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Dive into the research topics where Weijia Ou is active.

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Featured researches published by Weijia Ou.


Angewandte Chemie | 2009

A Facile System for Encoding Unnatural Amino Acids in Mammalian Cells

Peng R. Chen; Dan Groff; Jiantao Guo; Weijia Ou; Susan E. Cellitti; Bernhard H. Geierstanger; Peter G. Schultz

A shuttle system has been developed to genetically encode unnatural amino acids in mammalian cells using aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (aaRSs) evolved in E. coli. A pyrrolysyl-tRNA synthetase (PylRS) mutant was evolved in E. coli that selectively aminoacylates a cognate nonsense suppressor tRNA with a photocaged lysine derivative. Transfer of this orthogonal tRNA-aaRS pair into mammalian cells made possible the selective incorporation of this unnatural amino acid into proteins.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Site-specific protein modifications through pyrroline-carboxy-lysine residues

Weijia Ou; Tetsuo Uno; Hsien-Po Chiu; Jan Grunewald; Susan E. Cellitti; Tiffany Crossgrove; Xueshi Hao; Qian Fan; Lisa Quinn; Paula Patterson; Linda Okach; David H. Jones; Scott A. Lesley; Ansgar Brock; Bernhard H. Geierstanger

Pyrroline-carboxy-lysine (Pcl) is a demethylated form of pyrrolysine that is generated by the pyrrolysine biosynthetic enzymes when the growth media is supplemented with D-ornithine. Pcl is readily incorporated by the unmodified pyrrolysyl-tRNA/tRNA synthetase pair into proteins expressed in Escherichia coli and in mammalian cells. Here, we describe a broadly applicable conjugation chemistry that is specific for Pcl and orthogonal to all other reactive groups on proteins. The reaction of Pcl with 2-amino-benzaldehyde or 2-amino-acetophenone reagents proceeds to near completion at neutral pH with high efficiency. We illustrate the versatility of the chemistry by conjugating Pcl proteins with poly(ethylene glycol)s, peptides, oligosaccharides, oligonucleotides, fluorescence, and biotin labels and other small molecules. Because Pcl is genetically encoded by TAG codons, this conjugation chemistry enables enhancements of the pharmacology and functionality of proteins through site-specific conjugation.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2011

D-Ornithine coopts pyrrolysine biosynthesis to make and insert pyrroline-carboxy-lysine

Susan E. Cellitti; Weijia Ou; Hsien-Po Chiu; Jan Grunewald; David H. Jones; Xueshi Hao; Qian Fan; Lisa Quinn; Kenneth Ng; Andrew T. Anfora; Scott A. Lesley; Tetsuo Uno; Ansgar Brock; Bernhard H. Geierstanger

D-ornithine has previously been suggested to enhance the expression of pyrrolysine-containing proteins. We unexpectedly discovered that uptake of D-ornithine results in the insertion of a new amino acid, pyrroline-carboxy-lysine (Pcl) instead of the anticipated pyrrolysine (Pyl). Our feeding and biochemical studies point to specific roles of the poorly understood Pyl biosynthetic enzymes PylC and PylD in converting L-lysine and D-ornithine to Pcl and confirm intermediates in the biosynthesis of Pyl.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Loss of CD4 T-cell–dependent tolerance to proteins with modified amino acids

Varun Gauba; Jan Grünewald; Vanessa Gorney; Lisa M. Deaton; Mingchao Kang; Badry Bursulaya; Weijia Ou; Richard A. Lerner; Christian Schmedt; Bernhard H. Geierstanger; Peter G. Schultz; Teresa Ramirez-Montagut

The site-specific incorporation of the unnatural amino acid p-nitrophenylalanine (pNO2Phe) into autologous proteins overcomes self-tolerance and induces a long-lasting polyclonal IgG antibody response. To determine the molecular mechanism by which such simple modifications to amino acids are able to induce autoantibodies, we incorporated pNO2Phe, sulfotyrosine (SO3Tyr), and 3-nitrotyrosine (3NO2Tyr) at specific sites in murine TNF-α and EGF. A subset of TNF-α and EGF mutants with these nitrated or sulfated residues is highly immunogenic and induces antibodies against the unaltered native protein. Analysis of the immune response to the TNF-α mutants in different strains of mice that are congenic for the H-2 locus indicates that CD4 T-cell recognition is necessary for autoantibody production. IFN-γ ELISPOT analysis of CD4 T cells isolated from vaccinated mice demonstrates that peptides with mutated residues, but not the wild-type residues, are recognized. Immunization of these peptides revealed that a CD4 repertoire exists for the mutated peptides but is lacking for the wild-type peptides and that the mutated residues are processed, loaded, and presented on the I-Ab molecule. Overall, our results illustrate that, although autoantibodies are generated against the endogenous protein, CD4 cells are activated through a neo-epitope recognition mechanism. Therefore, tolerance is maintained at a CD4 level but is broken at the level of antibody production. Finally, these results suggest that naturally occurring posttranslational modifications such as nitration may play a role in antibody-mediated autoimmune disorders.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2015

Efficient Preparation of Site-Specific Antibody-Drug Conjugates Using Phosphopantetheinyl Transferases.

Jan Grünewald; Heath E. Klock; Susan E. Cellitti; Badry Bursulaya; Daniel McMullan; David H. Jones; Hsien-Po Chiu; Xing Wang; Paula Patterson; Huanfang Zhou; Julie Vance; Edward Nigoghossian; Hung Tong; Dylan Daniel; William Mallet; Weijia Ou; Tetsuo Uno; Ansgar Brock; Scott A. Lesley; Bernhard H. Geierstanger

Post-translational modification catalyzed by phosphopantetheinyl transferases (PPTases) has previously been used to site-specifically label proteins with structurally diverse molecules. PPTase catalysis results in covalent modification of a serine residue in acyl/peptidyl carrier proteins and their surrogate substrates which are typically fused to the N- or C-terminus. To test the utility of PPTases for preparing antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs), we inserted 11 and 12-mer PPTase substrate sequences at 110 constant region loop positions of trastuzumab. Using Sfp-PPTase, 63 sites could be efficiently labeled with an auristatin toxin, resulting in 95 homogeneous ADCs. ADCs labeled in the CH1 domain displayed in general excellent pharmacokinetic profiles and negligible drug loss. A subset of CH2 domain conjugates underwent rapid clearance in mouse pharmacokinetic studies. Rapid clearance correlated with lower thermal stability of the particular antibodies. Independent of conjugation site, almost all ADCs exhibited subnanomolar in vitro cytotoxicity against HER2-positive cell lines. One selected ADC was shown to induce tumor regression in a xenograft model at a single dose of 3 mg/kg, demonstrating that PPTase-mediated conjugation is suitable for the production of highly efficacious and homogeneous ADCs.


Analytical Chemistry | 2015

Isotope Coded Labeling for Accelerated Protein Interaction Profiling using MS

John D. Venable; Caitlin Steckler; Weijia Ou; Jan Grünewald; Sanjay Agarwalla; Ansgar Brock

Protein interaction surface mapping using MS is widely applied but comparatively resource-intensive. Here, a workflow adaptation for use of isotope-coded tandem mass tags for the purpose is reported. The key benefit of improved throughput derived from sample acquisition multiplexing and automated analysis is shown to be maintained in the new application. Mapping of the epitopes of two monoclonal antibodies on their respective targets serves to illustrate the novel approach. We conclude that the approach enables mapping of interactions by MS at significantly larger scales than hereto possible.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2017

Optimization of an Enzymatic Antibody–Drug Conjugation Approach Based on Coenzyme A Analogs

Jan Grünewald; Yunho Jin; Julie Vance; Jessica Read; Xing Wang; Yongqin Wan; Huanfang Zhou; Weijia Ou; Heath E. Klock; Eric C. Peters; Tetsuo Uno; Ansgar Brock; Bernhard H. Geierstanger

Phosphopantetheine transferases (PPTases) can be used to efficiently prepare site-specific antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) by enzymatically coupling coenzyme A (CoA)-linker payloads to 11-12 amino acid peptide substrates inserted into antibodies. Here, a two-step strategy is established wherein in a first step, CoA analogs with various bioorthogonal reactivities are enzymatically installed on the antibody for chemical conjugation with a cytotoxic payload in a second step. Because of the high structural similarity of these CoA analogs to the natural PPTase substrate CoA-SH, the first step proceeds very efficiently and enables the use of peptide tags as short as 6 amino acids compared to the 11-12 amino acids required for efficient one-step coupling of the payload molecule. Furthermore, two-step conjugation provides access to diverse linker chemistries and spacers of varying lengths. The potency of the ADCs was largely independent of linker architecture. In mice, proteolytic cleavage was observed for some C-terminally linked auristatin payloads. The in vivo stability of these ADCs was significantly improved by reduction of the linker length. In addition, linker stability was found to be modulated by attachment site, and this, together with linker length, provides an opportunity for maximizing ADC stability without sacrificing potency.


Archive | 2014

Specific sites for modifying antibodies to make immunoconjugates

Bernhard Hubert Geierstanger; Weijia Ou; Tetsuo Uno


Archive | 2016

CKIT ANTIBODY DRUG CONJUGATES

Tinya Abrams; Steven Cohen; Dylan Daniel; Catrin Finner; Bernhard H. Geierstanger; Thomas Huber; William Mallet; Matthew John Meyer; Weijia Ou; Siew Ho Schleyer; Kathrin Ulrike Tissot-Daguette


ChemBioChem | 2018

Tuning a Protein Labeling Reaction to Achieve Highly Site-Selective Lysine Conjugation.

Grace H. Pham; Weijia Ou; Badry Bursulaya; Michael DiDonato; Ananda Herath; Yunho Jin; Xueshi Hao; Jon Loren; Glen Spraggon; Ansgar Brock; Tetsuo Uno; Bernhard H. Geierstanger; Susan E. Cellitti

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Tetsuo Uno

Genomics Institute of the Novartis Research Foundation

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Bernhard H. Geierstanger

Genomics Institute of the Novartis Research Foundation

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Ansgar Brock

Genomics Institute of the Novartis Research Foundation

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Jan Grunewald

Genomics Institute of the Novartis Research Foundation

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Susan E. Cellitti

Genomics Institute of the Novartis Research Foundation

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Hsien-Po Chiu

Genomics Institute of the Novartis Research Foundation

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Jan Grünewald

Scripps Research Institute

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Xueshi Hao

Genomics Institute of the Novartis Research Foundation

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Yongqin Wan

Genomics Institute of the Novartis Research Foundation

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