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Dive into the research topics where Zhenquan Hu is active.

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Featured researches published by Zhenquan Hu.


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

W2466.48 Opens a Gate for a Continuous Intrinsic Water Pathway during Activation of the Adenosine A2A Receptor

Shuguang Yuan; Zhenquan Hu; Slawomir Filipek; Horst Vogel

The question how G-protein-coupled receptors transduce an extracellular signal by a sequence of transmembrane conformational transitions into an intracellular response remains to be solved at molecular detail. Herein, we use molecular dynamics simulations to reveal distinct conformational transitions of the adenosine A2A receptor, and we found that the conserved W246(6.48) residue in transmembrane helix TM6 performs a key rotamer toggle switch. Agonist binding induces the sidechain of W246(6.48) to fluctuate between two distinct conformations enabling the diffusion of water molecules from the bulk into the center of the receptor. After passing the W246(6.48) gate, the internal water molecules induce another conserved residue, Y288(7.53), to switch to a distinct rotamer conformation establishing a continuous transmembrane water pathway. Further, structural changes of TM6 and TM7 induce local structural changes of the adjacent lipid bilayer.


Toxicology Letters | 2015

OpenVirtualToxLab - a platform for generating and exchanging in silico toxicity data

Angelo Vedani; Max Dobler; Zhenquan Hu; Martin Smiesko

The VirtualToxLab is an in silico technology for estimating the toxic potential--endocrine and metabolic disruption, some aspects of carcinogenicity and cardiotoxicity--of drugs, chemicals and natural products. The technology is based on an automated protocol that simulates and quantifies the binding of small molecules towards a series of currently 16 proteins, known or suspected to trigger adverse effects: 10 nuclear receptors (androgen, estrogen α, estrogen β, glucocorticoid, liver X, mineralocorticoid, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ, progesterone, thyroid α, thyroid β), four members of the cytochrome P450 enzyme family (1A2, 2C9, 2D6, 3A4), a cytosolic transcription factor (aryl hydrocarbon receptor) and a potassium ion channel (hERG). The toxic potential of a compound--its ability to trigger adverse effects--is derived from its computed binding affinities toward these very proteins: the computationally demanding simulations are executed in client-server model on a Linux cluster of the University of Basel. The graphical-user interface supports all computer platforms, allows building and uploading molecular structures, inspecting and downloading the results and, most important, rationalizing any prediction at the atomic level by interactively analyzing the binding mode of a compound with its target protein(s) in real-time 3D. Access to the VirtualToxLab is available free of charge for universities, governmental agencies, regulatory bodies and non-profit organizations.


Trends in Biotechnology | 2017

Implementing WebGL and HTML5 in Macromolecular Visualization and Modern Computer-Aided Drug Design

Shuguang Yuan; H. C. Stephen Chan; Zhenquan Hu

Web browsers have long been recognized as potential platforms for remote macromolecule visualization. However, the difficulty in transferring large-scale data to clients and the lack of native support for hardware-accelerated applications in the local browser undermine the feasibility of such utilities. With the introduction of WebGL and HTML5 technologies in recent years, it is now possible to exploit the power of a graphics-processing unit (GPU) from a browser without any third-party plugin. Many new tools have been developed for biological molecule visualization and modern drug discovery. In contrast to traditional offline tools, real-time computing, interactive data analysis, and cross-platform analyses feature WebGL- and HTML5-based tools, facilitating biological research in a more efficient and user-friendly way.


Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Computational Molecular Science | 2017

Using PyMOL as a platform for computational drug design

Shuguang Yuan; H. C. Stephen Chan; Zhenquan Hu

PyMOL, a cross‐platform molecular graphics tool, has been widely used for three‐dimensional (3D) visualization of proteins, nucleic acids, small molecules, electron densities, surfaces, and trajectories. It is also capable of editing molecules, ray tracing, and making movies. This Python‐based software, alongside many Python plugin tools, has been developed to enhance its utilities and facilitate the drug design in PyMOL. To gain an insightful view of useful drug design tools and their functions in PyMOL, we present an extensive discussion on various molecular modeling modules in PyMOL, covering those for visualization and analysis enhancement, protein–ligand modeling, molecular simulations, and drug screening. This review provides an excellent introduction to present 3D structures visualization and computational drug design in PyMOL. WIREs Comput Mol Sci 2017, 7:e1298. doi: 10.1002/wcms.1298


Oncotarget | 2016

Discovery and characterization of a novel potent type II native and mutant BCR-ABL inhibitor (CHMFL-074) for Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML)

Feiyang Liu; Beilei Wang; Qiang Wang; Ziping Qi; Cheng Chen; L.L Kong; J.Y Chen; Xiaochuan Liu; Aoli Wang; Chen Hu; Wenliang Wang; Wang H; F Wu; Y Ruan; Shuang Qi; Jing Liu; Fengming Zou; Zhenquan Hu; Li Wang; Shanchun Zhang; Cai-Hong Yun; Z Zhai; Qingsong Liu

BCR gene fused ABL kinase is the critical driving force for the Philadelphia Chromosome positive (Ph+) Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML) and has been extensively explored as a drug target. With a structure-based drug design approach we have discovered a novel inhibitor CHMFL-074, that potently inhibits both the native and a variety of clinically emerged mutants of BCR-ABL kinase. The X-ray crystal structure of CHMFL-074 in complex with ABL1 kinase (PDB ID: 5HU9) revealed a typical type II binding mode (DFG-out) but relatively rare hinge binding. Kinome wide selectivity profiling demonstrated that CHMFL-074 bore a high selectivity (S score(1) = 0.03) and potently inhibited ABL1 kinase (IC50: 24 nM) and PDGFR α/β (IC50: 71 nM and 88 nM). CHMFL-074 displayed strong anti-proliferative efficacy against BCR-ABL–driven CML cell lines such as K562 (GI50: 56 nM), MEG-01 (GI50: 18 nM) and KU812 (GI50: 57 nM). CHMFL-074 arrested cell cycle into the G0/G1 phase and induced apoptosis in the Ph+ CML cell lines. In addition, it potently inhibited the CML patient primary cells proliferation but did not affect the normal bone marrow cells. In the CML cell K562 inoculated xenograft mouse model, oral administration of 100 mg/kg/d of CHMFL-074 achieved a tumor growth inhibition (TGI) of 65% without exhibiting apparent toxicity. As a potential drug candidate for fighting CML, CHMFL-074 is under extensive preclinical safety evaluation now.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016

Discovery of N-((1-(4-(3-(3-((6,7-Dimethoxyquinolin-3-yl)oxy)phenyl)ureido)-2-(trifluoromethyl)phenyl)piperidin-4-yl)methyl)propionamide (CHMFL-KIT-8140) as a Highly Potent Type II Inhibitor Capable of Inhibiting the T670I “Gatekeeper” Mutant of cKIT Kinase

Binhua Li; Aoli Wang; Juan Liu; Ziping Qi; Xiaochuan Liu; Kailin Yu; Hong Wu; Cheng Chen; Chen Hu; Wenchao Wang; Jiaxin Wu; Zhenquan Hu; Ling Ye; Fengming Zou; Feiyang Liu; Beilei Wang; Li Wang; Tao Ren; Shaojuan Zhang; Mingfeng Bai; Shanchun Zhang; Jing Liu; Qingsong Liu

cKIT kinase inhibitors, e.g., imatinib, could induce drug-acquired mutations such as cKIT T670I that rendered drug resistance after chronic treatment. Through a type II kinase inhibitor design approach we discovered a highly potent type II cKIT kinase inhibitor compound 35 (CHMFL-KIT-8140), which potently inhibited both cKIT wt (IC50 = 33 nM) and cKIT gatekeeper T670I mutant (IC50 = 99 nM). Compound 35 displayed strong antiproliferative effect against GISTs cancer cell lines GIST-T1 (cKIT wt, GI50 = 4 nM) and GIST-5R (cKIT T670I, GI50 = 26 nM). In the cellular context it strongly inhibited c-KIT mediated signaling pathways and induced apoptosis. In the BaF3-TEL-cKIT-T670I isogenic cell inoculated xenograft mouse model, 35 exhibited dose dependent tumor growth suppression efficacy and 100 mg/kg dosage provided 47.7% tumor growth inhibition (TGI) without obvious toxicity. We believe compound 35 would be a good pharmacological tool for exploration of the cKIT-T670I mutant mediated pathology in GISTs.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017

Discovery of 2-((3-acrylamido-4-methylphenyl)amino)-N-(2-methyl-5-(3,4,5-trimethoxybenzamido)phenyl)-4-(methylamino)pyrimidine-5-carboxamide (CHMFL-BMX-078) as a Highly Potent and Selective Type II Irreversible Bone Marrow Kinase in the X Chromosome (BMX) Kinase Inhibitor.

Xiaofei Liang; Fengchao Lv; Beilei Wang; Kailin Yu; Hong Wu; Ziping Qi; Zongru Jiang; Cheng Chen; Aoli Wang; Weili Miao; Wenchao Wang; Zhenquan Hu; Juan Liu; Xiaochuan Liu; Zheng Zhao; Li Wang; Shanchuan Zhang; Zi Ye; Chu Wang; Tao Ren; Yinsheng Wang; Qingsong Liu; Jing Liu

BMX is a member of TEC family nonreceptor tyrosine kinase and is involved in a variety of critical physiological and pathological processes. Through combination of irreversible inhibitor design and type II inhibitor design approaches, we have discovered a highly selective and potent type II irreversible BMX kinase inhibitor compound 41 (CHMFL-BMX-078), which exhibited an IC50 of 11 nM by formation of a covalent bond with cysteine 496 residue in the DFG-out inactive conformation of BMX. It displayed a high selectivity profile (S score(1) = 0.01) against the 468 kinases/mutants in the KINOMEscan evaluation and achieved at least 40-fold selectivity over BTK kinase. Given the fact that BMX mediated signaling pathway is still not fully understood, compound 41 would serve as a useful pharmacological tool to elucidate the detailed mechanism of BMX mediated signaling pathways.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016

Discovery of 2-((3-Amino-4-methylphenyl)amino)-N-(2-methyl-5-(3-(trifluoromethyl)benzamido)phenyl)-4-(methylamino)pyrimidine-5-carboxamide (CHMFL-ABL-053) as a Potent, Selective, and Orally Available BCR-ABL/SRC/p38 Kinase Inhibitor for Chronic Myeloid Leukemia

Xiaofei Liang; Xiaochuan Liu; Beilei Wang; Fengming Zou; Aoli Wang; Shuang Qi; Cheng Chen; Zheng Zhao; Wenchao Wang; Ziping Qi; Fengchao Lv; Zhenquan Hu; Li Wang; Shanchun Zhang; Qingsong Liu; Jing Liu

Starting from a dihydropyrimidopyrimidine core scaffold based compound 27 (GNF-7), we discovered a highly potent (ABL1: IC50 of 70 nM) and selective (S score (1) = 0.02) BCR-ABL inhibitor 18a (CHMFL-ABL-053). Compound 18a did not exhibit apparent inhibitory activity against c-KIT kinase, which is the common target of currently clinically used BCR-ABL inhibitors. Through significant suppression of the BCR-ABL autophosphorylation (EC50 about 100 nM) and downstream mediators such as STAT5, Crkl, and ERKs phosphorylation, 18a inhibited the proliferation of CML cell lines K562 (GI50 = 14 nM), KU812 (GI50 = 25 nM), and MEG-01 (GI50 = 16 nM). A pharmacokinetic study revealed that 18a had over 4 h of half-life and 24% bioavailability in rats. A 50 mg/kg/day dosage treatment could almost completely suppress tumor progression in the K562 cells inoculated xenograft mouse model. As a potential useful drug candidate for CML, 18a is under extensive preclinical safety evaluation now.


European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2018

Discovery of 4-((N-(2-(dimethylamino)ethyl)acrylamido)methyl)-N-(4-methyl-3-((4-(pyridin-3-yl)pyrimidin-2-yl)amino)phenyl)benzamide (CHMFL-PDGFR-159) as a highly selective type II PDGFRα kinase inhibitor for PDGFRα driving chronic eosinophilic leukemia

Qiang Wang; Feiyang Liu; Shuang Qi; Ziping Qi; Xiao-E Yan; Beilei Wang; Aoli Wang; Wei Wang; Cheng Chen; Xiaochuan Liu; Zongru Jiang; Zhenquan Hu; Li Wang; Wenchao Wang; Tao Ren; Shanchun Zhang; Cai-Hong Yun; Qingsong Liu; Jing Liu

Through exploration of the non-highly conserved allosteric hydrophobic pocket generated by DFG-out shifting in the inactive conformation, we discovered a highly selective type II PDGFRα kinase inhibitor 15i (CHMFL-PDGFRα-159), which exhibited strong potency against purified PDGFRα (IC50: 132 nM) but not structurally similar PDGFRβ, ABL, c-KIT and VEGFR2 kinases. In addition, it displayed a high selectivity profile (S score (10) = 0.02) at the concentration of 1 μM among 468 kinases/mutants in the KINOMEscan profiling. X-ray crystal structure of 15i in complex with PDGFRα revealed a distinct binding feature in the allosteric hydrophobic pocket which might help to expand the diversity of type II kinase inhibitors. Compound 15i potently inhibited the proliferation of PDGFRα driving Chronic Eosinophilic Leukemia (CEL) cell line EOL-1 through strong blockage of PDGFRα mediated signaling pathways, arresting cell cycle progression, and induction of apoptosis. Furthermore, compound 15i effectively suppressed the EOL-1 tumor progression in the xenograft model and increased the survival rate in the engraftment tumor model.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017

Discovery of 4-Methyl-N-(4-((4-methylpiperazin-1-yl)methyl)-3-(trifluoromethyl)phenyl)-3-((1-nicotinoylpiperidin-4-yl)oxy)benzamide (CHMFL-ABL/KIT-155) as a Novel Highly Potent Type II ABL/KIT Dual Kinase Inhibitor with a Distinct Hinge Binding

Qiang Wang; Feiyang Liu; Beilei Wang; Fengming Zou; Ziping Qi; Cheng Chen; Kailin Yu; Chen Hu; Shuang Qi; Wenchao Wang; Zhenquan Hu; Juan Liu; Wei Wang; Li Wang; Qianmao Liang; Shanchun Zhang; Tao Ren; Qingsong Liu; Jing Liu

The discovery of a novel potent type II ABL/c-KIT dual kinase inhibitor compound 34 (CHMFL-ABL/KIT-155), which utilized a hydrogen bond formed by NH on the kinase backbone and carbonyl oxygen of 34 as a unique hinge binding, is described. 34 potently inhibited purified ABL (IC50: 46 nM) and c-KIT kinase (IC50: 75 nM) in the biochemical assays and displayed high selectivity (S Score (1) = 0.03) at the concentration of 1 μM among 468 kinases/mutants in KINOMEscan assay. It exhibited strong antiproliferative activities against BCR-ABL/c-KIT driven CML/GISTs cancer cell lines through blockage of the BCR-ABL/c-KIT mediated signaling pathways, arresting cell cycle progression and induction of apoptosis. 34 possessed a good oral PK property and effectively suppressed the tumor progression in the K562 (CML) and GIST-T1 (GISTs) cells mediated xenograft mouse model. The distinct hinge-binding mode of 34 provided a novel pharmacophore for expanding the chemical structure diversity for the type II kinase inhibitors discovery.

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Qingsong Liu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Cheng Chen

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Jing Liu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Aoli Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Wenchao Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Tao Ren

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Beilei Wang

City University of Hong Kong

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Wei Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Xiaochuan Liu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Ziping Qi

University of Science and Technology of China

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