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Featured researches published by Alan D. Adams.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002

Lithocholic Acid Decreases Expression of Bile Salt Export Pump through Farnesoid X Receptor Antagonist Activity

Jinghua Yu; Jane-L. Lo; Li Huang; Annie Zhao; Edward Metzger; Alan D. Adams; Peter T. Meinke; Samuel D. Wright; Jisong Cui

Bile salt export pump (BSEP) is a major bile acid transporter in the liver. Mutations in BSEP result in progressive intrahepatic cholestasis, a severe liver disease that impairs bile flow and causes irreversible liver damage. BSEP is a target for inhibition and down-regulation by drugs and abnormal bile salt metabolites, and such inhibition and down-regulation may result in bile acid retention and intrahepatic cholestasis. In this study, we quantitatively analyzed the regulation of BSEP expression by FXR ligands in primary human hepatocytes and HepG2 cells. We demonstrate that BSEP expression is dramatically regulated by ligands of the nuclear receptor farnesoid X receptor (FXR). Both the endogenous FXR agonist chenodeoxycholate (CDCA) and synthetic FXR ligand GW4064 effectively increased BSEP mRNA in both cell types. This up-regulation was readily detectable at as early as 3 h, and the ligand potency for BSEP regulation correlates with the intrinsic activity on FXR. These results suggest BSEP as a direct target of FXR and support the recent report that the BSEP promoter is transactivated by FXR. In contrast to CDCA and GW4064, lithocholate (LCA), a hydrophobic bile acid and a potent inducer of cholestasis, strongly decreased BSEP expression. Previous studies did not identify LCA as an FXR antagonist ligand in cells, but we show here that LCA is an FXR antagonist with partial agonist activity in cells. In an in vitro co-activator association assay, LCA decreased CDCA- and GW4064-induced FXR activation with an IC50 of 1 μm. In HepG2 cells, LCA also effectively antagonized GW4064-enhanced FXR transactivation. These data suggest that the toxic and cholestatic effect of LCA in animals may result from its down-regulation of BSEP through FXR. Taken together, these observations indicate that FXR plays an important role in BSEP gene expression and that FXR ligands may be potential therapeutic drugs for intrahepatic cholestasis.


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 Biological Chemistry | 1999

L-764406 is a partial agonist of human peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma. The role of Cys313 in ligand binding.

Alex Elbrecht; Yuli Chen; Alan D. Adams; Joel P. Berger; Patrick R. Griffin; Tracey Klatt; Bei Zhang; John G. Menke; Gaochao Zhou; Roy G. Smith; David E. Moller

Insulin-sensitizing thiazolidinedione (TZD) compounds are high affinity ligands for a member of the nuclear receptor family, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR) γ. A scintillation proximity assay for measurement of3H-radiolabeled TZD binding to human PPARγ under homogeneous conditions was developed. Using this approach, a novel non-TZD compound (L-764406) was shown to be a potent (apparent binding IC50 of 70 nm) PPARγ ligand. Preincubation of PPARγ with L-764406 prevented binding of the [3H]TZD, suggesting a covalent interaction with the receptor; in addition, structurally related analogues ofL-764406, which would be predicted not to interact with PPARγ in a covalent fashion, did not displace [3H]TZD binding to PPARγ. Covalent binding of L-764406 was proven by an observed molecular weight shift of a tryptic PPARγ ligand binding domain (LBD) peptide by mass spectrometric analysis. A specific cysteine residue (Cys313 in helix 3 of hPPARγ2) was identified as the attachment site for this compound. In protease protection experiments, the liganded receptor adopted a typical agonist conformation. L-764406 exhibited partial agonist activity in cells expressing a chimeric receptor containing the PPARγ LBD and a cognate reporter gene and also induced the expression of the adipocyte-specific gene aP2 in 3T3-L1 cells. In contrast,L-764406 did not exhibit activity in cells transfected with chimeric receptors containing PPARα or PPARδ LBDs. The partial agonist properties of L-764406 were also evident in a co-activator association assay, indicating that the increased transcription in cells was co-activator mediated. Thus,L-764406 is a novel non-TZD ligand for PPARγ and is also the first known partial agonist for this receptor. The results suggest a critical functional role for Cys313, and helix 3, in contributing to ligand binding and subsequent agonist-induced conformational changes.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Identification of a potent synthetic FXR agonist with an unexpected mode of binding and activation.

Stephen M. Soisson; Gopalakrishnan Parthasarathy; Alan D. Adams; Soumya P. Sahoo; Ayesha Sitlani; Carl P. Sparrow; Jisong Cui; Joseph W. Becker

The farnesoid X receptor (FXR), a member of the nuclear hormone receptor family, plays important roles in the regulation of bile acid and cholesterol homeostasis, glucose metabolism, and insulin sensitivity. There is intense interest in understanding the mechanisms of FXR regulation and in developing pharmaceutically suitable synthetic FXR ligands that might be used to treat metabolic syndrome. We report here the identification of a potent FXR agonist (MFA-1) and the elucidation of the structure of this ligand in ternary complex with the human receptor and a coactivator peptide fragment using x-ray crystallography at 1.9-Å resolution. The steroid ring system of MFA-1 binds with its D ring-facing helix 12 (AF-2) in a manner reminiscent of hormone binding to classical steroid hormone receptors and the reverse of the pose adopted by naturally occurring bile acids when bound to FXR. This binding mode appears to be driven by the presence of a carboxylate on MFA-1 that is situated to make a salt-bridge interaction with an arginine residue in the FXR-binding pocket that is normally used to neutralize bound bile acids. Receptor activation by MFA-1 differs from that by bile acids in that it relies on direct interactions between the ligand and residues in helices 11 and 12 and only indirectly involves a protonated histidine that is part of the activation trigger. The structure of the FXR:MFA-1 complex differs significantly from that of the complex with a structurally distinct agonist, fexaramine, highlighting the inherent plasticity of the receptor.


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.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Design of potent and selective GPR119 agonists for type II diabetes.

Jason W. Szewczyk; John J. Acton; Alan D. Adams; Gary G. Chicchi; Stanley Freeman; Andrew D. Howard; Yong Huang; Cai Li; Peter T. Meinke; Ralph Mosely; Elizabeth Murphy; Rachel Samuel; Conrad Santini; Meng Yang; Yong Zhang; Kake Zhao; Harold B. Wood

Screening of the Merck sample collection identified compound 1 as a weakly potent GPR119 agonist (hEC(50)=3600 nM). Dual termini optimization of 1 led to compound 36 having improved potency, selectivity, and formulation profile, however, modest physical properties (PP) hindered its utility. Design of a new core containing a cyclopropyl restriction yielded further PP improvements and when combined with the termini SAR optimizations yielded a potent and highly selective agonist suitable for further preclinical development (58).


Assay and Drug Development Technologies | 2003

Miniaturization of Cell-Based β-Lactamase-Dependent FRET Assays to Ultra-High Throughput Formats to Identify Agonists of Human Liver X Receptors

Jayne Chin; Alan D. Adams; Aileen Bouffard; Ahren I. Green; Raul Lacson; Todd Smith; Paul Fischer; John G. Menke; Carl P. Sparrow; Lyndon J. Mitnaul

Activation of liver X receptors (LXRs) induces reverse cholesterol transport and increases high-density lipoprotein cholesterol in vivo. Here, we describe novel, functional, homogeneous cell-based fluorescence resonance energy transfer assays for identifying agonists of LXRs using beta-lactamase as the reporter gene. Stable Chinese hamster ovary cell lines expressing LXRalpha-GAL4 or LXRbeta-GAL4 fusion proteins that regulate beta-lactamase transcription from upstream 7 x UAS GAL4 DNA binding sequences were generated and characterized. Synthetic and natural ligands of LXR dose-dependently activated the expression of beta-lactamase in a subtype-specific manner. These assays were used to demonstrate that a 1-pyridyl hydantoin small molecule LXR synthetic ligand specifically activates LXRalpha receptors. The beta-lactamase assays were optimized for cell density, dimethyl sulfoxide sensitivity, and time of agonist stimulation. Clonal LXRbeta-GAL4-beta-lactamase cells were miniaturized into an ultra high throughput (3456-well nanoplates) screening format.


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.


Journal of Laboratory Automation | 2001

Compound Characterization Using Gene Microarrays

Alex Elbrecht; Yuli Chen; Jian Xu; David Gerhold; Joel P. Berger; Alan D. Adams; Richard Blevins

Ligands for peroxisome proliferator activated receptors (PPARs) are used as hypolipidemic agents and for the treatment of type II diabetes, PPARa and PPARg, respectively. PPARs are members of the nuclear receptor family of ligand activated transcription factors which exert their effects primarily by regulating gene transcription. We have used gene microarrays to characterize PPAR ligands (profiling) and to investigate their mechanism of action. Compound profiles based on gene expression allow for novel ligand groupings when compared with groupings based on compound structure or on the results from single variable assays.


Molecular Endocrinology | 2003

Distinct Properties and Advantages of a Novel Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Protein γ Selective Modulator

Joel P. Berger; Ann Petro; Karen L. MacNaul; Linda J. Kelly; Bei B. Zhang; Karen Richards; Alex Elbrecht; Bruce A. Johnson; Gaochao Zhou; Thomas W. Doebber; Chhabi Biswas; Mona Parikh; Neelam Sharma; Michael Tanen; G. Marie Thompson; John Ventre; Alan D. Adams; Ralph T. Mosley; Richard S. Surwit; David E. Moller

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