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Dive into the research topics where Yu-Jing Lu is active.

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Featured researches published by Yu-Jing Lu.


ChemMedChem | 2008

G‐Quadruplexes: Targets in Anticancer Drug Design

Tian-Miao Ou; Yu-Jing Lu; Jia-Heng Tan; Zhi-Shu Huang; Kwok-Yin Wong; Lian-Quan Gu

G‐quadruplexes are special secondary structures adopted in some guanine‐rich DNA sequences. As guanine‐rich sequences are present in important regions of the eukaryotic genome, such as telomeres and the regulatory regions of many genes, such structures may play important roles in the regulation of biological events in the body. G‐quadruplexes have become valid targets for new anticancer drugs in the past few decades. Many leading compounds that target these structures have been reported, and a few of them have entered preclinical or clinical trials. Nonetheless, the selectivity of this kind of antitumor compound has yet to be improved in order to suppress the side effects caused by nonselective binding. As drug design targets, the topology and structural characteristics of quadruplexes, their possible biological roles, and the modes and sites of small‐ligand binding to these structures should be understood clearly. Herein we provide a summary of published research that has set out to address the above problem to provide useful information on the design of small ligands that target G‐quadruplexes. This review also covers research methodologies that have been developed to study the binding of ligands to G‐quadruplexes.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

5-N-Methylated Quindoline Derivatives as Telomeric G-Quadruplex Stabilizing Ligands: Effects of 5-N Positive Charge on Quadruplex Binding Affinity and Cell Proliferation

Yu-Jing Lu; Tian-Miao Ou; Jia-Heng Tan; Jin-Qiang Hou; Weiyan Shao; Dan Peng; Ning Sun; Xiao-Dong Wang; Wei-Bin Wu; Xianzhang Bu; Zhi-Shu Huang; Dik-Lung Ma; Kwok-Yin Wong; Lian-Quan Gu

A series of 5-N-methyl quindoline (cryptolepine) derivatives (2a- x) as telomeric quadruplex ligands was synthesized and evaluated. The designed ligands possess a positive charge at the 5- N position of the aromatic quindoline scaffold. The quadruplex binding of these compounds was evaluated by circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy, fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) melting assay, polymerase chain reaction (PCR) stop assay, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), and molecular modeling studies. Introduction of a positive charge not only significantly improved the binding ability but also induced the selectivity toward antiparallel quadruplex, whereas the nonmethylated derivatives tended to stabilize hybrid-type quadruplexes. NMR and molecular modeling studies revealed that the ligands stacked on the external G-quartets and the positively charged 5- N atom could contribute to the stabilizing ability. Long-term exposure of human cancer cells to 2r showed a remarkable cessation in population growth and cellular senescence phenotype and accompanied by a shortening of the telomere length.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Turning off Transcription of the bcl-2 Gene by Stabilizing the bcl-2 Promoter Quadruplex with Quindoline Derivatives

Xiao-Dong Wang; Tian-Miao Ou; Yu-Jing Lu; Zeng Li; Zheng Xu; Chen Xi; Jia-Heng Tan; Shi-Liang Huang; Lin-Kun An; Ding Li; Lian-Quan Gu; Zhi-Shu Huang

Human bcl-2 gene is an apoptosis-related oncogene containing a GC-rich sequence which is located upstream from P1 promoter and has the potential to form G-quadruplex structures. However, the regulatory role of the quadruplex and the effect of its ligands on bcl-2 have not been clarified. Here, we demonstrated that the G-quadruplex structure was disrupted when partial mutation of G --> A was made, resulting in a 2-fold increase in basal transcriptional activity of bcl-2 promoter. Quindoline derivatives, the highly active G-quadruplex ligands developed by our group, could significantly suppress bcl-2 transcriptional activation but had less effect on mutated bcl-2 transcription. These results provided direct evidence that G-quadruplex structure formed in bcl-2 promoter region could function as a transcriptional repressor element, and G-quadruplex specific ligands could regulate the transcription of bcl-2 through stabilization of quadruplex structure. The results further indicated that quindoline derivatives could induce apoptosis of HL-60 tumor cells.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

9-N-Substituted berberine derivatives: Stabilization of G-quadruplex DNA and down-regulation of oncogene c-myc

Yan Ma; Tian-Miao Ou; Jin-Qiang Hou; Yu-Jing Lu; Jia-Heng Tan; Lian-Quan Gu; Zhi-Shu Huang

A series of 9-N-substituted berberine derivatives (2a-j) were synthesized and evaluated as a new class of G-quadruplex binding ligands. G-quadruplex of DNA had been proven to be the transcription controller of human c-myc gene. The interaction of 9-N-substituted berberine derivatives with G-quadruplex DNA in c-myc was examined via EMSA, CD spectroscopy, FRET-melting method, PCR-stop assay, competitive dialysis, cell proliferation assay, and RT-PCR assay. The experiment results indicated that these derivatives could selectively induce and stabilize the formation of intramolecular parallel G-quadruplex in c-myc, which led to down-regulation of transcription of the c-myc in the HL60 lymphomas cell line. The related structure-activity relationships were also discussed.


Oncogene | 2006

Senescence and telomere shortening induced by novel potent G-quadruplex interactive agents, quindoline derivatives, in human cancer cell lines.

Jun Min Zhou; Xiao Feng Zhu; Yu-Jing Lu; Rong Deng; Zhiying Huang; Yu Ping Mei; Ying Nan Wang; Wenlin Huang; Zong Chao Liu; Lian-Quan Gu; Yi-Xin Zeng

Agents stabilizing G-quadruplexes have the potential to interfere with telomere replication by blocking the elongation step catalysed by telomerase or telomerase-independent mechanism and could therefore act as antitumor agents. In this study, we found that quindoline derivatives interacted preferentially with intramolecular G-quadruplex structures and were novel potent telomerase inhibitors. Treatment with quindoline derivatives reproducibly inhibited telomerase activity in human leukemia K562 cells and colon cancer SW620 cells. N′-(10H-Indolo [3,2-b] quinolin-11-yl)-N, N-dimethyl-propane-1,3-diamine (SYUIQ-5), (one of quindoline derivatives), when added to K562 and SW620 cell culture at nonacute cytotoxic concentrations, increased time of population doublings of K562 and SW620 cells, induced a marked cessation in cell growth and cellular senescence phenotype after 35 and 18 days, respectively. Growth cessation was accompanied by a shortening of telomere length, and induction of p16, p21 and p27 protein expression. However, another compound SYUIQ-7 with greater IC50 for telomerase had no obvious cellular effect in nonacute cytotoxic concentrations. These results indicate that quindoline derivatives as novel potent G-quadruplex interactive agents induce senescence and telomere shortening in cancer cells and therefore are promising agents for cancer treatment.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009

Isaindigotone Derivatives: A New Class of Highly Selective Ligands for Telomeric G-Quadruplex DNA

Jia-Heng Tan; Tian-Miao Ou; Jin-Qiang Hou; Yu-Jing Lu; Shi-Liang Huang; Hai-Bin Luo; Jian-Yong Wu; Zhi-Shu Huang; Kwok-Yin Wong; Lian-Quan Gu

Four isaindigotone derivatives (5a,b and 6a,b) designed as telomeric G-quadruplex ligands have been synthesized and characterized. The unfused aromatic rings in these compounds allow a flexible and adaptive conformation in G-quadruplex recognition. The interaction of human telomeric G-quadruplex DNA with these designed ligands was explored by means of FRET melting, fluorescence titration, CD spectroscopy, continuous variation, and molecular modeling studies. Our results showed that the adaptive scaffold might not only allow the ligands to well occupy the G-quartet but also perfectly bind to the grooves of the G-quadruplex. The synergetic effect of the multiple binding modes might be responsible for the improved binding ability and high selectivity of these ligands toward G-quadruplex over duplex DNA. Long-term exposure of HL60 and CA46 cancer cells to compound 5a showed a remarkable decrease in population growth, cellular senescence phenotype, and shortening of the telomere length, which is consistent with the behavior of an effective telomeric G-quadruplex ligand and telomerase inhibitor.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2011

Inhibition of Cell Proliferation by Quindoline Derivative (SYUIQ-05) through its Preferential Interaction with c-myc Promoter G-Quadruplex

Tian-Miao Ou; Jing Lin; Yu-Jing Lu; Jin-Qiang Hou; Jia-Heng Tan; Shu-Han Chen; Zeng Li; Yan-Ping Li; Ding Li; Lian-Quan Gu; Zhi-Shu Huang

G-Quadruplex is a special DNA secondary structure and present in many important regulatory regions in human genome, such as the telomeric end and the promoters of some oncogenes. Specially, different forms of G-quadruplexes exist in telomeric DNA and c-myc promoter and play important roles in the pathway of cell proliferation and senescence. The effects of G-quadruplex ligands for either telomeric or c-myc G-quadruplex in vitro have been widely studied, but the specificity of these effects in vivo is still unknown. In the present research, various experiments were carried out to study the effect of G-quadruplex ligand SYUIQ-05 on tumor cell lines and the mechanism of this effect. Our results showed that it preferred to bind with G-quadruplex in c-myc and had rather insignificant effect on G-quadruplex in telomere. Therefore, it is possible that this compound had its antitumor activity for cancer cells mainly through its interaction with c-myc quadruplex.


Chemical Communications | 2011

Benzothiazole-substituted benzofuroquinolinium dye: a selective switch-on fluorescent probe for G-quadruplex

Yu-Jing Lu; Siu-Cheong Yan; Fung-Yi Chan; Lan Zou; Wai-Hong Chung; Wing-Leung Wong; Bin Qiu; Ning Sun; Pak-Ho Chan; Zhi-Shu Huang; Lian-Quan Gu; Kwok-Yin Wong

A new switch-on fluorescent probe containing the natural product cryptolepine analogue benzofuroquinolinium moiety (binding scaffold) and a benzothiazole moiety (signalling unit) shows a remarkable fluorescence enhancement selective for the G-quadruplex nucleic acid structure. Binding studies revealed that the highly selective response of the fluorescent probe arises from end-stack binding to G-quadruplex.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Rational design of berberine-based FtsZ inhibitors with broad-spectrum antibacterial activity.

Ning Sun; Fung-Yi Chan; Yu-Jing Lu; Marco A. C. Neves; Hok-Kiu Lui; Yong Wang; Ka-Yan Chow; Kin-Fai Chan; Siu-Cheong Yan; Yun-Chung Leung; Ruben Abagyan; Tak-Hang Chan; Kwok-Yin Wong

Inhibition of the functional activity of Filamenting temperature-sensitive mutant Z (FtsZ) protein, an essential and highly conserved bacterial cytokinesis protein, is a promising approach for the development of a new class of antibacterial agents. Berberine, a benzylisoquinoline alkaloid widely used in traditional Chinese and native American medicines for its antimicrobial properties, has been recently reported to inhibit FtsZ. Using a combination of in silico structure-based design and in vitro biological assays, 9-phenoxyalkyl berberine derivatives were identified as potent FtsZ inhibitors. Compared to the parent compound berberine, the derivatives showed a significant enhancement of antibacterial activity against clinically relevant bacteria, and an improved potency against the GTPase activity and polymerization of FtsZ. The most potent compound 2 strongly inhibited the proliferation of Gram-positive bacteria, including methicillin-resistant S. aureus and vancomycin-resistant E. faecium, with MIC values between 2 and 4 µg/mL, and was active against the Gram-negative E. coli and K. pneumoniae, with MIC values of 32 and 64 µg/mL respectively. The compound perturbed the formation of cytokinetic Z-ring in E. coli. Also, the compound interfered with in vitro polymerization of S. aureus FtsZ. Taken together, the chemical modification of berberine with 9-phenoxyalkyl substituent groups greatly improved the antibacterial activity via targeting FtsZ.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2016

Molecular Engineering of Thiazole Orange Dye: Change of Fluorescent Signaling from Universal to Specific upon Binding with Nucleic Acids in Bioassay.

Yu-Jing Lu; Qiang Deng; Jinqiang Hou; Dong-Ping Hu; Zheng-Ya Wang; Kun Zhang; Leonard G. Luyt; Wing-Leung Wong; Cheuk-Fai Chow

The universal fluorescent staining property of thiazole orange (TO) dye was adapted in order to be specific for G-quadruplex DNA structures, through the introduction of a styrene-like substituent at the ortho-position of the TO scaffold. This extraordinary outcome was determined from experimental studies and further explored through molecular docking studies. The molecular docking studies help understand how such a small substituent leads to remarkable fluorescent signal discrimination between G-quadruplex DNA and other types of nucleic acids. The results reveal that the modified dyes bind to the G-quadruplex or duplex DNA in a similar fashion as TO, but exhibit either enhanced or quenched fluorescent signal, which is determined by the spatial length and orientation of the substituent and has never been known. The new fluorescent dye modified with a p-(dimethylamino)styryl substituent offers 10-fold more selectivity toward telomeric G-quadruplexes than double-stranded DNA substrates. In addition, native PAGE experiments, FRET, CD analysis, and live cell imaging were also studied and demonstrated the potential applications of this class of thiazole-orange-based fluorescent probes in bioassays and cell imaging.

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Kun Zhang

Guangdong University of Technology

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Kwok-Yin Wong

Hong Kong Polytechnic University

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Ning Sun

Hong Kong Polytechnic University

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Yanxiong Fang

Guangdong University of Technology

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