Colorectal cancer (CRC) has been proven to be highly reliant on arginine availability. Limiting arginine-rich foods or treating patients with arginine-depleting enzymes arginine deiminase (ADI) or arginase can suppress colon cancer. However, arginase and ADI are not the best drug candidates for CRC.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAntimicrobial resistance has attracted worldwide attention and remains an urgent issue to resolve. Discovery of novel compounds is regarded as one way to circumvent the development of resistance and increase the available treatment options. Gossypol is a natural polyphenolic aldehyde, and it has attracted increasing attention as a possible antibacterial drug.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWith our recent success in developing a recombinant human arginase drug against broad-spectrum cancer cell lines, we have explored the potential of a recombinant arginase mutant (BCA-M) for human cervical cancer treatment. Our studies demonstrated that BCA-M significantly inhibited the growth of human cervical cancer cells in vitro regardless of argininosuccinate synthetase (ASS) and argininosuccinate lyase (ASL) expression. Drug susceptibilities correlate well with the expressions of major urea cycle genes and completeness of L-arginine regeneration pathways.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTachyplesin I (TPI) is a cationic β-hairpin antimicrobial peptide with broad-spectrum, potent antimicrobial activity. In this study, the all d-amino acid analogue of TPI (TPAD) was synthesized, and its structure and activity were determined. TPAD has comparable antibacterial activity to TPI on 14 bacterial strains, including four drug-resistant bacteria.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTachyplesin I is a potent antimicrobial peptide with broad spectrum of antimicrobial activity. It has 2 disulfide bonds and can form 3 disulfide bond isomers. In this study, the structure and antimicrobial activity of 3 tachyplesin I isomers (tachyplesin I, 3C12C, 3C7C) were investigated using molecular dynamic simulations, circular dichroism structural study, as well as antimicrobial activity and hemolysis assay.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Filamenting temperature-sensitive mutant Z (FtsZ), an essential GTPase in bacterial cell division, is highly conserved among Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria and thus considered an attractive target to treat antibiotic-resistant bacterial infections. In this study, a new class of FtsZ inhibitors bearing the pyrimidine-quinuclidine scaffold was identified from structure-based virtual screening of natural product libraries. Iterative rounds of in silico studies and biological evaluation established the preliminary structure-activity relationships of the new compounds.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMelanoma has been shown to require arginine for growth, thus providing a potential Achilles' heel for therapeutic exploitation. Our investigations show that arginine depletion, using a recombinant form of human arginase I (rhArg), efficiently inhibits the growth of mammalian melanoma cell lines in vitro. These cell lines are consistently deficient in ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) expression, correlating with their sensitivity to rhArg.
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