Research Interests

Professor Philip Hogg

(Position Details)
Phone Please contact School/Unit
Qualifications BSc, PhD Qld
 
School/Unit
UNSW Cancer Research Centre
 
Broad Research Areas
Biochemistry
HIV - AIDS
 
Specific Research Keywords
Allosteric Disulphides
Protein Regulation
Cancer Drug Development and Pharmacology
 
Research Interests
Disulphide bonds are covalent links between pairs of cysteine amino acids. All life forms make this bond. Human cells, for instance, make about 3,000 different proteins that contain disulphide bonds. These bonds have been generally considered to be either structural or catalytic. Structural bonds stabilise a protein while catalytic bonds mediate thiol-disulphide interchange reactions in substrate proteins. There is emerging evidence for a third type of disulphide bond which can control protein function by triggering a conformational change when it breaks and/or forms. We have called these bonds ‘allosteric disulphides’. We have predicted that about one in fifteen of all structurally determined disulphides is a potential allosteric bond, implying a significant role for these bonds in controlling protein function. Viral, bacterial and human proteins have been shown to be controlled by allosteric disulphides. Our research focus is to characterise control of important proteins by allosteric disulphides, be able to predict allosteric disulphides in proteins, and to exploit allosteric disulphides for drug development.
 
Teaching Interests
My teaching interests include fundamental protein chemistry and cell biology. My expertise is in vascular biology.
 
Society Memberships & Professional Activities
Awards and Honours
W.R. Pitney Award, University of New South Wales (1992)
Tow Prize, Coast Medical Association, Sydney (1992)
R. Douglas Wright Fellowship, National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia (1993)
The Cecil Orlando Adcock Research Award, National Heart Foundation of Australia (1993)
The Walter A. Stimson Research Award, National Heart Foundation of Australia (1995)
Senior Research Fellowship, National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia (1996)
The Speywood Medal, Australian Society for Thrombosis and Haemostasis (1996)
The Ian Crawford Research Award, National Heart Foundation of Australia (1997)
The Nick Balagiannis Research Award, National Heart Foundation of Australia (1999)
Principal Research Fellowship, National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia (2000)
Commonwealth Health Minister's Award for Excellence in Health and Medical Research (2001)
GlaxoSmithKline Australia Award for Research Excellence (formally Wellcome Medal) (2001)
The GE Healthcare Bio-Sciences Award, Australian Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (2006)
 
Funding Sources
My research is supported by Program Grants from the National Health and Medical Research Council and the NSW Cancer Council, and Project Grants from the National Health and Medical Research Council and the National Heart Foundation. I am also supported by a Capital Works Grant from the Australian Cancer Research Foundation and an Infrastructure Grant from the NSW Health Department.
 
Other Postgraduate Research

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Key works/Publications
Lay, A.J., Jiang, X.-M., Kisker, O., Flynn, E., Underwood, A., Condron, R. and Hogg, P.J. (2000) Phosphoglycerate kinase acts in tumor angiogenesis as a disulphide reductase. Nature 408, 869-873.

Xie, L., Chesterman, C.N. and Hogg, P.J. (2001) Control of von Willebrand factor multimer size by thrombospondin-1. J Exp Med 193, 1341-1349.

Matthias, L.J., Yam, P.T.W., Jiang, X.-M., Vandegraaff, N., Li, P., Poumbourios, P., Donoghue, N., and Hogg, P.J. (2002) Disulphide exchange in domain 2 of CD4 is required for entry of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1. Nature Immunol 3, 727-732.

Hogg, P.J. (2003) Disulphide-bonds as switches for protein function. Trends Biochem. Sci. 28, 210-214.

Don, A.S., Kisker, O., Dilda, P., Donoghue, N., Zhao, X., Decollogne, S., Creighton, B., Flynn, E., Folkman, J. and Hogg, P.J. (2003) A peptide trivalent arsenical inhibits tumor angiogenesis by perturbing mitochondrial function in angiogenic endothelial cells. Cancer Cell 3, 497-509.

Dilda, P.J., Don, A.S., Tanabe, K.M., Higgins, V.J., Allen, J.D., Dawes, I.W. and Hogg, P.J. (2005) Mechanism of selectivity of an angiogenesis inhibitor from screening a genome-wide set of Saccharomyces cerevisiae deletion strains. J Natl Cancer Inst 97, 1539-1547

Schmidt, B., Ho, L. and Hogg, P.J. (2006) Allosteric disulphide bonds. Biochemistry, in press
 
Attachments

Philip_Hogg_Bio.pdf
 


Profile last updated: 8/12/2008

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Philip Hogg

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Biochemistry
HIV - AIDS



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