Zhongli Zheng
Biogen Idec
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Featured researches published by Zhongli Zheng.
ACS Chemical Biology | 2011
Laura Silvian; Jessica E. Friedman; Kathy Strauch; Teresa G. Cachero; Eric S. Day; Fang Qian; Brian T. Cunningham; Amy D. Fung; Lihong Sun; Gerald W. Shipps; Lihe Su; Zhongli Zheng; Gnanasambandam Kumaravel; Adrian Whitty
BIO8898 is one of several synthetic organic molecules that have recently been reported to inhibit receptor binding and function of the constitutively trimeric tumor necrosis factor (TNF) family cytokine CD40 ligand (CD40L, aka CD154). Small molecule inhibitors of protein-protein interfaces are relatively rare, and their discovery is often very challenging. Therefore, to understand how BIO8898 achieves this feat, we characterized its mechanism of action using biochemical assays and X-ray crystallography. BIO8898 inhibited soluble CD40L binding to CD40-Ig with a potency of IC(50) = 25 μM and inhibited CD40L-dependent apoptosis in a cellular assay. A co-crystal structure of BIO8898 with CD40L revealed that one inhibitor molecule binds per protein trimer. Surprisingly, the compound binds not at the surface of the protein but by intercalating deeply between two subunits of the homotrimeric cytokine, disrupting a constitutive protein-protein interface and breaking the proteins 3-fold symmetry. The compound forms several hydrogen bonds with the protein, within an otherwise hydrophobic binding pocket. In addition to the translational splitting of the trimer, binding of BIO8898 was accompanied by additional local and longer-range conformational perturbations of the protein, both in the core and in a surface loop. Binding of BIO8898 is reversible, and the resulting complex is stable and does not lead to detectable dissociation of the protein trimer. Our results suggest that a set of core aromatic residues that are conserved across a subset of TNF family cytokines might represent a generic hot-spot for the induced-fit binding of trimer-disrupting small molecules.
Molecular Diversity | 2003
Gergely M. Makara; Huw Nash; Zhongli Zheng; Jean-Paul A. Orminati; Edward A. Wintner
Combinatorial library design can be carried out at either the reagent or the product level. Various reports in the literature have come to conflicting conclusions in favor of one over the other. In this paper a reagent-based screening library design strategy is presented. The method relies on analysis of scaffolds and building blocks separately to define the overall diversity in a compound file. The primary diversity selection by properties relevant for molecular recognition and by redundancy is followed by the application of filters for molecular properties known to be relevant for drug-likeness. Filter properties are rapidly estimated at the product level using a fragmental estimation approach. Initial experimental data suggest that high diversity in vast screening libraries can be achieved by carefully applied reagent level analysis. A potential role of diverse screening libraries in chemical genomics (pharmacological knockouts) is also discussed.
Protein Science | 1998
Juswinder Singh; Ellen Garber; Herman W. T. van Vlijmen; Michael Karpusas; Yen-Ming Hsu; Zhongli Zheng; David W. Thomas; James H. Naismith
Archive | 1997
Juswinder Singh; Zhongli Zheng; Peter Sprague; Herman W. T. van Vlijmen; Alfredo C. Castro; Steven P. Adams
Archive | 2001
Michael Karpusas; Yen-Ming Hsu; Frederick R. Taylor; Zhongli Zheng
Archive | 2001
Zhongli Zheng; Julio Hernan Cuervo; Ko-Chung Lin; Humayun Saleem Ateeq
Archive | 2001
Zhongli Zheng; Frederick R. Taylor; Christopher D. Benjamin; Yen-Ming Hsu
Archive | 2003
Wen-Cherng Lee; Mary Beth Carter; Lihong Sun; Paul Lyne; Claudio Chuaqui; Zhongli Zheng; Juswinder Singh; Paula Boriack-Sjodin
Archive | 2003
Zhongli Zheng; Mary Beth Carter; Yusheng Liao; Lihong Sun; Leonid Kirkovsky; Susan Mrose; Yen-Ming Hsu; David W. Thomas; Gerald W. Shipps; Satish Jindal; George R. Lenz; Huw M. Nash
Archive | 2004
Steven P. Adams; Daniel L. Flynn; Michael Kelly; Gergely M. Makara; Keith Mason; Ciamac C. Moallemi; Huw M. Nash; Edward A. Wintner; Zhongli Zheng