Yue-Hao Wang
University of Rhode Island
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Publication
Featured researches published by Yue-Hao Wang.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006
Marina K. Ayrapetov; Yue-Hao Wang; Xiaofeng Lin; Xianfeng Gu; Keykavous Parang; Gongqin Sun
Src protein-tyrosine kinase contains a myristoylation motif, a unique region, an Src homology (SH) 3 domain, an SH2 domain, a catalytic domain, and a C-terminal tail. The C-terminal tail contains a Tyr residue, Tyr527. Phosphorylation of Tyr527 triggers Src inactivation, caused by Tyr(P)527 binding to the SH2 domain. In this study, we demonstrated that a conformational contribution, not affinity, is the predominant force for the intramolecular SH2-Tyr(P)527 binding, and we characterized the structural basis for this conformational contribution. First, a phosphopeptide mimicking the C-terminal tail is an 80-fold weaker ligand than the optimal phosphopeptide, pYEEI, and similar to a phosphopeptide containing three Ala residues following Tyr(P) in binding to the Src SH2 domain. Second, the SH2-Tyr(P)527 binding is largely independent of the amino acid sequence surrounding Tyr(P)527, and only slightly decreased by an inactivating mutation in the SH2 domain. Furthermore, even the unphosphorylated C-terminal tail with the sequence of YEEI suppresses Src activity by binding to the SH2 domain. These experiments demonstrate that very weak affinity is sufficient for the SH2-Tyr(P)527 binding in Src inactivation. Third, the effective intramolecular SH2-Tyr(P)527 binding is attributed to a conformational contribution that requires residues Trp260 and Leu255. Although the SH3 domain is essential for Src inactivation by Tyr(P)527, it does not contribute to the SH2-Tyr(P)527 binding. These findings suggest a conformation-based Src inactivation model, which provides a unifying framework for understanding Src activation by a variety of mechanisms.
ChemMedChem | 2007
Anil Kumar; Yue-Hao Wang; Xiaofeng Lin; Gongqin Sun; Keykavous Parang
3‐Phenylpyrazolo[3,4‐d]pyrimidine (PhPP) derivatives substituted with an alkyl or aryl carboxylic acid at the N1‐endocyclic amine, such as PhPP‐CH2COOH (IC50=250 μM), and peptides Ac‐CIYKYY (IC50=400 μM) and Ac‐YIYGSFK (IC50=570 μM) were weak inhibitors of polyE4Y phosphorylation by active c‐Src. A series of PhPP–peptide conjugates were synthesized using PhPP as an ATP mimic and CIYKYY or YIYGSFK as a peptide substrate to improve the inhibitory potency against active c‐Src kinase. PhPP derivatives were attached to the N terminus or the side chain of amino acids in the peptide template. Two N‐terminal substituted conjugates, PhPP‐CH2CO‐CIYKYY (IC50=0.38 μM) and PhPP‐CH2CO‐YIYGSFK (IC50=2.7 μM), inhibited the polyE4Y phosphorylation by active c‐Src significantly higher than that of the parent compounds. The conjugation of PhPP with the peptides produced a synergistic inhibition effect possibly through creation of favorable interactions between the conjugate and the kinase domain as shown by molecular modeling studies.
Biochemistry | 2006
David J. Kemble; Yue-Hao Wang; Gongqin Sun
Protein tyrosine kinase Src is a key enzyme in mammalian signal transduction and an important target for anticancer drug discovery. Although recombinant expression in bacterial cells offers a convenient and rapid way for producing several other protein tyrosine kinases, active Src is difficult to produce in bacterial systems. However, a kinase-defective Src mutant (due to a single point mutation, Lys295Met) is expressed strongly in bacteria. We hypothesize that the difficulty with expressing active Src in bacteria is due to toxicity caused by Src kinase activity. To test this hypothesis, we generated a series of Src mutants by altering certain residues, especially His384, in the catalytic loop and examined their expression in the bacteria and their kinase activity. The results demonstrate that Src mutants with kinase activity above a certain threshold could not be purified from a bacterial expression system, while a variety of mutants with a kinase activity below this threshold could indeed be expressed and purified. These observations support the conclusion that Src activity is toxic to the bacteria, which prevents high-level expression of fully active Src. We further demonstrated that His384, a universally conserved residue among protein tyrosine kinases, is not essential for Src catalysis or its inactivation by C-terminal tail Tyr phosphorylation. Interestingly, His384 mutants undergo autophosphorylation on Tyr416 like wild-type Src but are not activated by autophosphorylation. The potential role of His384 in Src activation by autophosphorylation is discussed in the context of Src structure.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2009
Kezhen Huang; Yue-Hao Wang; Alex Brown; Gongqin Sun
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2006
Anil Kumar; Guofeng Ye; Yue-Hao Wang; Xiaofeng Lin; Gongqin Sun; Keykavous Parang
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2006
Yue-Hao Wang; Marina K. Ayrapetov; Xiaofeng Lin; Gongqin Sun
Archive | 2013
Anil Kumar; Guofeng Ye; Xianfeng Gu; Yue-Hao Wang; Gongqin Sun; Keykavous Parang
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2006
Xianfeng Gu; Yue-Hao Wang; Anil Kumar; Guofeng Ye; Keykavous Parang; Gongqin Sun
Archive | 2005
Keykavous Parang; Gongqin Sun; Anil Kumar; Nguyen Hai Nam; Yue-Hao Wang; Guofeng Ye
Biochemistry | 2007
Yue-Hao Wang; Kezhen Huang; Xiaofeng Lin; Gongqin Sun