Picture of Jon Clardy

Jon Clardy, Ph.D.

Christopher T. Walsh Professor of Biological Chemistry and Molecular Pharmacology

The laboratory focuses on biologically active small molecules, especially those from bacteria and fungi with an overall goal of understanding how small molecules control biological processes. 

Research:

The laboratory focuses on biologically active small molecules, especially those from bacteria and fungi with an overall goal of understanding how small molecules control biological processes.  Organizing themes include: 1) function-based discovery of microbially-produced small molecules and their roles in microbial symbioses , 2) function-based discovery of biologically active small molecules using high-throughput screening,  3) genome-based discovery of bacterially-produced small molecules. 

1.  We have focused on the small molecule exchanges that underlie multilateral symbioses involving bacteria, partly because they are widespread and poorly understood and partly because they lead to the discovery of new useful molecules in the biological context in which they evolved.  Current projects involve the bacterial symbionts of fungus-growing ants, members of the human gut microbiome linked to disease, and interactions between micro-algae and bacteria.

2.  We also continue to discover small molecules in a more medically relevant context: high-throughput screening for a variety of diseases.  In these projects we have focused on antibacterial, antifungal, and antiparasitic agents along with immunomodulators and anticancer agents. 

3.  It is now quite clear that well studied bacteria – the producers of drugs that are used on the ton scale, for example – are genetically capable of producing many more potentially useful small molecules.  The biosynthetic gene can be seen but the associated molecules have never been characterized.  Ways to access these cryptic metabolites is a current focus of the laboratory.

Address: 

Room C-643

240 Longwood Avenue

Boston, MA 02115

Publications View
Amycomicin is a potent and specific antibiotic discovered with a targeted interaction screen.
Authors: Authors: Pishchany G, Mevers E, Ndousse-Fetter S, Horvath DJ, Paludo CR, Silva-Junior EA, Koren S, Skaar EP, Clardy J, Kolter R.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
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A plant-responsive bacterial-signaling system senses an ethanolamine derivative.
Authors: Authors: Coutinho BG, Mevers E, Schaefer AL, Pelletier DA, Harwood CS, Clardy J, Greenberg EP.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
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Mammalian Cells Engineered To Produce New Steroids.
Authors: Authors: Spady ES, Wyche TP, Rollins NJ, Clardy J, Way JC, Silver PA.
Chembiochem
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Discovery of Antimicrobial Lipodepsipeptides Produced by a Serratia sp. within Mosquito Microbiomes.
Authors: Authors: Ganley JG, Carr G, Ioerger TR, Sacchettini JC, Clardy J, Derbyshire ER.
Chembiochem
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A Repeating Sulfated Galactan Motif Resuscitates Dormant Micrococcus luteus Bacteria.
Authors: Authors: Böttcher T, Szamosvári D, Clardy J.
Appl Environ Microbiol
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Oridonin inhibits aberrant AKT activation in breast cancer.
Authors: Authors: Sun B, Wang G, Liu H, Liu P, Twal WO, Cheung H, Carroll SL, Ethier SP, Mevers EE, Clardy J, Roberts T, Chen C, Li Q, Wang L, Yang M, Zhao JJ, Wang Q.
Oncotarget
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Defense contracts: molecular protection in insect-microbe symbioses.
Authors: Authors: Van Arnam EB, Currie CR, Clardy J.
Chem Soc Rev
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Tundrenone: An Atypical Secondary Metabolite from Bacteria with Highly Restricted Primary Metabolism.
Authors: Authors: Puri AW, Mevers E, Ramadhar TR, Petras D, Liu D, Piel J, Dorrestein PC, Greenberg EP, Lidstrom ME, Clardy J.
J Am Chem Soc
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Pyrazines from bacteria and ants: convergent chemistry within an ecological niche.
Authors: Authors: Silva-Junior EA, Ruzzini AC, Paludo CR, Nascimento FS, Currie CR, Clardy J, Pupo MT.
Sci Rep
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Stingless Bee Larvae Require Fungal Steroid to Pupate.
Authors: Authors: Paludo CR, Menezes C, Silva-Junior EA, Vollet-Neto A, Andrade-Dominguez A, Pishchany G, Khadempour L, do Nascimento FS, Currie CR, Kolter R, Clardy J, Pupo MT.
Sci Rep
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