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Dive into the research topics where Christine C. Chung is active.

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Featured researches published by Christine C. Chung.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Antidiabetic and antisteatotic effects of the selective fatty acid synthase (FAS) inhibitor platensimycin in mouse models of diabetes

Margaret Wu; Sheo B. Singh; Jun Wang; Christine C. Chung; Gino Salituro; Bindhu V. Karanam; Sang Ho Lee; Maryann Powles; Kenneth Ellsworth; Corey N. Miller; Robert W. Myers; Michael R. Tota; Bei B. Zhang; Cai Li

Platensimycin (PTM) is a recently discovered broad-spectrum antibiotic produced by Streptomyces platensis. It acts by selectively inhibiting the elongation-condensing enzyme FabF of the fatty acid biosynthesis pathway in bacteria. We report here that PTM is also a potent and highly selective inhibitor of mammalian fatty acid synthase. In contrast to two agents, C75 and cerulenin, that are widely used as inhibitors of mammalian fatty acid synthase, platensimycin specifically inhibits fatty acid synthesis but not sterol synthesis in rat primary hepatocytes. PTM preferentially concentrates in liver when administered orally to mice and potently inhibits hepatic de novo lipogenesis, reduces fatty acid oxidation, and increases glucose oxidation. Chronic administration of platensimycin led to a net reduction in liver triglyceride levels and improved insulin sensitivity in db/+ mice fed a high-fructose diet. PTM also reduced ambient glucose levels in db/db mice. These results provide pharmacological proof of concept of inhibiting fatty acid synthase for the treatment of diabetes and related metabolic disorders in animal models.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Discovery and optimization of novel 4-[(aminocarbonyl)amino]-N-[4-(2-aminoethyl)phenyl]benzenesulfonamide ghrelin receptor antagonists.

Alexander Pasternak; Stephen D. Goble; Reynalda Dejesus; Donna L. Hreniuk; Christine C. Chung; Michael R. Tota; Paul Mazur; Scott D. Feighner; Andrew D. Howard; Sander G. Mills; Lihu Yang

This Letter describes optimization of ghrelin receptor antagonists and inverse agonists starting from a screening hit.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2014

Discovery of a Potent and Selective DGAT1 Inhibitor with a Piperidinyl-oxy-cyclohexanecarboxylic Acid Moiety.

Shuwen He; Qingmei Hong; Zhong Lai; David X. Yang; Pauline C. Ting; Jeffrey T. Kuethe; Timothy A. Cernak; Kevin D. Dykstra; Donald M. Sperbeck; Zhicai Wu; Yang Yu; Ginger X. Yang; Tianying Jian; Jian Liu; Deodial Guiadeen; Arto D. Krikorian; Lisa M. Sonatore; Judyann Wiltsie; Jinqi Liu; Judith N. Gorski; Christine C. Chung; Jack Gibson; JeanMarie Lisnock; Jianying Xiao; Michael Wolff; Sharon Tong; Maria Madeira; Bindhu V. Karanam; Dong-Ming Shen; James M. Balkovec

We report the discovery of a novel series of DGAT1 inhibitors in the benzimidazole class with a piperdinyl-oxy-cyclohexanecarboxylic acid moiety. This novel series possesses significantly improved selectivity against the A2A receptor, no ACAT1 off-target activity at 10 μM, and higher aqueous solubility and free fraction in plasma as compared to the previously reported pyridyl-oxy-cyclohexanecarboxylic acid series. In particular, 5B was shown to possess an excellent selectivity profile by screening it against a panel of more than 100 biological targets. Compound 5B significantly reduces lipid excursion in LTT in mouse and rat, demonstrates DGAT1 mediated reduction of food intake and body weight in mice, is negative in a 3-strain Ames test, and appears to distribute preferentially in the liver and the intestine in mice. We believe this lead series possesses significant potential to identify optimized compounds for clinical development.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

Potent DGAT1 Inhibitors in the Benzimidazole Class with a Pyridyl-oxy-cyclohexanecarboxylic Acid Moiety

Shuwen He; Qingmei Hong; Zhong Lai; Zhicai Wu; Yang Yu; David W. Kim; Pauline C. Ting; Jeffrey T. Kuethe; Ginger X. Yang; Tianying Jian; Jian Liu; Deodial Guiadeen; Arto D. Krikorian; Donald M. Sperbeck; Lisa M. Sonatore; Judyann Wiltsie; Christine C. Chung; Jack Gibson; JeanMarie Lisnock; Beth Ann Murphy; Judith N. Gorski; Jinqi Liu; Dunlu Chen; Xiaoli Chen; Michael Wolff; Sharon Tong; Maria Madeira; Bindhu V. Karanam; Dong-Ming Shen; James M. Balkovec

We report the design and synthesis of a series of novel DGAT1 inhibitors in the benzimidazole class with a pyridyl-oxy-cyclohexanecarboxylic acid moiety. In particular, compound 11A is a potent DGAT1 inhibitor with excellent selectivity against ACAT1. Compound 11A significantly reduces triglyceride excursion in lipid tolerance tests (LTT) in both mice and dogs at low plasma exposure. An in vivo study in mice with des-fluoro analogue 10A indicates that this series of compounds appears to distribute in intestine preferentially over plasma. The propensity to target intestine over plasma could be advantageous in reducing potential side effects since lower circulating levels of drug are required for efficacy. However, in the preclinical species, compound 11A undergoes cis/trans epimerization in vivo, which could complicate further development due to the presence of an active metabolite.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2016

Identification of DGAT2 Inhibitors Using Mass Spectrometry

Xuelei S. Song; Jiaping Zhang; Xun Chen; Oksana C. Palyha; Christine C. Chung; Lisa M. Sonatore; Larissa Wilsie; Steven J. Stout; David G. McLaren; Andrew K.P. Taggart; Jason E. Imbriglio; Shirly Pinto; Margarita Garcia-Calvo; George H. Addona

Mass spectrometry offers significant advantages over other detection technologies in the areas of hit finding, hit validation, and medicinal chemistry compound optimization. The foremost obvious advantage is the ability to directly measure enzymatic product formation. In addition, the inherent sensitivity of the liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (LC/MS) approach allows the execution of enzymatic assays at substrate concentrations typically at or below substrate Km. Another advantage of the LC/MS approach is the ability to assay impure enzyme systems that would otherwise be difficult to prosecute with traditional labeled methods. This approach was used to identify inhibitors of diacylglycerol O-acyltransferase-2 (DGAT2), a transmembrane enzyme involved in the triglyceride (TG) production pathway. The LC/MS approach was employed because of its increased assay window (compared with control membranes) of more than sevenfold compared with less than twofold with a conventional fluorogenic assay. The ability to generate thousands of dose-dependent IC50 data was made possible by the use of a staggered parallel LC/MS system with fast elution gradients. From the hit-deconvolution efforts, several structural scaffold series were identified that inhibit DGAT2 activity. Additional profiling of one chemotype in particular identified two promising reversible and selective compounds (compound 15 and compound 16) that effectively inhibit TG production in mouse primary hepatocytes.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2003

The role of tryptophan 1072 in human PDE3B inhibitor binding.

Christine C. Chung; Jeffrey P. Varnerin; Nancy R. Morin; Douglas J. MacNeil; Suresh B. Singh; Sangita B. Patel; Giovanna Scapin; Lex H.T. Van der Ploeg; Michael R. Tota

The catalytic domain of recombinant human PDE3B was expressed in Escherichia coli as inclusion bodies and refolded to form active enzyme. A mutation at tryptophan 1072 in PDE3B disrupts inhibitor binding, but has minimal effect on cAMP hydrolysis. The W1072A mutation caused a 158-fold decrease in affinity for cilostamide, a 740-fold decrease for cGMP, and a 15-fold decrease in affinity for IBMX. The corresponding tyrosine mutation had a smaller effect. However, the K(m) of cAMP for the W1072A mutation was only increased by about 7-fold. The data indicate that the inhibitor binding region is not completely coincident with the substrate binding region. The homologous residue in PDE4B is located on helix 16 within 7A of the predicted bound substrate. A model of PDE3B was constructed based on the X-ray crystal structure of PDE4B.


Biochemistry | 2004

Crystal Structure of Human Phosphodiesterase 3B: Atomic Basis for Substrate and Inhibitor Specificity

Giovanna Scapin; Sangita B. Patel; Christine C. Chung; Jeffrey P. Varnerin; Scott D. Edmondson; Anthony Mastracchio; Emma R. Parmee; Suresh B. Singh; J.W Becker; L.H Van Der Ploeg; Michael R. Tota


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2005

Dynamic activation of cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator by type 3 and type 4D phosphodiesterase inhibitors.

Susana Liu; Alain Veilleux; Lei Zhang; Andrew A. Young; Evonne Kwok; Christine C. Chung; Michael R. Tota; Daniel Dube; Richard W. Friesen; Zheng Huang


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2006

3-Aryl-4-hydroxyquinolin-2(1H)-one derivatives as type I fatty acid synthase inhibitors.

Alexey Rivkin; Yoona R. Kim; Mark T. Goulet; Nathan Bays; Armetta D. Hill; Ilona Kariv; Stefan Krauss; Nicole Ginanni; Peter Strack; Nancy E. Kohl; Christine C. Chung; Jeffrey P. Varnerin; Paul N. Goudreau; Amy Chang; Michael R. Tota; Benito Munoz


Assay and Drug Development Technologies | 2008

A fluorescence-based thiol quantification assay for ultra-high-throughput screening for inhibitors of coenzyme A production.

Christine C. Chung; Kenji Ohwaki; Jonathan Schneeweis; Erica Stec; Jeffrey P. Varnerin; Paul N. Goudreau; Amy Chang; Jason Cassaday; Lihu Yang; Takeru Yamakawa; Oleg Kornienko; Peter Hodder; James Inglese; Marc Ferrer; Berta Strulovici; Jun Kusunoki; Michael R. Tota; Toshimitsu Takagi

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