduced pfmdr1 mutations also acquired ACT‐451840 resistance. These findings reveal that PfMDR1 mutations can impart resistance to compounds active against asexual blood stages and mature gametocytes. Exploiting PfMDR1 resistance mechanisms provides new opportunities for developing disease‐relieving and transmission‐blocking antimalarials.


ACS Infectious Diseases | 2016

High-Throughput Luciferase-Based Assay for the Discovery of Therapeutics That Prevent Malaria

Justine Swann; Victoria C. Corey; Christina Scherer; Nobutaka Kato; Eamon Comer; Micah Maetani; Yevgeniya Antonova-Koch; Christin Reimer; Kerstin Gagaring; Maureen Ibanez; David Plouffe; Anne-Marie Zeeman; Clemens H. M. Kocken; Case W. McNamara; Stuart L. Schreiber; Brice Campo; Elizabeth A. Winzeler; Stephan Meister

In order to identify the most attractive starting points for drugs that can be used to prevent malaria, a diverse chemical space comprising tens of thousands to millions of small molecules may need to be examined. Achieving this throughput necessitates the development of efficient ultra-high-throughput screening methods. Here, we report the development and evaluation of a luciferase-based phenotypic screen of malaria exoerythrocytic-stage parasites optimized for a 1536-well format. This assay uses the exoerythrocytic stage of the rodent malaria parasite, Plasmodium berghei, and a human hepatoma cell line. We use this assay to evaluate several biased and unbiased compound libraries, including two small sets of molecules (400 and 89 compounds, respectively) with known activity against malaria erythrocytic-stage parasites and a set of 9886 diversity-oriented synthesis (DOS)-derived compounds. Of the compounds screened, we obtain hit rates of 12–13 and 0.6% in preselected and naïve libraries, respectively, and identify 52 compounds with exoerythrocytic-stage activity less than 1 μM and having minimal host cell toxicity. Our data demonstrate the ability of this method to identify compounds known to have causal prophylactic activity in both human and animal models of malaria, as well as novel compounds, including some exclusively active against parasite exoerythrocytic stages.


ACS Infectious Diseases | 2015

Next-Generation Sequencing of Plasmodium vivax Patient Samples Shows Evidence of Direct Evolution in Drug-Resistance Genes

Erika L. Flannery; Tina Wang; Ali Akbari; Victoria C. Corey; Felicia Gunawan; A. Taylor Bright; Matthew Abraham; Juan Sanchez; Meddly L. Santolalla; G. Christian Baldeviano; Kimberly A. Edgel; Rosales La; Andres G. Lescano; Vineet Bafna; Joseph M. Vinetz; Elizabeth A. Winzeler

Understanding the mechanisms of drug resistance in Plasmodium vivax, the parasite that causes the most widespread form of human malaria, is complicated by the lack of a suitable long-term cell culture system for this parasite. In contrast to P. falciparum, which can be more readily manipulated in the laboratory, insights about parasite biology need to be inferred from human studies. Here we analyze the genomes of parasites within 10 human P. vivax infections from the Peruvian Amazon. Using next-generation sequencing we show that some P. vivax infections analyzed from the region are likely polyclonal. Despite their polyclonality we observe limited parasite genetic diversity by showing that three or fewer haplotypes comprise 94% of the examined genomes, suggesting the recent introduction of parasites into this geographic region. In contrast we find more than three haplotypes in putative drug-resistance genes, including the gene encoding dihydrofolate reductase-thymidylate synthase and the P. vivax multidrug resistance associated transporter, suggesting that resistance mutations have arisen independently. Additionally, several drug-resistance genes are located in genomic regions with evidence of increased copy number. Our data suggest that whole genome sequencing of malaria parasites from patients may provide more insight about the evolution of drug resistance than genetic linkage or association studies, especially in geographical regions with limited parasite genetic diversity.


Science | 2018

Mapping the malaria parasite druggable genome by using in vitro evolution and chemogenomics

Annie N. Cowell; Eva S. Istvan; Amanda K Lukens; Maria G. Gomez-Lorenzo; Manu Vanaerschot; Tomoyo Sakata-Kato; Erika L. Flannery; Pamela Magistrado; Edward Owen; Matthew Abraham; Gregory LaMonte; Heather J. Painter; Roy Williams; Virginia Franco; Maria Linares; Ignacio Arriaga; Selina Bopp; Victoria C. Corey; Nina F. Gnädig; Olivia Coburn-Flynn; Christin Reimer; Purva Gupta; James M. Murithi; Pedro A. Moura; Olivia Fuchs; Erika Sasaki; Sang W. Kim; Christine H. Teng; Lawrence T. Wang; Aslı Akidil

Dissecting Plasmodium drug resistance Malaria is a deadly disease with no effective vaccine. Physicians thus depend on antimalarial drugs to save lives, but such compounds are often rendered ineffective when parasites evolve resistance. Cowell et al. systematically studied patterns of Plasmodium falciparum genome evolution by analyzing the sequences of clones that were resistant to diverse antimalarial compounds across the P. falciparum life cycle (see the Perspective by Carlton). The findings identify hitherto unrecognized drug targets and drug-resistance genes, as well as additional alleles in known drug-resistance genes. Science, this issue p. 191; see also p. 159 Genome sequencing elucidates potential drug resistance in the malaria parasite and identifies antimalarial targets. Chemogenetic characterization through in vitro evolution combined with whole-genome analysis can identify antimalarial drug targets and drug-resistance genes. We performed a genome analysis of 262 Plasmodium falciparum parasites resistant to 37 diverse compounds. We found 159 gene amplifications and 148 nonsynonymous changes in 83 genes associated with drug-resistance acquisition, where gene amplifications contributed to one-third of resistance acquisition events. Beyond confirming previously identified multidrug-resistance mechanisms, we discovered hitherto unrecognized drug target–inhibitor pairs, including thymidylate synthase and a benzoquinazolinone, farnesyltransferase and a pyrimidinedione, and a dipeptidylpeptidase and an arylurea. This exploration of the P. falciparum resistome and druggable genome will likely guide drug discovery and structural biology efforts, while also advancing our understanding of resistance mechanisms available to the malaria parasite.


Mbio | 2016

Mutations in the Plasmodium falciparum Cyclic Amine Resistance Locus (PfCARL) Confer Multidrug Resistance

Gregory LaMonte; Michelle Yi-Xiu Lim; Melanie Wree; Christin Reimer; Marie Nachon; Victoria C. Corey; Peter Gedeck; David Plouffe; Alan Du; Nelissa Figueroa; Bryan K. S. Yeung; Pablo Bifani; Elizabeth A. Winzeler

ABSTRACT Mutations in the Plasmodium falciparum cyclic amine resistance locus (PfCARL) are associated with parasite resistance to the imidazolopiperazines, a potent class of novel antimalarial compounds that display both prophylactic and transmission-blocking activity, in addition to activity against blood-stage parasites. Here, we show that pfcarl encodes a protein, with a predicted molecular weight of 153 kDa, that localizes to the cis-Golgi apparatus of the parasite in both asexual and sexual blood stages. Utilizing clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeat (CRISPR)-mediated gene introduction of 5 variants (L830V, S1076N/I, V1103L, and I1139K), we demonstrate that mutations in pfcarl are sufficient to generate resistance against the imidazolopiperazines in both asexual and sexual blood-stage parasites. We further determined that the mutant PfCARL protein confers resistance to several structurally unrelated compounds. These data suggest that PfCARL modulates the levels of small-molecule inhibitors that affect Golgi-related processes, such as protein sorting or membrane trafficking, and is therefore an important mechanism of resistance in malaria parasites. IMPORTANCE Several previous in vitro evolution studies have implicated the Plasmodium falciparum cyclic amine resistance locus (PfCARL) as a potential target of imidazolopiperazines, potent antimalarial compounds with broad activity against different parasite life cycle stages. Given that the imidazolopiperazines are currently being tested in clinical trials, understanding their mechanism of resistance and the cellular processes involved will allow more effective clinical usage. Several previous in vitro evolution studies have implicated the Plasmodium falciparum cyclic amine resistance locus (PfCARL) as a potential target of imidazolopiperazines, potent antimalarial compounds with broad activity against different parasite life cycle stages. Given that the imidazolopiperazines are currently being tested in clinical trials, understanding their mechanism of resistance and the cellular processes involved will allow more effective clinical usage.


ACS Infectious Diseases | 2016

Plasmodium falciparum Cyclic Amine Resistance Locus (PfCARL), a Resistance Mechanism for Two Distinct Compound Classes

Pamela Magistrado; Victoria C. Corey; Amanda K Lukens; Greg LaMonte; Erika Sasaki; Stephan Meister; Melanie Wree; Elizabeth A. Winzeler; Dyann F. Wirth

MMV007564 is a novel antimalarial benzimidazolyl piperidine chemotype identified in cellular screens. To identify the genetic determinant of MMV007564 resistance, parasites were cultured in the presence of the compound to generate resistant lines. Whole genome sequencing revealed distinct mutations in the gene named Plasmodium falciparum cyclic amine resistance locus (pfcarl), encoding a conserved protein of unknown function. Mutations in pfcarl are strongly associated with resistance to a structurally unrelated class of compounds, the imidazolopiperazines, including KAF156, currently in clinical trials. Our data demonstrate that pfcarl mutations confer resistance to two distinct compound classes, benzimidazolyl piperidines and imidazolopiperazines. However, MMV007564 and the imidazolopiperazines, KAF156 and GNF179, have different timings of action in the asexual blood stage and different potencies against the liver and sexual blood stages. These data suggest that pfcarl is a multidrug-resistance gene rather than a common target for benzimidazolyl piperidines and imidazolopiperazines.


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2016

Whole Genome Shotgun Sequencing Shows Selection on Leptospira Regulatory Proteins during in vitro Culture Attenuation

Jason S. Lehmann; Victoria C. Corey; Jessica N. Ricaldi; Joseph M. Vinetz; Elizabeth A. Winzeler; Michael A. Matthias

Leptospirosis is the most common zoonotic disease worldwide with an estimated 500,000 severe cases reported annually, and case fatality rates of 12–25%, due primarily to acute kidney and lung injuries. Despite its prevalence, the molecular mechanisms underlying leptospirosis pathogenesis remain poorly understood. To identify virulence-related genes in Leptospira interrogans, we delineated cumulative genome changes that occurred during serial in vitro passage of a highly virulent strain of L. interrogans serovar Lai into a nearly avirulent isogenic derivative. Comparison of protein coding and computationally predicted noncoding RNA (ncRNA) genes between these two polyclonal strains identified 15 nonsynonymous single nucleotide variant (nsSNV) alleles that increased in frequency and 19 that decreased, whereas no changes in allelic frequency were observed among the ncRNA genes. Some of the nsSNV alleles were in six genes shown previously to be transcriptionally upregulated during exposure to in vivo-like conditions. Five of these nsSNVs were in evolutionarily conserved positions in genes related to signal transduction and metabolism. Frequency changes of minor nsSNV alleles identified in this study likely contributed to the loss of virulence during serial in vitro culture. The identification of new virulence-associated genes should spur additional experimental inquiry into their potential role in Leptospira pathogenesis.

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David A. Fidock

Columbia University Medical Center

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Eva S. Istvan

Washington University in St. Louis

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Melanie Wree

University of California

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