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Featured researches published by Yi Liang Liu.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Multitarget Drug Discovery for Tuberculosis and Other Infectious Diseases

Kai Li; Lici A. Schurig-Briccio; Xinxin Feng; Ashutosh Upadhyay; Venugopal Pujari; Benoit Lechartier; Fabio L. Fontes; Hongliang Yang; Guodong Rao; Wei Zhu; Anmol Gulati; Joo Hwan No; Giovana Cintra; Shannon Bogue; Yi Liang Liu; Katie J. Molohon; Peter Orlean; Douglas A. Mitchell; Lucio H. Freitas-Junior; Feifei Ren; Hong Sun; Tong Jiang; Yujie Li; Rey-Ting Guo; Stewart T. Cole; Robert B. Gennis; Dean C. Crick; Eric Oldfield

We report the discovery of a series of new drug leads that have potent activity against Mycobacterium tuberculosis as well as against other bacteria, fungi, and a malaria parasite. The compounds are analogues of the new tuberculosis (TB) drug SQ109 (1), which has been reported to act by inhibiting a transporter called MmpL3, involved in cell wall biosynthesis. We show that 1 and the new compounds also target enzymes involved in menaquinone biosynthesis and electron transport, inhibiting respiration and ATP biosynthesis, and are uncouplers, collapsing the pH gradient and membrane potential used to power transporters. The result of such multitarget inhibition is potent inhibition of TB cell growth, as well as very low rates of spontaneous drug resistance. Several targets are absent in humans but are present in other bacteria, as well as in malaria parasites, whose growth is also inhibited.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Bioorganometallic mechanism of action, and inhibition, of IspH

Weixue Wang; Ke Wang; Yi Liang Liu; Joo Hwan No; Jikun Li; Mark J. Nilges; Eric Oldfield

We have investigated the mechanism of action of Aquifex aeolicus IspH [E-4-hydroxy-3-methyl-but-2-enyl diphosphate (HMBPP) reductase], together with its inhibition, using a combination of site-directed mutagenesis (K M ,V max), EPR and 1H, 2H, 13C, 31P, and 57Fe-electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectroscopy. On addition of HMBPP to an (unreactive) E126A IspH mutant, a reaction intermediate forms that has a very similar EPR spectrum to those seen previously with the HMBPP “parent” molecules, ethylene and allyl alcohol, bound to a nitrogenase FeMo cofactor. The EPR spectrum is broadened on 57Fe labeling and there is no evidence for the formation of allyl radicals. When combined with ENDOR spectroscopy, the results indicate formation of an organometallic species with HMBPP, a π/σ “metallacycle” or η 2-alkenyl complex. The complex is poised to interact with H+ from E126 (and H124) in reduced wt IspH, resulting in loss of water and formation of an η 1-allyl complex. After reduction, this forms an η 3-allyl π-complex (i.e. containing an allyl anion) that on protonation (at C2 or C4) results in product formation. We find that alkyne diphosphates (such as propargyl diphosphate) are potent IspH inhibitors and likewise form metallacycle complexes, as evidenced by 1H, 2H, and 13C ENDOR, where hyperfine couplings of approximately 6 MHz for 13C and 10 MHz for 1H, are observed. Overall, the results are of broad general interest because they provide new insights into IspH catalysis and inhibition, involving organometallic species, and may be applicable to other Fe4S4-containing proteins, such as IspG.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Antibacterial drug leads targeting isoprenoid biosynthesis.

Wei Zhu; Yonghui Zhang; William Sinko; Mary E. Hensler; Joshua Olson; Katie J. Molohon; Steffen Lindert; Rong Cao; Kai Li; Ke Wang; Yang Wang; Yi Liang Liu; Anna Sankovsky; César Augusto F. de Oliveira; Douglas A. Mitchell; Victor Nizet; J. Andrew McCammon; Eric Oldfield

With the rise in resistance to antibiotics such as methicillin, there is a need for new drugs. We report here the discovery and X-ray crystallographic structures of 10 chemically diverse compounds (benzoic, diketo, and phosphonic acids, as well as a bisamidine and a bisamine) that inhibit bacterial undecaprenyl diphosphate synthase, an essential enzyme involved in cell wall biosynthesis. The inhibitors bind to one or more of the four undecaprenyl diphosphate synthase inhibitor binding sites identified previously, with the most active leads binding to site 4, outside the catalytic center. The most potent leads are active against Staphylococcus aureus [minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC)90 ∼0.25 µg/mL], and one potently synergizes with methicillin (fractional inhibitory concentration index = 0.25) and is protective in a mouse infection model. These results provide numerous leads for antibacterial development and open up the possibility of restoring sensitivity to drugs such as methicillin, using combination therapies.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Lipophilic analogs of zoledronate and risedronate inhibit Plasmodium geranylgeranyl diphosphate synthase (GGPPS) and exhibit potent antimalarial activity

Joo Hwan No; Fernando de Macedo Dossin; Yonghui Zhang; Yi Liang Liu; Wei Zhu; Xinxin Feng; Jinyoung Anny Yoo; Eunhae Lee; Ke Wang; Raymond Hui; Lucio H. Freitas-Junior; Eric Oldfield

We report the results of an in vitro screening assay targeting the intraerythrocytic form of the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum using a library of 560 prenyl-synthase inhibitors. Based on “growth-rescue” and enzyme-inhibition experiments, geranylgeranyl diphosphate synthase (GGPPS) is shown to be a major target for the most potent leads, BPH-703 and BPH-811, lipophilic analogs of the bone-resorption drugs zoledronate and risedronate. We determined the crystal structures of these inhibitors bound to a Plasmodium GGPPS finding that their head groups bind to the [Mg2+]3 cluster in the active site in a similar manner to that found with their more hydrophilic parents, whereas their hydrophobic tails occupy a long-hydrophobic tunnel spanning both molecules in the dimer. The results of isothermal-titration-calorimetric experiments show that both lipophilic bisphosphonates bind to GGPPS with, on average, a ΔG of -9 kcal mol-1, only 0.5 kcal mol-1 worse than the parent bisphosphonates, consistent with the observation that conversion to the lipophilic species has only a minor effect on enzyme activity. However, only the lipophilic species are active in cells. We also tested both compounds in mice, finding major decreases in parasitemia and 100% survival. These results are of broad general interest because they indicate that it may be possible to overcome barriers to cell penetration of existing bisphosphonate drugs in this and other systems by simple covalent modification to form lipophilic analogs that retain their enzyme-inhibition activity and are also effective in vitro and in vivo.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Mechanism of action and inhibition of dehydrosqualene synthase

Fu Yang Lin; Chia I. Liu; Yi Liang Liu; Yonghui Zhang; Ke Wang; Wen-Yih Jeng; Tzu-Ping Ko; Rong Cao; Andrew H.-J. Wang; Eric Oldfield

“Head-to-head” terpene synthases catalyze the first committed steps in sterol and carotenoid biosynthesis: the condensation of two isoprenoid diphosphates to form cyclopropylcarbinyl diphosphates, followed by ring opening. Here, we report the structures of Staphylococcus aureus dehydrosqualene synthase (CrtM) complexed with its reaction intermediate, presqualene diphosphate (PSPP), the dehydrosqualene (DHS) product, as well as a series of inhibitors. The results indicate that, on initial diphosphate loss, the primary carbocation so formed bends down into the interior of the protein to react with C2,3 double bond in the prenyl acceptor to form PSPP, with the lower two-thirds of both PSPP chains occupying essentially the same positions as found in the two farnesyl chains in the substrates. The second-half reaction is then initiated by the PSPP diphosphate returning back to the Mg2+ cluster for ionization, with the resultant DHS so formed being trapped in a surface pocket. This mechanism is supported by the observation that cationic inhibitors (of interest as antiinfectives) bind with their positive charge located in the same region as the cyclopropyl carbinyl group; that S-thiolo-diphosphates only inhibit when in the allylic site; activity results on 11 mutants show that both DXXXD conserved domains are essential for PSPP ionization; and the observation that head-to-tail isoprenoid synthases as well as terpene cyclases have ionization and alkene-donor sites which spatially overlap those found in CrtM.


Chemical Biology & Drug Design | 2013

Farnesyl Diphosphate Synthase Inhibitors from In Silico Screening

Steffen Lindert; Wei Zhu; Yi Liang Liu; Ran Pang; Eric Oldfield; J. Andrew McCammon

The relaxed complex scheme is an in silico drug screening method that accounts for receptor flexibility using molecular dynamics simulations. Here, we used this approach combined with similarity searches and experimental inhibition assays to identify several low micromolar, non‐bisphosphonate inhibitors, bisamidines, of farnesyl diphosphate synthase (FPPS), an enzyme targeted by some anticancer and antimicrobial agents and for the treatment of bone resorption diseases. This novel class of farnesyl diphosphate synthase inhibitors have more drug‐like properties than existing bisphosphonate inhibitors, making them interesting pharmaceutical leads.


PLOS Pathogens | 2014

Squalene synthase as a target for Chagas disease therapeutics.

Na Shang; Qian Li; Tzu-Ping Ko; Hsiu Chien Chan; Jikun Li; Yingying Zheng; Chun Hsiang Huang; Feifei Ren; Chun Chi Chen; Zhen Zhu; Melina Galizzi; Zhu Hong Li; Carlos A. Rodrígues-Poveda; Dolores González-Pacanowska; Phercyles Veiga-Santos; Tecia Maria Ulisses de Carvalho; Wanderley de Souza; Julio A. Urbina; Andrew H.-J. Wang; Roberto Docampo; Kai Li; Yi Liang Liu; Eric Oldfield; Rey-Ting Guo

Trypanosomatid parasites are the causative agents of many neglected tropical diseases and there is currently considerable interest in targeting endogenous sterol biosynthesis in these organisms as a route to the development of novel anti-infective drugs. Here, we report the first x-ray crystallographic structures of the enzyme squalene synthase (SQS) from a trypanosomatid parasite, Trypanosoma cruzi, the causative agent of Chagas disease. We obtained five structures of T. cruzi SQS and eight structures of human SQS with four classes of inhibitors: the substrate-analog S-thiolo-farnesyl diphosphate, the quinuclidines E5700 and ER119884, several lipophilic bisphosphonates, and the thiocyanate WC-9, with the structures of the two very potent quinuclidines suggesting strategies for selective inhibitor development. We also show that the lipophilic bisphosphonates have low nM activity against T. cruzi and inhibit endogenous sterol biosynthesis and that E5700 acts synergistically with the azole drug, posaconazole. The determination of the structures of trypanosomatid and human SQS enzymes with a diverse set of inhibitors active in cells provides insights into SQS inhibition, of interest in the context of the development of drugs against Chagas disease.


Science Translational Medicine | 2014

A combination therapy for KRAS-driven lung adenocarcinomas using lipophilic bisphosphonates and rapamycin

Yifeng Xia; Yi Liang Liu; Yonghua Xie; Wei Zhu; Francisco Guerra; Shen Shen; Narayana Yeddula; Wolfgang H. Fischer; William Low; Xiaoying Zhou; Yonghui Zhang; Eric Oldfield; Inder M. Verma

Lipophilic bisphosphonates combined with rapamycin inhibit the growth of KRAS-mutant lung adenocarcinomas in mouse models. Bone Drugs’ Cousins Treating Cancer Bisphosphonates are a class of drugs that are commonly used to treat osteoporosis and other disorders associated with bone resorption. A new group of related compounds called lipophilic bisphosphonates does not bind to bone, but has activity against some of the enzymes involved in the metabolism and activation of KRAS, a well-known oncogene. Here, Xia et al. show that lipophilic bisphosphonates are toxic to KRAS-mutant lung cancer cells in vitro. The lipophilic bisphosphonates alone were less effective in vivo, but rapamycin boosted their effectiveness in mouse models by facilitating autophagy and inhibiting a pathway that promotes tumor cell survival. Lung cancer is the most common human malignancy and leads to about one-third of all cancer-related deaths. Lung adenocarcinomas harboring KRAS mutations, in contrast to those with EGFR and EML4-ALK mutations, have not been successfully targeted. We describe a combination therapy for treating these malignancies with two agents: a lipophilic bisphosphonate and rapamycin. This drug combination is much more effective than either agent acting alone in the KRAS G12D–induced mouse lung model. Lipophilic bisphosphonates inhibit both farnesyl and geranylgeranyldiphosphate synthases, effectively blocking prenylation of KRAS and other small G proteins (heterotrimeric GTP-binding protein, heterotrimeric guanine nucleotide–binding proteins) critical for tumor growth and cell survival. Bisphosphonate treatment of cells initiated autophagy but was ultimately unsuccessful and led to p62 accumulation and concomitant nuclear factor κB (NF-κB) activation, resulting in dampened efficacy in vivo. However, we found that rapamycin, in addition to inhibiting the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathway, facilitated autophagy and prevented p62 accumulation–induced NF-κB activation and tumor cell proliferation. Overall, these results suggest that using lipophilic bisphosphonates in combination with rapamycin may provide an effective strategy for targeting lung adenocarcinomas harboring KRAS mutations.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Structure, function and inhibition of the two- and three-domain 4Fe-4S IspG proteins

Yi Liang Liu; Francisco Guerra; Ke Wang; Weixue Wang; Jikun Li; Cancan Huang; Wei Zhu; Kevin Houlihan; Zhi Li; Yong Zhang; Satish K. Nair; Eric Oldfield

IspG is a 4Fe4S protein involved in isoprenoid biosynthesis. Most bacterial IspGs contain two domains: a TIM barrel (A) and a 4Fe4S domain (B), but in plants and malaria parasites, there is a large insert domain (A*) whose structure and function are unknown. We show that bacterial IspGs function in solution as (AB)2 dimers and that mutations in either both A or both B domains block activity. Chimeras harboring an A-mutation in one chain and a B-mutation in the other have 50% of the activity seen in wild-type protein, because there is still one catalytically active AB domain. However, a plant IspG functions as an AA*B monomer. We propose, using computational modeling and electron microscopy, that the A* insert domain has a TIM barrel structure that interacts with the A domain. This structural arrangement enables the A and B domains to interact in a “cup and ball” manner during catalysis, just as in the bacterial systems. EPR/HYSCORE spectra of reaction intermediate, product, and inhibitor ligands bound to both two and three domain proteins are identical, indicating the same local electronic structure, and computational docking indicates these ligands bridge both A and B domains. Overall, the results are of broad general interest because they indicate the insert domain in three-domain IspGs is a second TIM barrel that plays a structural role and that the pattern of inhibition of both two and three domain proteins are the same, results that can be expected to be of use in drug design.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Head-to-Head Prenyl Tranferases: Anti-Infective Drug Targets.

Fu Yang Lin; Yi Liang Liu; Kai Li; Rong Cao; Wei Zhu; Jordan Axelson; Ran Pang; Eric Oldfield

We report X-ray crystallographic structures of three inhibitors bound to dehydrosqualene synthase from Staphylococcus aureus: 1 (BPH-651), 2 (WC-9), and 3 (SQ-109). Compound 2 binds to the S2 site with its -SCN group surrounded by four hydrogen bond donors. With 1, we report two structures: in both, the quinuclidine headgroup binds in the allylic (S1) site with the side chain in S2, but in the presence of PPi and Mg(2+), the quinuclidines cationic center interacts with PPi and three Mg(2+), mimicking a transition state involved in diphosphate ionization. With 3, there are again two structures. In one, the geranyl side chain binds to either S1 or S2 and the adamantane headgroup binds to S1. In the second, the side chain binds to S2 while the headgroup binds to S1. These results provide structural clues for the mechanism and inhibition of the head-to-head prenyl transferases and should aid future drug design.

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Rey-Ting Guo

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Joo Hwan No

Institut Pasteur Korea

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Feifei Ren

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Victor Nizet

University of California

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Chun Chi Chen

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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