Picture of Donald Coen

Donald Mark Coen, Ph.D.

Professor of Biological Chemistry and Molecular Pharmacology

Our laboratory takes molecular approaches to herpesvirus replication and latency. Current projects focus on the biogenesis, mechanisms of repression, and biological roles of viral microRNAs during HSV infection.

Research:

Our laboratory takes molecular approaches to herpesvirus replication and latency.  These studies provide excellent models for biological processes in eukaryotic cells and, because herpesviruses such as herpes simplex virus (HSV) and human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) are important pathogens, to exploit differences between herpesvirus and cellular processes for safe and effective antiviral therapy.   Areas of research include:

Novel post-transcriptional regulatory mechanisms.  Current projects focus on the biogenesis, mechanisms of repression, and biological roles of viral microRNAs during HSV infection.

Herpesvirus DNA replication proteins:  Projects include determining the 3-D structures of these proteins (with the Hogle lab), and the roles of poorly understood structural domains, and exploring their interactions with each other, cellular proteins, and nucleic acids via biochemical, mutational, and biophysical approaches, including (with the Loparo and Golan labs) single molecule methods.   These studies should permit detailed understanding of these complicated proteins and rational drug design.

Nuclear egress:  How do HCMV nucleocapsids move towards and gain access to the inner nuclear membrane, and bud through it?  Projects include biochemical and biophysical studies of a viral enzyme that mimics cyclin-dependent kinase and of a nuclear egress complex (in collaboration with the Hogle lab), and molecular genetic and cell biological studies of these proteins' functions in infected cells.

Drug targets and development of new therapies.   Aside from studies of established drug targets (herpesvirus DNA polymerases and the HCMV protein kinase), projects include discovering new antiviral drugs that inhibit protein-protein interactions, and finding new drug targets by a combination of "chemical genetic" and molecular genetic approaches.

HSV latency/pathogenesis.  HSV forms latent infections that persist for the life of the host.  How this occurs is biologically fascinating and clinically important.  Projects entail molecular genetic, and PCR-basedmethods to explore viral gene regulation especially how viral and host microRNAs repress viral gene expression, thereby maintaining latency.

Address: 

Room SGM - 304

250 Longwood Avenue

Boston, MA 02115

Publications View
Mutation within the herpes simplex virus DNA polymerase gene conferring resistance to (R)-9-(3,4-dihydroxybutyl)guanine.
Authors: Authors: Chiou HC, Kerns KM, Coen DM.
Antimicrob Agents Chemother
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Structural organization and unusual codon usage in the DNA polymerase gene from herpes simplex virus type 1.
Authors: Authors: Hall JD, Gibbs JS, Coen DM, Mount DW.
DNA
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Sequence and mapping analyses of the herpes simplex virus DNA polymerase gene predict a C-terminal substrate binding domain.
Authors: Authors: Gibbs JS, Chiou HC, Hall JD, Mount DW, Retondo MJ, Weller SK, Coen DM.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
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Mutations in the herpes simplex virus major DNA-binding protein gene leading to altered sensitivity to DNA polymerase inhibitors.
Authors: Authors: Chiou HC, Weller SK, Coen DM.
Virology
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Alternate utilization of two regulatory domains within the Moloney murine sarcoma virus long terminal repeat.
Authors: Authors: Graves BJ, Eisenberg SP, Coen DM, McKnight SL.
Mol Cell Biol
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Promoter domains required for expression of plasmid-borne copies of the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase gene in virus-infected mouse fibroblasts and microinjected frog oocytes.
Authors: Authors: Eisenberg SP, Coen DM, McKnight SL.
Mol Cell Biol
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Sensitivity of arabinosyladenine-resistant mutants of herpes simplex virus to other antiviral drugs and mapping of drug hypersensitivity mutations to the DNA polymerase locus.
Authors: Authors: Coen DM, Fleming HE, Leslie LK, Retondo MJ.
J Virol
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Herpes simplex virus mutants resistant to arabinosyladenine in the presence of deoxycoformycin.
Authors: Authors: Fleming HE, Coen DM.
Antimicrob Agents Chemother
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Genetics of herpes simplex virus.
Authors: Authors: Schaffer PA, Weller SK, Pancake BA, Coen DM.
J Invest Dermatol
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Generation of genetic diversity in herpes simplex virus: an antimutator phenotype maps to the DNA polymerase locus.
Authors: Authors: Hall JD, Coen DM, Fisher BL, Weisslitz M, Randall S, Almy RE, Gelep PT, Schaffer PA.
Virology
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