Publications by authors named "S Antonysamy"

Article Synopsis
  • T-cell engaging (TCE) bispecific antibodies can effectively target and eliminate cancer cells by activating T cells, but their use is limited by potential toxic side effects that can affect healthy cells as well.
  • The study introduces a novel strategy using pro-drug forms of TCEs that become active specifically in the tumor environment by incorporating a masking approach that relies on tumor-enriched proteases.
  • Researchers successfully engineered and tested a pro-drug TCE using the anti-CD3 antibody E10, demonstrating its ability to activate T cells selectively within tumors, highlighting a promising avenue for safer cancer immunotherapy.
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Background: Due to the importance of both prostaglandins (PGs) and leukotrienes (LTs) as pro-inflammatory mediators, and the potential for eicosanoid shunting in the presence of pathway target inhibitors, we have investigated an approach to inhibiting the formation of both PGs and LTs as part of a multi-targeted drug discovery effort.

Methods: We generated ligand-protein X-ray crystal structures of known inhibitors of microsomal prostaglandin E2 synthase-1 (mPGES-1) and the 5-Lipoxygenase Activating Protein (FLAP), with their respective proteins, to understand the overlapping pharmacophores. We subsequently used molecular modeling and structure-based drug design (SBDD) to identify hybrid structures intended to inhibit both targets.

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Antibody therapeutics are one of the most important classes of drugs. Antibody structures have become an integral part of predicting the behavior of potential therapeutics, either directly or as the basis of modeling. Structures of Fab:antigen complexes have even greater value.

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Loss-of-function mutations in the retinoblastoma gene are common in several treatment-refractory cancers such as small-cell lung cancer and triple-negative breast cancer. To identify drugs synthetic lethal with mutation ( ), we tested 36 cell-cycle inhibitors using a cancer cell panel profiling approach optimized to discern cytotoxic from cytostatic effects. Inhibitors of the Aurora kinases AURKA and AURKB showed the strongest association in this assay.

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Protein arginine methyltransferase 5 (PRMT5) is a type II arginine methyltransferase that catalyzes the formation of symmetric dimethylarginine in a number of nuclear and cytoplasmic proteins. Although the cellular functions of PRMT5 have not been fully unraveled, it has been implicated in a number of cellular processes like RNA processing, signal transduction, and transcriptional regulation. PRMT5 is ubiquitously expressed in most tissues and its expression has been shown to be elevated in several cancers including breast cancer, gastric cancer, glioblastoma, and lymphoma.

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