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Dive into the research topics where Christen M. Anderson is active.

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Featured researches published by Christen M. Anderson.


Regulatory Peptides | 2007

Biological activity of AC3174, a peptide analog of exendin-4.

Diane M. Hargrove; Eric S. Kendall; James M. Reynolds; Aung N. Lwin; John Patrick Herich; Pamela A. Smith; Bronislava Gedulin; Shawn D. Flanagan; Carolyn M. Jodka; Julie A. Hoyt; Kevin McCowen; David G. Parkes; Christen M. Anderson

Exenatide, the active ingredient of BYETTA (exenatide injection), is an incretin mimetic that has been developed for the treatment of patients with type 2 diabetes. Exenatide binds to and activates the known GLP-1 receptor with a potency comparable to that of the mammalian incretin GLP-1(7-36), thereby acting as a glucoregulatory agent. AC3174 is an analog of exenatide with leucine substituted for methionine at position 14, [Leu(14)]exendin-4. The purpose of these studies was to evaluate the glucoregulatory activity and pharmacokinetics of AC3174. In RINm5f cell membranes, the potency of AC3174 for the displacement of [(125)I]GLP-1 and activation of adenylate cyclase was similar to that of exenatide and GLP-1. In vivo, AC3174, administered as a single IP injection, significantly decreased plasma glucose concentration and glucose excursion following the administration of an oral glucose challenge in both non-diabetic (C57BL/6) and diabetic db/db mice (P<0.05 vs. vehicle-treated). The magnitude of glucose lowering of AC3174 was comparable to exenatide. The ED(50) values of AC3174 for glucose lowering (60 minute post-dose) were 1.2 microg/kg in db/db mice and 1.3 microg/kg in C57BL/6 mice. AC3174 has insulinotropic activity in vivo. Administration of AC3174 resulted in a 4-fold increase in insulin concentrations in normal mice following an IP glucose challenge. AC3174 was also shown to inhibit food intake and decrease gastric emptying in rodent models. AC3174 was stable in human plasma (>90% of parent peptide was present after 5 h of incubation). In rats, the in vivo half-life of AC3174 was 42-43 min following SC administration. In summary, AC3174 is an analog of exenatide that binds to the GLP-1 receptor in vitro and shares many of the biological and glucoregulatory activities of exenatide and GLP-1 in vivo.


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

Leptin responsiveness restored by amylin agonism in diet-induced obesity: Evidence from nonclinical and clinical studies

Jonathan D. Roth; Barbara L. Roland; Rebecca L. Cole; James L. Trevaskis; Christian Weyer; Joy E. Koda; Christen M. Anderson; David G. Parkes; Alain D. Baron

Body weight is regulated by complex neurohormonal interactions between endocrine signals of long-term adiposity (e.g., leptin, a hypothalamic signal) and short-term satiety (e.g., amylin, a hindbrain signal). We report that concurrent peripheral administration of amylin and leptin elicits synergistic, fat-specific weight loss in leptin-resistant, diet-induced obese rats. Weight loss synergy was specific to amylin treatment, compared with other anorexigenic peptides, and dissociable from amylins effect on food intake. The addition of leptin after amylin pretreatment elicited further weight loss, compared with either monotherapy condition. In a 24-week randomized, double-blind, clinical proof-of-concept study in overweight/obese subjects, coadministration of recombinant human leptin and the amylin analog pramlintide elicited 12.7% mean weight loss, significantly more than was observed with either treatment alone (P < 0.01). In obese rats, amylin pretreatment partially restored hypothalamic leptin signaling (pSTAT3 immunoreactivity) within the ventromedial, but not the arcuate nucleus and up-regulated basal and leptin-stimulated signaling in the hindbrain area postrema. These findings provide both nonclinical and clinical evidence that amylin agonism restored leptin responsiveness in diet-induced obesity, suggesting that integrated neurohormonal approaches to obesity pharmacotherapy may facilitate greater weight loss by harnessing naturally occurring synergies.


Cardiovascular Diabetology | 2010

Glucagon-like peptide-1 and the exenatide analogue AC3174 improve cardiac function, cardiac remodeling, and survival in rats with chronic heart failure

Que Liu; Christen M. Anderson; Anatoly Broyde; Clara Polizzi; Rayne Fernandez; Alain D. Baron; David G. Parkes

BackgroundAccumulating evidence suggests glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) exerts cardioprotective effects in animal models of myocardial infarction (MI). We hypothesized that chronic treatment with GLP-1 or the exenatide analog AC3174 would improve cardiac function, cardiac remodeling, insulin sensitivity, and exercise capacity (EC) in rats with MI-induced chronic heart failure (CHF) caused by coronary artery ligation.MethodsTwo weeks post-MI, male Sprague-Dawley rats were treated with GLP-1 (2.5 or 25 pmol/kg/min), AC3174 (1.7 or 5 pmol/kg/min) or vehicle via subcutaneous infusion for 11 weeks. Cardiac function and morphology were assessed by echocardiography during treatment. Metabolic, hemodynamic, exercise-capacity, and body composition measurements were made at study end.ResultsCompared with vehicle-treated rats with CHF, GLP-1 or AC3174 significantly improved cardiac function, including left ventricular (LV) ejection fraction, and end diastolic pressure. Cardiac dimensions also improved as evidenced by reduced LV end diastolic and systolic volumes and reduced left atrial volume. Vehicle-treated CHF rats exhibited fasting hyperglycemia and hyperinsulinemia. In contrast, GLP-1 or AC3174 normalized fasting plasma insulin and glucose levels. GLP-1 or AC3174 also significantly reduced body fat and fluid mass and improved exercise capacity and respiratory efficiency. Four of 16 vehicle control CHF rats died during the study compared with 1 of 44 rats treated with GLP-1 or AC3174. The cellular mechanism by which GLP-1 or AC3174 exert cardioprotective effects appears unrelated to changes in GLUT1 or GLUT4 translocation or expression.ConclusionsChronic treatment with either GLP-1 or AC3174 showed promising cardioprotective effects in a rat model of CHF. Hence, GLP-1 receptor agonists may represent a novel approach for the treatment of patients with CHF or cardiovascular disease associated with type 2 diabetes.


Endocrinology | 2006

Antiobesity Effects of the β-Cell Hormone Amylin in Diet-Induced Obese Rats: Effects on Food Intake, Body Weight, Composition, Energy Expenditure, and Gene Expression

Jonathan D. Roth; Heather Hughes; Eric S. Kendall; Alain D. Baron; Christen M. Anderson


American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2007

Effects of prior or concurrent food restriction on amylin-induced changes in body weight and body composition in high-fat-fed female rats

Jonathan D. Roth; Heather Hughes; Todd Coffey; Holly Maier; James L. Trevaskis; Christen M. Anderson


Archive | 2005

Treatment of obesity and related disorders

Jonathan D. Roth; Christen M. Anderson; Alain D. Baron


Archive | 2007

Methods for Treating Obesity and Obesity Related and Disorders

Jonathan D. Roth; Christen M. Anderson; Alain D. Baron


Archive | 2005

Use of glp-1 and agonists thereof to prevent cardiac myocyte apoptosis

Christen M. Anderson; Alain D. Baron


Archive | 2006

Use of glp-1, exendin and agonists thereof to delay or prevent cardiac remodeling

Christen M. Anderson; Que Liu


Archive | 2007

Methods for treating obesity and obesity related diseases and disorders

Jonathan D. Roth; Christen M. Anderson; Alain D. Baron

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Que Liu

Amylin Pharmaceuticals

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