
Sunesis Pharmaceuticals, Inc. has announced a presentation of updated interim results from an ongoing Phase 2 clinical trial demonstrating that the Company’s lead product candidate, voreloxin, shows promising efficacy and safety as a single agent in patients with platinum-resistant ovarian cancer. Ovarian cancer remains an unmet medical need with high recurrence rates, and the
Full Post: Sunesis Pharmaceuticals updates clinical data on Voreloxin in platinum-resistant ovarian cancer

A Queen’s University study sheds new light on the way one of our cell enzymes, implicated in causing tissue damage after heart attacks and strokes, is normally kept under control.
Led by Biochemistry professor Peter Davies, the research team’s discovery will be useful in developing new drug treatments that can aid recovery in stroke and heart disease, as well as lessen the effects of Alzheimer’s and other neurologically degenerative diseases.
“This is particularly exciting because the enzyme structure we were seeking - and the way its inhibitor blocks activity without itself being damaged - have proved so elusive until now,” says Dr. Davies, Canada Research Chair in Protein Engineering.
The team’s findings will be published on-line in the international journal, Nature , on Thursday Nov. 20.
In remodeling proteins needed for cell growth and movement, our cells use the enzyme calpain to break off pieces from other proteins. Calpain is activated when the cell releases short bursts of calcium.
During heart attacks or strokes, however, blood supply to cells is interrupted. When the blockage is re-opened, the influx of blood causes calcium levels in the cell to become dangerously high, and the calpain activity to increase. The result is significant damage to tissues. “While you want the enzyme to switch on and off, you don’t want it to go out of control,” says Biochemistry research associate Rob Campbell, a member of the Queen’s team.
The study shows how another protein, calpastatin, binds and blocks calpain once it has been activated by calcium. Dr. Campbell, an x-ray crystallographer, and PhD student Rachel Hanna were able to determine the structure of the calcium-bound calpain and discover how calpastatin can inhibit calpain without being cut and destroyed in the process. That information will be useful in designing drugs to protect against the damage caused by over-activation of calpain.
Because the crystals grown in the lab at Queen’s were too small to be used for X-ray diffraction data collection on the university’s diffractometer, Dr. Campbell and Ms Hanna booked time on the National Synchrotron Light Source at Brookhaven Long Island (operated by the U.S. Department of Energy).
Working in shifts around the clock, they collected the required data during the first nine of their 48 allotted hours. After another hour, “We knew we had the structure solved,” Ms Hanna recalls. “It was really exciting. We immediately sent an e-mail to Peter to say: ‘We did it!’”
http://www.queensu.ca/
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Related Posts:
Scientists at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital have gained new insights into regulation of one of the body’s enzyme workhorses called calpains. As the cell’s molecular overachievers, calpains function in many cellular processes, including the movement of cells in tissues, the death of damaged cells, insulin secretion, and brain cell and muscle function. The downside
Full Post: Scientists gain new insights into regulation of calpains
A University of Iowa study provides insight into a calcium-sensing enzyme already known to play a role in irregular heartbeats and other critical functions. The researchers showed that the enzyme, calmodulin kinase II (CaM kinase II), contributes to arrhythmia in an extremely rare disease called Timothy syndrome and that inhibiting the enzyme prevents irregular heartbeats.
Full Post: Timothy syndrome provides clues about enzyme role in arrhythmias
During heart failure the body reacts to the production of the hormone aldosterone. Too much aldosterone can stiffen and damage the muscles of the heart. Dutch researcher Luc Roumen has optimised compounds that inhibit the production of this hormone and looked at their optimum dosage. The compounds were manufactured by the companies Schering-Plough and
Full Post: New therapy for heart failure
Taking a cue from the way drugs like Viagra put the biological brakes on a key enzyme involved in heart failure, scientists at Johns Hopkins have mapped out a key chemical step involved in blocking the enzyme. The Johns Hopkins team reports how the enzyme, phosphodiesterase 5, or PDE5A, slows down the breakdown of another,
Full Post: Scientists map steps to block enzyme phosphodiesterase 5’s action in heart failure
While studying the mechanics of blood clots, researchers at the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center discovered a new enzyme that not only affects the blood, but seems to play a primary role in how cancer tumors expand and spread throughout the body. The research appeared in recent issues of the journal Blood and the
Full Post: Discovery of new enzyme in cancer growth --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
