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Featured researches published by A. Brian Jones.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002

A potent synthetic LXR agonist is more effective than cholesterol-loading at inducing ABCA1 mRNA and stimulating cholesterol efflux

Carl P. Sparrow; Joanne Baffic; My-Hanh Lam; Erik G. Lund; Alan D. Adams; Xuan Fu; Nancy S. Hayes; A. Brian Jones; Karen L. MacNaul; John G. Ondeyka; Sheo B. Singh; Jianhua Wang; Gaochao Zhou; David E. Moller; Samuel D. Wright; John G. Menke

The LXR nuclear receptors are intracellular sensors of cholesterol excess and are activated by various oxysterols. LXRs have been shown to regulate multiple genes of lipid metabolism, including ABCA1 (formerly known asABC1). ABCA1 is a lipid pump that effluxes cholesterol and phospholipid out of cells. ABCA1 deficiency causes extremely low high density lipoprotein (HDL) levels, demonstrating the importance of ABCA1 in the formation of HDL. The present work shows that the acetyl-podocarpic dimer (APD) is a potent, selective agonist for both LXRα (NR1H3) and LXRβ (NR1H2). In transient transactivation assays, APD was ∼1000-fold more potent, and yielded ∼6-fold greater maximal stimulation, than the widely used LXR agonist 22-(R)-hydroxycholesterol. APD induced ABCA1mRNA levels, and increased efflux of both cholesterol and phospholipid, from multiple cell types. Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry measurements demonstrated that APD stimulated efflux of endogenous cholesterol, eliminating any possible artifacts of cholesterol labeling. For both mRNA induction and stimulation of cholesterol efflux, APD was found to be more effective than was cholesterol loading. Taken together, these data show that APD is a more effective LXR agonist than endogenous oxysterols. LXR agonists may therefore be useful for the prevention and treatment of atherosclerosis, especially in the context of low HDL levels.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2002

Functional Properties of the High-Affinity TRPV1 (VR1) Vanilloid Receptor Antagonist (4-Hydroxy-5-iodo-3-methoxyphenylacetate ester) Iodo-Resiniferatoxin

Guy R. Seabrook; Kathy Sutton; Wolfgang Jarolimek; Gregory John Hollingworth; Simon Teague; J.K. Webb; Natalie Clark; Susan Boyce; Julie Kerby; Zahid Ali; Margaret Z. Chou; Richard E. Middleton; Gregory J. Kaczorowski; A. Brian Jones

We have synthesized iodinated resiniferatoxin bearing a 4-hydroxy-5-iodo-3-methoxyphenylacetate ester (I-RTX) and have characterized its activity on rat and human TRPV1 (VR1) receptors, as well as in behavioral assays of nociception. In whole cell patch-clamp recordings from transfected cells the functional activity of I-RTX was determined. Currents activated by capsaicin exhibited characteristic outward rectification and were antagonized by capsazepine and I-RTX. On rat TRPV1 the affinity of I-RTX was 800-fold higher than that of capsazepine (IC50 = 0.7 and 562 nM, respectively) and 10-fold higher on rat versus human receptors (IC50 = 0.7 and 5.4 nM, respectively). The same difference was observed when comparing the inhibition of [3H]RTX binding to rat and human TRPV1 membranes for both RTX and I-RTX. Additional pharmacological differences were revealed using protons as the stimulus. Under these conditions capsazepine only partly blocked currents through rat TRPV1 receptors (by 70 to 80% block), yet was a full antagonist on human receptors. In contrast, I-RTX completely blocked proton-induced currents in both species and that activated by noxious heat. I-RTX also blocked capsaicin-induced firing of C-fibers in a rat in vitro skin-nerve assay. Despite this activity and the high affinity of I-RTX for rat TRPV1, only capsazepine proved to be an effective antagonist of capsaicin-induced paw flinching in rats. Thus, although I-RTX has limited utility for in vivo behavioral studies it is a high-affinity TRPV1 receptor antagonist that will be useful to characterize the functional properties of cloned and native vanilloid receptor subtypes in vitro.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

Activation of Insulin Signal Transduction Pathway and Anti-diabetic Activity of Small Molecule Insulin Receptor Activators

Sajjad A. Qureshi; Victor D.-H. Ding; Zhihua Li; Deborah Szalkowski; Dawn E. Biazzo-Ashnault; Dan Xie; Richard Saperstein; Edward J. Brady; Su Huskey; Xiaolan Shen; Kun Liu; Libo Xu; Gino Salituro; James V. Heck; David E. Moller; A. Brian Jones; Bei B. Zhang

We recently described the identification of a non-peptidyl fungal metabolite (l-783,281, compound 1), which induced activation of human insulin receptor (IR) tyrosine kinase and mediated insulin-like effects in cells, as well as decreased blood glucose levels in murine models of Type 2 diabetes (Zhang, B., Salituro, G., Szalkowski, D., Li, Z., Zhang, Y., Royo, I., Vilella, D., Diez, M. T., Pelaez, F., Ruby, C., Kendall, R. L., Mao, X., Griffin, P., Calaycay, J., Zierath, J. R., Heck, J. V., Smith, R. G. & Moller, D. E. (1999) Science 284, 974–977). Here we report the characterization of an active analog (compound 2) with enhanced IR kinase activation potency and selectivity over related receptors (insulin-like growth factor I receptor, epidermal growth factor receptor, and platelet-derived growth factor receptor). The IR activators stimulated tyrosine kinase activity of partially purified native IR and recombinant IR tyrosine kinase domain. Administration of the IR activators to mice was associated with increased IR tyrosine kinase activity in liver.In vivo oral treatment with compound 2 resulted in significant glucose lowering in several rodent models of diabetes. In db/db mice, oral administration of compound 2 elicited significant correction of hyperglycemia. In a streptozotocin-induced diabetic mouse model, compound 2 potentiated the glucose-lowering effect of insulin. In normal rats, compound 2 improved oral glucose tolerance with significant reduction in insulin release following glucose challenge. A structurally related inactive analog (compound 3) was not effective on insulin receptor activation or glucose lowering in db/db mice. Thus, small molecule IR activators exert insulin mimetic and sensitizing effects in cells and in animal models of diabetes. These results have implications for the future development of new therapies for diabetes mellitus.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2003

Amphipathic 3-Phenyl-7-propylbenzisoxazoles; human pPaR γ, δ and α agonists

Alan D. Adams; Winston Yuen; Zao Hu; Conrad Santini; A. Brian Jones; Karen L. MacNaul; Joel P. Berger; Thomas W. Doebber; David E. Moller

A series of amphipathic 3-phenylbenzisoxazoles were found to be potent agonists of human PPARalpha, gamma and delta. The optimization of acid proximal structure for in vitro and in vivo potency is described. Results of po dosed efficacy studies in the db/db mouse model of type 2 diabetes showed efficacy equal or superior to Rosiglitazone in correcting hyperglycemia and hypertriglyceridemia. Good functional receptor selectivity for PPARalpha and gamma over PPARdelta can be obtained.


Biochemical Journal | 2002

Regulation of insulin signal transduction pathway by a small-molecule insulin receptor activator.

Victor D.-H. Ding; Sajjad A. Qureshi; Deborah Szalkowski; Zhihua Li; Dawn E. Biazzo-Ashnault; Dan Xie; Kun Liu; A. Brian Jones; David E. Moller; Bei B. Zhang

Insulin regulates cellular metabolism and growth through activation of insulin receptors (IRs). We recently identified a non-peptide small-molecule IR activator (compound 2), which induced human IR tyrosine kinase activity in Chinese-hamster ovary cells expressing human IR [Qureshi, Ding, Li, Szalkowski, Biazzo-Ashnault, Xie, Saperstein, Brady, Huskey, Shen et al. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 36590-36595]. Oral treatment with this compound resulted in correction of hyperglycaemia, hypertriacylglycerolaemia and hyperinsulinaemia in several rodent models of diabetes. In the present study, we have found that this compound increased tyrosine phosphorylation of the IR beta-subunit and IR substrate 1 in primary rat adipocytes as well as induced phosphorylation of Akt, the 70 kDa ribosomal protein S6 kinase and glycogen synthase-3 (deactivation) in Chinese-hamster ovary cells expressing human IR. Similar to insulin, compound 2 stimulated glucose uptake, glycogen synthesis and inhibited isoprenaline-stimulated lipolysis in adipocytes. A structurally related analogue (compound 3) was devoid of the above activities suggesting that the activity of compound 2 is specifically mediated by targeted IR activation. The effects of compound 2 on stimulation of glucose uptake, glycogen synthesis and inhibition of lipolysis were blocked by wortmannin, consistent with the involvement of a phosphoinositide 3-kinase-dependent pathway. In addition, compound 2, but not compound 3, exhibited additive or synergistic effects with sub-maximal concentrations of insulin in rat adipocytes. Thus the IR activator was capable of activating insulin-mediated signalling and metabolic pathways in primary adipocytes. These results demonstrate that IR activators have implications for the future development of new therapeutic approaches to Type I and Type II diabetes.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Discovery of novel 6,6-heterocycles as transient receptor potential vanilloid (TRPV1) antagonists.

Charles A. Blum; Timothy M. Caldwell; Xiaozhang Zheng; Rajagopal Bakthavatchalam; Scott M. Capitosti; Harry Brielmann; Stéphane De Lombaert; Mark T. Kershaw; David J. Matson; James E. Krause; Daniel N. Cortright; Marci Crandall; William J. Martin; Beth Ann Murphy; Susan Boyce; A. Brian Jones; Glenn Mason; Wayne Rycroft; Helen Perrett; Rachael Conley; Nicola Burnaby-Davies; Bertrand L. Chenard; Kevin J. Hodgetts

The transient receptor potential cation channel, subfamily V, member 1 (TRPV1) is a nonselective cation channel that can be activated by a wide range of noxious stimuli, including capsaicin, acid, and heat. Blockade of TRPV1 activation by selective antagonists is under investigation in an attempt to identify novel agents for pain treatment. The design and synthesis of a series of novel TRPV1 antagonists with a variety of different 6,6-heterocyclic cores is described, and an extensive evaluation of the pharmacological and pharmacokinetic properties of a number of these compounds is reported. For example, the 1,8-naphthyridine 52 was characterized as an orally bioavailable and brain penetrant TRPV1 antagonist. In vivo, 52 fully reversed carrageenan-induced thermal hyperalgesia (CITH) in rats and dose-dependently potently reduced complete Freunds adjuvant (CFA) induced chronic inflammatory pain after oral administration.


Tetrahedron Letters | 1999

Total synthesis of asterriquinone B1

Kun Liu; Harold B. Wood; A. Brian Jones

Abstract This communication describes the first total synthesis of asterriquinone B1, a representative member of a group of anti-tumor metabolites of Aspergillus terreus . The synthesis described herein is potentially applicable to other members of the asterriquinone family.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2000

The basal SAR of a novel insulin receptor activator.

Harold B. Wood; Regina M. Black; Gino Salituro; Deborah Szalkowski; Zhihua Li; Yan Zhang; David E. Moller; Bei Zhang; A. Brian Jones

The synthesis and SAR of analogues prepared from novel insulin receptor activator 1 are described. Changes to the dihydroxyquinone core were not tolerated while functionalization of the two indoles contained in 1 resulted in little effect upon activation of the insulin receptor.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2003

O-Arylmandelic acids as highly selective human PPAR α/γ agonists

Alan D. Adams; Zao Hu; Derek Von Langen; Adonis Dadiz; Alex Elbrecht; Karen L. MacNaul; Joel P. Berger; Gaochao Zhou; Thomas W. Doebber; Roger Meurer; Michael J. Forrest; David E. Moller; A. Brian Jones

A new class of O-arylmandelic acid PPAR agonists show excellent anti-hyperglycemic efficacy in a db/db mouse model of DM2. These PPARα-weighted agonists do not show the typical PPARγ associated side effects of BAT proliferation and cardiac hypertrophy in a rat tolerability assay.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Pyrido[2,3-b]pyrazines, discovery of TRPV1 antagonists with reduced potential for the formation of reactive metabolites

Kevin J. Hodgetts; Charles A. Blum; Timothy M. Caldwell; Rajagopal Bakthavatchalam; Xiaozhang Zheng; Scott M. Capitosti; James E. Krause; Daniel N. Cortright; Marci Crandall; Beth Ann Murphy; Susan Boyce; A. Brian Jones; Bertrand L. Chenard

The transient receptor potential cation channel, subfamily V, member 1 (TRPV1) is a non-selective cation channel that can be activated by a wide range of noxious stimuli, including capsaicin, acid, and heat. Blockade of TRPV1 activation by selective antagonists is under investigation in an attempt to identify novel agents for pain treatment. During pre-clinical development, the 1,8-naphthyridine 2 demonstrated unacceptably high levels of irreversible covalent binding. Replacement of the 1,8-naphthyridine core by a pyrido[2,3-b]pyrazine led to the discovery of compound 26 which was shown to have significantly lower potential for the formation of reactive metabolites. Compound 26 was characterized as an orally bioavailable TRPV1 antagonist with moderate brain penetration. In vivo, 26 significantly attenuated carrageenan-induced thermal hyperalgesia (CITH) and dose-dependently reduced complete Freunds adjuvant (CFA)-induced chronic inflammatory pain after oral administration.

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