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Dive into the research topics where Angela C. Doran is active.

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Featured researches published by Angela C. Doran.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2009

Selective inhibition of casein kinase 1 epsilon minimally alters circadian clock period.

Kevin Walton; Katherine Fisher; David M. Rubitski; Michael Marconi; Qing Jun Meng; Martin Sládek; Jessica Adams; Michael Bass; Rama Y. Chandrasekaran; Todd William Butler; Matt Griffor; Francis Rajamohan; Megan Serpa; Yuhpyng Chen; Michelle Claffey; Michael H. Hastings; Andrew Loudon; Elizabeth S. Maywood; Jeffrey F. Ohren; Angela C. Doran; Travis T. Wager

The circadian clock links our daily cycles of sleep and activity to the external environment. Deregulation of the clock is implicated in a number of human disorders, including depression, seasonal affective disorder, and metabolic disorders. Casein kinase 1 epsilon (CK1ϵ) and casein kinase 1 delta (CK1δ) are closely related Ser-Thr protein kinases that serve as key clock regulators as demonstrated by mammalian mutations in each that dramatically alter the circadian period. Therefore, inhibitors of CK1δ/ϵ may have utility in treating circadian disorders. Although we previously demonstrated that a pan-CK1δ/ϵ inhibitor, 4-[3-cyclohexyl-5-(4-fluoro-phenyl)-3H-imidazol-4-yl]-pyrimidin-2-ylamine (PF-670462), causes a significant phase delay in animal models of circadian rhythm, it remains unclear whether one of the kinases has a predominant role in regulating the circadian clock. To test this, we have characterized 3-(3-chloro-phenoxymethyl)-1-(tetrahydro-pyran-4-yl)-1H-pyrazolo[3,4-d]pyrimidin-4-ylamine (PF-4800567), a novel and potent inhibitor of CK1ϵ (IC50 = 32 nM) with greater than 20-fold selectivity over CK1δ. PF-4800567 completely blocks CK1ϵ-mediated PER3 nuclear localization and PER2 degradation. In cycling Rat1 fibroblasts and a mouse model of circadian rhythm, however, PF-4800567 has only a minimal effect on the circadian clock at concentrations substantially over its CK1ϵ IC50. This is in contrast to the pan-CK1δ/ϵ inhibitor PF-670462 that robustly alters the circadian clock under similar conditions. These data indicate that CK1ϵ is not the predominant mediator of circadian timing relative to CK1δ. PF-4800567 should prove useful in probing unique roles between these two kinases in multiple signaling pathways.


Drug Metabolism and Disposition | 2006

Evaluation of Cerebrospinal Fluid Concentration and Plasma Free Concentration As a Surrogate Measurement for Brain Free Concentration

Xingrong Liu; Bill J. Smith; Cuiping Chen; Ernesto Callegari; Stacey L. Becker; Xi Chen; Julie Cianfrogna; Angela C. Doran; Shawn D. Doran; John P. Gibbs; Natilie Hosea; JianHua Liu; Frederick R. Nelson; Mark A. Szewc; Jeffrey Van Deusen

This study was designed to evaluate the use of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) drug concentration and plasma unbound concentration (Cu,plasma) to predict brain unbound concentration (Cu,brain). The concentration-time profiles in CSF, plasma, and brain of seven model compounds were determined after subcutaneous administration in rats. The Cu,brain was estimated from the product of total brain concentrations and unbound fractions, which were determined using brain tissue slice and brain homogenate methods. For theobromine, theophylline, caffeine, fluoxetine, and propranolol, which represent rapid brain penetration compounds with a simple diffusion mechanism, the ratios of the area under the curve of Cu,brain/CCSF and Cu,brain/Cu,plasma were 0.27 to 1.5 and 0.29 to 2.1, respectively, using the brain slice method, and were 0.27 to 2.9 and 0.36 to 3.9, respectively, using the brain homogenate method. A P-glycoprotein substrate, CP-141938 (methoxy-3-[(2-phenyl-piperadinyl-3-amino)-methyl]-phenyl-N-methyl-methane-sulfonamide), had Cu,brain/CCSF and Cu,brain/Cu,plasma ratios of 0.57 and 0.066, using the brain slice method, and 1.1 and 0.13, using the brain homogenate method, respectively. The slow brain-penetrating compound, N[3-(4′-fluorophenyl)-3-(4′-phenylphenoxy)propyl-]sarcosine, had Cu,brain/CCSF and Cu,brain/Cu,plasma ratios of 0.94 and 0.12 using the brain slice method and 0.15 and 0.018 using the brain homogenate method, respectively. Therefore, for quick brain penetration with simple diffusion mechanism compounds, CCSF and Cu,plasma represent Cu,brain equally well; for efflux substrates or slow brain penetration compounds, CCSF appears to be equivalent to or more accurate than Cu,plasma to represent Cu,brain. Thus, we hypothesize that CCSF is equivalent to or better than Cu,plasma to predict Cu,brain. This hypothesis is supported by the literature data.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

3-Benzyl-1,3-oxazolidin-2-ones as mGluR2 positive allosteric modulators: Hit-to lead and lead optimization.

Allen J. Duplantier; Ivan Viktorovich Efremov; John Candler; Angela C. Doran; Alan H. Ganong; Jessica A. Haas; Ashley N. Hanks; Kenneth G. Kraus; John T. Lazzaro; Jiemin Lu; Noha Maklad; Sheryl A. McCarthy; Theresa J. O’Sullivan; Bruce N. Rogers; Judith A. Siuciak; Douglas K. Spracklin; Lei Zhang

The discovery, synthesis and SAR of a novel series of 3-benzyl-1,3-oxazolidin-2-ones as positive allosteric modulators (PAMs) of mGluR2 is described. Expedient hit-to-lead work on a single HTS hit led to the identification of a ligand-efficient and structurally attractive series of mGluR2 PAMs. Human microsomal clearance and suboptimal physicochemical properties of the initial lead were improved to give potent, metabolically stable and orally available mGluR2 PAMs.


Drug Metabolism and Disposition | 2012

An Evaluation of Using Rat-derived Single-dose Neuropharmacokinetic Parameters to Project Accurately Large Animal Unbound Brain Drug Concentrations

Angela C. Doran; Sarah Osgood; Jessica Y. Mancuso; Christopher L. Shaffer

Previous publications suggest that interstitial fluid compound concentrations (CISF) best determine quantitative neurotherapeutic pharmacology relationships, although confirming large animal CISF remains elusive. Therefore, this work primarily evaluated using respective acute dose, rat-derived unbound brain compound concentration-to-unbound plasma compound concentration ratios (Cb,u/Cp,u) to project accurately dog and nonhuman primate (nhp) Cb,u, a CISF surrogate, from measured Cp,u for the highly permeable non-P-glycoprotein substrates N-{(3R,4S)-3-[4-(5-cyano-2-thienyl)phenyl]tetrahydro-2H-pyran-4-yl}propane-2-sulfonamide (PF-4778574) and [4-chloro-5-fluoro-2-(3-methoxy-2-methyl-phenoxy)-benzyl]-methylamine (CE-157119) and the P-glycoprotein substrates risperidone and 9-hydroxyrisperidone. First, in rats, it was determined for eight of nine commercial compounds that their single-dose-derived Cb,u/Cp,u were ≤2.5-fold different from their steady-state values; for all nine drugs, their Cb,u/Cp,u were ≤2.5-fold different from their steady-state CISF/Cp,u (Drug Metab Dispos 37:787–793, 2009). Subsequently, PF-4778574, CE-157119 and risperidone underwent rat, dog, and nhp neuropharmacokinetics studies. In large animals at each measured Cp,u, the methodology adequately predicted [estimated mean (95% confidence interval) of 1.02 (0.80, 1.29)] the observed Cb,u for PF-4778574 and CE-157119 but underpredicted [0.17 (0.12, 0.22)] Cb,u for risperidone and 9-hydroxyrisperidone. The data imply that forecasting higher species Cb,u from a measured Cp,u and rat acute dose-determined Cb,u:Cp,u is of high confidence for nonefflux transporter substrates that show net passive diffusion (PF-4778574) or net active influx (CE-157119) at the blood-brain barrier in rats. However, this methodology appears ineffective for correctly predicting large animal Cb,u for P-glycoprotein substrates (risperidone and 9-hydroxyrisperidone) because of their apparently much greater Cp,u-favoring Cb,u:Cp,u asymmetry in rats versus dogs or nhp. Instead, for such P-glycoprotein substrates, large animal-specific cerebrospinal fluid compound concentrations (CCSF) seemingly best represent Cb,u.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008

3-(Imidazolyl methyl)-3-aza-bicyclo[3.1.0]hexan-6-yl)methyl ethers: A novel series of mGluR2 positive allosteric modulators

Lei Zhang; Bruce N. Rogers; Allen J. Duplantier; Stanley F. McHardy; Ivan Viktorovich Efremov; Helen Berke; Weimin Qian; Andy Q. Zhang; Noha Maklad; John Candler; Angela C. Doran; John T. Lazzaro; Alan H. Ganong

The synthesis and structure-activity relationship (SAR) of a novel series of 3-(imidazolyl methyl)-3-aza-bicyclo[3.1.0]hexan-6-yl)methyl ethers, derived from a high throughput screening (HTS), are described. Subsequent optimization led to identification of potent, metabolically stable and orally available mGluR2 positive allosteric modulators (PAMs).


CPT: Pharmacometrics & Systems Pharmacology | 2013

Modeling and Validating Chronic Pharmacological Manipulation of Circadian Rhythms

Jae Kyoung Kim; Daniel B. Forger; M Marconi; D Wood; Angela C. Doran; Travis T. Wager; Cheng Chang; Km Walton

Circadian rhythms can be entrained by a light‐dark (LD) cycle and can also be reset pharmacologically, for example, by the CK1δ/ε inhibitor PF‐670462. Here, we determine how these two independent signals affect circadian timekeeping from the molecular to the behavioral level. By developing a systems pharmacology model, we predict and experimentally validate that chronic CK1δ/ε inhibition during the earlier hours of a LD cycle can produce a constant stable delay of rhythm. However, chronic dosing later during the day, or in the presence of longer light intervals, is not predicted to yield an entrained rhythm. We also propose a simple method based on phase response curves (PRCs) that predicts the effects of a LD cycle and chronic dosing of a circadian drug. This work indicates that dosing timing and environmental signals must be carefully considered for accurate pharmacological manipulation of circadian phase.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2011

1-[(1-methyl-1H-imidazol-2-yl)methyl]-4-phenylpiperidines as mGluR2 positive allosteric modulators for the treatment of psychosis.

Lei Zhang; Michael Aaron Brodney; John Candler; Angela C. Doran; Allen J. Duplantier; Ivan Viktorovich Efremov; Edel Evrard; Kenneth G. Kraus; Alan H. Ganong; Jessica A. Haas; Ashley N. Hanks; Keith Jenza; John T. Lazzaro; Noha Maklad; Sheryl A. McCarthy; Weimin Qian; Bruce N. Rogers; Melinda D. Rottas; Christopher J. Schmidt; Judith A. Siuciak; F. David Tingley; Andy Q. Zhang

A novel series of mGluR2 positive allosteric modulators (PAMs), 1-[(1-methyl-1H-imidazol-2-yl)methyl]-4-phenylpiperidines, is herein disclosed. Structure-activity relationship studies led to potent, selective mGluR2 PAMs with excellent pharmacokinetic profiles. A representative lead compound (+)-17e demonstrated dose-dependent inhibition of methamphetamine-induced hyperactivity and mescaline-induced scratching in mice, providing support for potential efficacy in treating psychosis.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2016

Peripheral Administration of a Long-Acting Peptide Oxytocin Receptor Agonist Inhibits Fear-Induced Freezing.

Meera E. Modi; Mark J. Majchrzak; Kari R. Fonseca; Angela C. Doran; Sarah Osgood; Michelle Vanase-Frawley; Eric Feyfant; Heather McInnes; Ramin Darvari; Derek L. Buhl; Natasha M. Kablaoui

Oxytocin (OT) modulates the expression of social and emotional behaviors and consequently has been proposed as a pharmacologic treatment of psychiatric diseases, including autism spectrum disorders and schizophrenia; however, endogenous OT has a short half-life in plasma and poor permeability across the blood-brain barrier. Recent efforts have focused on the development of novel drug delivery methods to enhance brain penetration, but few efforts have aimed at improving its half-life. To explore the behavioral efficacy of an OT analog with enhanced plasma stability, we developed PF-06655075 (PF1), a novel non–brain-penetrant OT receptor agonist with increased selectivity for the OT receptor and significantly increased pharmacokinetic stability. PF-06478939 was generated with only increased stability to disambiguate changes to selectivity versus stability. The efficacy of these compounds in evoking behavioral effects was tested in a conditioned fear paradigm. Both central and peripheral administration of PF1 inhibited freezing in response to a conditioned fear stimulus. Peripheral administration of PF1 resulted in a sustained level of plasma concentrations for greater than 20 hours but no detectable accumulation in brain tissue, suggesting that plasma or cerebrospinal fluid exposure was sufficient to evoke behavioral effects. Behavioral efficacy of peripherally administered OT receptor agonists on conditioned fear response opens the door to potential peripheral mechanisms in other behavioral paradigms, whether they are mediated by direct peripheral activation or feed-forward responses. Compound PF1 is freely available as a tool compound to further explore the role of peripheral OT in behavioral response.


Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences | 2014

Diphenhydramine has Similar Interspecies Net Active Influx at the Blood–Brain Barrier

Christopher L. Shaffer; Sarah Osgood; Jessica Y. Mancuso; Angela C. Doran

In rats, oxycodone, diphenhydramine, and [4-chloro-5-fluoro-2-(3-methoxy-2-methyl-phenoxy)-benzyl]-methylamine (CE-157119) undergo net active influx at the blood-brain barrier (BBB) based on significantly greater interstitial fluid compound concentrations (CISF ) than unbound plasma compound concentrations (Cp,u ). Oxycodone and diphenhydramine have CISF :Cp,u of 3.0 and 5.5, respectively, while CE-157119 has an unbound brain compound concentration (Cb,u ):Cp,u of 3.90; Cb,u is a high-confidence CISF surrogate. However, only CE-157119 has published dog and nonhuman primate (nhp) neuropharmacokinetics, which show similar Cb,u :Cp,u (4.61 and 2.04, respectively) as rats. Thus, diphenhydramine underwent identical interspecies neuropharmacokinetics studies to determine if its net active BBB influx in rats replicated in dogs and/or nhp. The single-dose-derived rat Cb,u :Cp,u (3.90) was consistent with prior steady-state-derived CISF :Cp,u and similar to those in dogs (4.88) and nhp (4.51-5.00). All large animal interneurocompartmental ratios were ≤1.8-fold different than their rat values, implying that diphenhydramine has constant and substantial Cb,u -favoring disequilibria in these mammals. Accordingly, the applied Cb,u -forecasting methodology accurately predicted [estimated mean (95% confidence interval) of 0.84 (0.68, 1.05)] Cb,u from each measured Cp,u in large animals. The collective datasets suggest these Cb,u -preferring asymmetries are mediated by a species-independent BBB active uptake system whose identification, full characterization, and structure-activity relationships should be prioritized for potential exploitation.


ACS Chemical Neuroscience | 2014

Casein Kinase 1δ/ε Inhibitor PF-5006739 Attenuates Opioid Drug-Seeking Behavior

Travis T. Wager; Ramalakshmi Y. Chandrasekaran; Jenifer Bradley; David M. Rubitski; Helen Berke; Scot Mente; Todd William Butler; Angela C. Doran; Cheng Chang; Katherine Fisher; John D. Knafels; Shenping Liu; Jeff Ohren; Michael Marconi; George J. DeMarco; Blossom Sneed; Kevin Walton; David Horton; Amy Rosado; Andy Mead

Casein kinase 1 delta (CK1δ) and casein kinase 1 epsilon (CK1ε) inhibitors are potential therapeutic agents for a range of psychiatric disorders. The feasibility of developing a CNS kinase inhibitor has been limited by an inability to identify safe brain-penetrant compounds with high kinome selectivity. Guided by structure-based drug design, potent and selective CK1δ/ε inhibitors have now been identified that address this gap, through the design and synthesis of novel 4-[4-(4-fluorophenyl)-1-(piperidin-4-yl)-1H-imidazol-5-yl]pyrimidin-2-amine derivatives. PF-5006739 (6) possesses a desirable profile, with low nanomolar in vitro potency for CK1δ/ε (IC50 = 3.9 and 17.0 nM, respectively) and high kinome selectivity. In vivo, 6 demonstrated robust centrally mediated circadian rhythm phase-delaying effects in both nocturnal and diurnal animal models. Further, 6 dose-dependently attenuated opioid drug-seeking behavior in a rodent operant reinstatement model in animals trained to self-administer fentanyl. Collectively, our data supports further development of 6 as a promising candidate to test the hypothesis of CK1δ/ε inhibition in treating multiple indications in the clinic.

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