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Dive into the research topics where William Stuart Somers is active.

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Featured researches published by William Stuart Somers.


Protein Science | 2008

Crystal structures of the two major aggrecan degrading enzymes, ADAMTS4 and ADAMTS5

Lidia Mosyak; Katy E. Georgiadis; Tania Shane; Kristine Svenson; Tracy Hebert; Thomas McDonagh; Stewart Mackie; Stephane Olland; Laura Lin; Xiaotian Zhong; Ronald W. Kriz; Erica Reifenberg; Lisa A. Collins-Racie; Christopher John Corcoran; Bethany A. Freeman; Richard Zollner; Tod Marvell; Matthew Vera; Phaik-Eng Sum; Edward R. Lavallie; Mark Stahl; William Stuart Somers

Aggrecanases are now believed to be the principal proteinases responsible for aggrecan degradation in osteoarthritis. Given their potential as a drug target, we solved crystal structures of the two most active human aggrecanase isoforms, ADAMTS4 and ADAMTS5, each in complex with bound inhibitor and one wherein the enzyme is in apo form. These structures show that the unliganded and inhibitor‐bound enzymes exhibit two essentially different catalytic‐site configurations: an autoinhibited, nonbinding, closed form and an open, binding form. On this basis, we propose that mature aggrecanases exist as an ensemble of at least two isomers, only one of which is proteolytically active.


Protein Science | 2009

Triad of polar residues implicated in pH specificity of acidic mammalian chitinase

Andrea Olland; James Strand; Eleonora Presman; Robert M. Czerwinski; Diane Joseph-McCarthy; Rustem Krykbaev; Gerhard Schlingmann; Rajiv Chopra; Laura Lin; Margaret Fleming; Ron Kriz; Mark Stahl; William Stuart Somers; Lori Fitz; Lidia Mosyak

Acidic mammalian chitinase (AMCase) is a mammalian chitinase that has been implicated in allergic asthma. One of only two active mammalian chinases, AMCase, is distinguished from other chitinases by several unique features. Here, we present the novel structure of the AMCase catalytic domain, both in the apo form and in complex with the inhibitor methylallosamidin, determined to high resolution by X‐ray crystallography. These results provide a structural basis for understanding some of the unique characteristics of this enzyme, including the low pH optimum and the preference for the β‐anomer of the substrate. A triad of polar residues in the second‐shell is found to modulate the highly conserved chitinase active site. As a novel target for asthma therapy, structural details of AMCase activity will help guide the future design of specific and potent AMCase inhibitors.


Antibodies | 2016

Development of PF-06671008, a Highly Potent Anti-P-cadherin/Anti-CD3 Bispecific DART Molecule with Extended Half-Life for the Treatment of Cancer

Adam R. Root; Wei Cao; Bilian Li; Peter LaPan; Caryl Meade; Jocelyn Sanford; Macy Jin; Cliona O’Sullivan; Emma Cummins; Matthew Lambert; Alfredo Darmanin Sheehan; Weijun Ma; Scott Gatto; Kelvin M. Kerns; Khetemenee Lam; Aaron M. D’Antona; Lily Zhu; William A. Brady; Susan Benard; Amy King; Tao He; Lisa A. Racie; Maya Arai; Dianah Barrett; Wayne Stochaj; Edward R. Lavallie; James R. Apgar; Kristine Svenson; Lidia Mosyak; Yinhua Yang

Bispecific antibodies offer a promising approach for the treatment of cancer but can be challenging to engineer and manufacture. Here we report the development of PF-06671008, an extended-half-life dual-affinity re-targeting (DART®) bispecific molecule against P-cadherin and CD3 that demonstrates antibody-like properties. Using phage display, we identified anti-P-cadherin single chain Fv (scFv) that were subsequently affinity-optimized to picomolar affinity using stringent phage selection strategies, resulting in low picomolar potency in cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) killing assays in the DART format. The crystal structure of this disulfide-constrained diabody shows that it forms a novel compact structure with the two antigen binding sites separated from each other by approximately 30 Å and facing approximately 90° apart. We show here that introduction of the human Fc domain in PF-06671008 has produced a molecule with an extended half-life (~4.4 days in human FcRn knock-in mice), high stability (Tm1 > 68 °C), high expression (>1 g/L), and robust purification properties (highly pure heterodimer), all with minimal impact on potency. Finally, we demonstrate in vivo anti-tumor efficacy in a human colorectal/human peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) co-mix xenograft mouse model. These results suggest PF-06671008 is a promising new bispecific for the treatment of patients with solid tumors expressing P-cadherin.


Nature | 1994

The X-ray structure of a growth hormone-prolactin receptor complex.

William Stuart Somers; Mark Ultsch; A.M. de Vos; Anthony A. Kossiakoff


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1994

The crystal structure of affinity-matured human growth hormone at 2 A resolution.

Mark Ultsch; William Stuart Somers; Anthony A. Kossiakoff; A.M. de Vos


Protein Science | 1994

Comparison of the intermediate complexes of human growth hormone bound to the human growth hormone and prolactin receptors

Anthony A. Kossiakoff; William Stuart Somers; Mark Ultsch; Kerrie Andow; Yves Muller; Abraham M. de Vos


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2002

Structure of a phage display-derived variant of human growth hormone complexed to two copies of the extracellular domain of its receptor: evidence for strong structural coupling between receptor binding sites

Celia A. Schiffer; Mark Ultsch; Scott Walsh; William Stuart Somers; Abraham M. de Vos; Anthony A. Kossiakoff


Archive | 2001

Crystal structure of bace and uses thereof

Rajiv Chopra; Kristine Svenson; Bethany Annis; Tatos N. Akopian; Mark L. Stahl; William Stuart Somers


Archive | 2000

CRYSTAL STRUCTURE OF cPLA2, AND METHODS OF IDENTIFYING AGONISTS AND ANTAGONISTS USING SAME

Andréa Dessen; William Stuart Somers; Mark L. Stahl; Jasbir Seehra


Archive | 1999

Crystal structure of escherichia coli gdp-fucose synthetase and methods of its use

William Stuart Somers; Mark L. Stahl; Francis X. Sullivan

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Lidia Mosyak

Weizmann Institute of Science

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