Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Christopher John Swain is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Christopher John Swain.


Neuropharmacology | 1996

Tachykinin NK1 receptor antagonists act centrally to inhibit emesis induced by the chemotherapeutic agent cisplatin in ferrets

F.D. Tattersall; Wayne Rycroft; B. Francis; D. Pearce; K. Merchant; Angus Murray Macleod; Tamara Ladduwahetty; L. Keown; Christopher John Swain; Raymond Baker; Margaret A. Cascieri; Elzbieta Ber; Joseph M. Metzger; D. E. Macintyre; R.G. Hill; Richard Hargreaves

These studies have compared the pharmacological profile of two non-peptide human type neurokinin1 (hNK1) receptor selective antagonists, L-741,671 and a quaternised compound L-743,310. In radioligand binding studies L-741,671 and L-743,310 had high affinity for ferret and cloned hNK1 receptors [Ki (nM) ferret 0.7 and 0.1; human 0.03 and 0.06, respectively] but low affinity for rodent NK1 receptors [Ki (nM) 64 and 17, respectively] suggesting that ferret receptors have hNK1-like binding pharmacology. Studies in vivo showed that L-741,671 and L-743,310 had equivalent functional activity in the periphery (ID50s of 1.6 and 2 micrograms/kg i.v., respectively) as measured by inhibition of plasma protein extravasation evoked in the oesophagus of guinea pigs by resiniferatoxin (7 nmol/kg i.v.). Using an in situ brain perfusion technique in anaesthetised rats, L-741,671 was shown to be much more brain penetrant than the quaternary compound L-743,310 which had an entry rate similar to the poorly brain penetrant plasma marker inulin. These compounds thus provided an opportunity to compare the anti-emetic effects of equi-active hNK1 receptor antagonists with and without brain penetration to central NK1 receptor sites. When tested against cisplatin-induced emesis in ferrets, L-741,671 (0.3, 1 and 3 mg/kg i.v.) produced marked dose-dependent inhibition of retching and vomiting but L-743,310 was inactive at 3 and 10 micrograms/kg i.v. In contrast, direct central injection of L-741,671 and L-743,310 (30 micrograms) into the vicinity of the nucleus tractus solitarius or L-743,310 (200 micrograms) intracisternally was shown to inhibit retching and vomiting induced by i.v. cisplatin. L-741,671 and L-743,310 had equivalent functional activity, at the same dose, against cisplatin-induced emesis when injected centrally. These observations indicated that had L-743,310 penetrated into the brain after systemic administration it would have been active in the cisplatin-induced emesis assay and so show that brain penetration is essential for the anti-emetic action of systemically administered NK1 receptor antagonists.


European Journal of Pharmacology | 1997

In vitro and in vivo predictors of the anti-emetic activity of tachykinin NK1 receptor antagonists

N.M.J. Rupniak; F. David Tattersall; Angela R. Williams; Wayne Rycroft; Emma J. Carlson; Margaret A. Cascieri; Sharon Sadowski; Elzbieta Ber; Jeffrey J. Hale; Sander G. Mills; Malcolm Maccoss; Eileen Mary Seward; Ian Thomas Huscroft; Simon Neil Owen; Christopher John Swain; R.G. Hill; Richard Hargreaves

The ability of tachykinin NK1 receptor antagonists to inhibit GR73632 (D-Ala-[L-Pro9,Me-Leu8]substance P-(7-11))-induced foot tapping in gerbils was employed as an indirect measure of brain penetration and this was compared with their ability to prevent acute emesis induced by cisplatin in ferrets. (+)-GR203040 ((2S,3S and 2R,3R)-2-methoxy-5-tetrazol-1-yl-benzyl-(2-phenyl-piperidin- 3-yl)-amine), CP-99,994 ((2S,3S)-cis-3-(2-methoxybenzylamino)-2-phenyl piperidine) dihydrochloride), and L-742,694 (2-(S)-(3,5-bis(trifluoromethyl)benzyloxy)-3-(S)-phenyl-4-(5-(3-oxo-1,2, 4-triazolo)methylmorpholine) potently inhibited GR73632-induced foot tapping (ID50 < or = 0.85 mg/kg), and acute retching induced by cisplatin (ID50 < or = 0.18 mg/kg). RPR100893 ((3aS,4S,7aS)-7,7-diphenyl-4-(2-methoxyphenyl)-2-[(S)-2-(2-m ethoxyphenyl)proprionyl] perhydroisoindol-4-ol) was not a potent antagonist of retching (ID50 4.1 mg/kg) or foot tapping (ID50 > 10 mg/kg). High doses (3-10 mg/kg) of CGP49823 ((2R,4S)-2-benzyl-1-(3,5-dimethylbenzoyl)-N-[(4-quinolinyl)methyl] -4-piperineamine) dihydrochloride), FK888 (N2-[(4R)-4-hydroxy-1-(1-methyl-1H-indol-3-yl)carbonyl-L-propyl]-N-methy l-N-phenylmethyl-L-3-(2-naphthyl)-alaninamide), and LY303870 ((R)-1-[N-(2-methoxybenzyl)acetylamino]-3-(1H-indol-3-yl)-2-[N-(2-(4-(pi peridinyl)piperidin-1-yl)acetyl)amino]propane) were required to inhibit foot tapping; these agents were not anti-emetic in this dose range. SR140333 ((S)-1-[2-[3-(3,4-dichlorphenyl)-1 (3-isopropoxyphenylacetyl)piperidin-3-yl] ethyl]-4-phenyl-1 azaniabicyclo [2.2.2]octane; 3-10 mg/kg) failed to inhibit foot tapping or emesis. Affinities for the human and ferret tachykinin NK1 receptor were highly correlated (r = 0.93, P = 0.0008). Inhibition of foot tapping in gerbils, but not NK1 receptor binding affinity, predicted anti-emetic activity in ferrets (r = 0.75, P < 0.01). These findings confirm that the anti-emetic activity of tachykinin NK1 receptor antagonists is dependent on brain penetration.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 1994

Piperidine-ether based hNK1 antagonists 1: Determination of the relative and absolute stereochemical requirements

Timothy Harrison; Brian John Williams; Christopher John Swain; Richard G. Ball

Abstract The synthesis of a new series of piperidine-based ethers is described and the relative and absolute stereochemical requirements necessary for high affinity binding to the hNK1 receptor established. The synthesis of the corresponding pyrrolidine derivative is also presented.


Neuroscience | 2002

Chronic substance P (NK1) receptor antagonist and conventional antidepressant treatment increases burst firing of monoamine neurones in the locus coeruleus

Karen A. Maubach; K Martin; Gary G. Chicchi; Timothy Harrison; A Wheeldon; Christopher John Swain; Michael J Cumberbatch; N.M.J. Rupniak; Guy R. Seabrook

The mechanism of action of conventional antidepressants (e.g. imipramine) has been linked to modulation of central monoamine systems. Substance P (NK1) receptor antagonists may have antidepressant and anxiolytic effects in patients with major depressive disorder and high anxiety but, unlike conventional antidepressants, are independent of activity at monoamine reuptake sites, transporters, receptors, or monoamine oxidase. To investigate the possibility that substance P receptor antagonists influence central monoamine systems indirectly, we have compared the effects of chronic administration of imipramine with that of the substance P receptor antagonist L-760735 on the spontaneous firing activity of locus coeruleus neurones. Electrophysiological recordings were made from brain slices prepared from guinea-pigs that had been dosed orally every day for 4 weeks with either L-760735 (3 mg/kg), imipramine (10 mg/kg), or vehicle (water), or naive animals. Chronic, but not acute, treatment with the substance P receptor antagonist L-760735, induced burst firing of neurones in the locus coeruleus. This effect resembles that of the conventional antidepressant imipramine. However, their effects are dissociable since, in contrast to chronic imipramine treatment, chronic L-760735 treatment does not cause functional desensitisation of somatic alpha2 adrenoceptors. The mechanism by which chronic substance P receptor antagonist or conventional antidepressant treatment influences the pattern of firing activity of norepinephrine neurones remains to be elucidated. However, an indirect action in the periphery or distant brain nuclei has been excluded by the use of the in vitro slice preparation, suggesting a local site of action in the locus coeruleus.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2001

2-Aryl Indole NK1 receptor antagonists: optimisation of indole substitution

Laura Catherine Cooper; Gary G. Chicchi; Kevin Dinnell; Jason Matthew Elliott; Gregory John Hollingworth; Marc M. Kurtz; Karen L Locker; Denise Morrison; Duncan E. Shaw; Kwei-Lan Tsao; Alan P. Watt; Angela R. Williams; Christopher John Swain

The synthesis and biological evaluation of a series of 2-aryl indoles with high affinity for the human neurokinin-1 (hNK1) receptor are reported, concentrating on optimisation of the indole substitution.


Tetrahedron Letters | 1998

Traceless solid phase synthesis of 2,3-disubstituted indoles

Adrian Leonard Smith; Graeme Irvine Stevenson; Christopher John Swain; JoséL. Castro

Abstract An efficient method for the traceless solid phase synthesis of 2,3-disubstituted indoles using a THP linker and a Pd(0)-mediated annulation of 2-iodoaniline and acetylenes is reported.


Neuropharmacology | 2003

Comparison of the functional blockade of rat substance P (NK1) receptors by GR205171, RP67580, SR140333 and NKP-608

N.M.J. Rupniak; Emma J. Carlson; Sara L. Shepheard; Graham Bentley; Angela R. Williams; Alastair W. Hill; Christopher John Swain; Sander G. Mills; Jerry Di Salvo; Ruth Kilburn; Margaret A. Cascieri; Marc M. Kurtz; Kwei-Lan Tsao; Sandra L. Gould; Gary G. Chicchi

Extensive screening of compound libraries was undertaken to identify compounds with high affinity for the rat NK(1) receptor based on inhibition of [(125)I]-substance P binding. RP67580, SR140333, NKP-608 and GR205171 were selected as compounds of interest, with cloned rat NK(1) receptor binding K(i) values of 0.15-1.9 nM. Despite their high binding affinity, NKP-608 and GR205171 exhibited only a moderate functional antagonism of substance P-induced inositol-1-phosphate accumulation and acidification rate at 1 microM using cloned or native rat NK(1) receptors in vitro. The ability of the compounds to penetrate the CNS was determined by inhibition of NK(1) agonist-induced behaviours in gerbils and rats. GR205171 and NKP-608 potently inhibited GR73632-induced foot drumming in gerbils (ID(50) 0.04 and 0.2 mg/kg i.v., respectively). In contrast, RP67580 and SR140333 were poorly brain penetrant in gerbils (no inhibition at 10 mg/kg i.v.) and were not examined further in vivo. In rats, only high doses of GR205171 (10 or 30 mg/kg s.c.) inhibited NK(1) agonist-induced sniffing and hypertension, whilst NKP-608 (1 or 10 mg/kg i.p.) was without effect. GR205171 (3-30 mg/kg s.c.) caused only partial inhibition of separation-induced vocalisations in rat pups, a response that is known to be NK(1) receptor mediated in other species. These observations demonstrate the shortcomings of currently available NK(1) receptor antagonists for rat psychopharmacology assays.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 1994

Gem-disubstituted amino-ether based substance p antagonists

Timothy Harrison; Brian John Williams; Christopher John Swain

Abstract The design and syntheses of new series of gem -disubstituted pyrrolidine and piperidine derivatives (eg. 2 and 3 ) is described. The design and syntheses of new series of gem -disubstituted pyrrolidine and piperidine derivatives (eg. 2 and 3 ) is described.


Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience | 2007

Evidence for an enhancement of excitatory transmission in adult CNS by Wnt signaling pathway modulation.

Vahri Beaumont; Sally-Anne Thompson; Fahd Choudhry; Hugh Nuthall; Helmut Glantschnig; Lorraine Lipfert; Gabriela R. David; Christopher John Swain; George McAllister; Ignacio Munoz-Sanjuan

The role for Wnt signaling modulation during synaptogenesis, neurogenesis and cell fate specification have been well characterized. In contrast, the roles for Wnt signaling pathways in the regulation of synaptic plasticity and adult physiology are only starting to be elucidated. Here, we have identified a novel series of Wnt pathway small molecule modulators, and report that these and other small molecules targeting the Wnt pathway acutely enhance excitatory transmission in adult hippocampal preparations. Our findings are consistent with a pre- and postsynaptic site of action, leading to both increased spontaneous and evoked neurotransmission that occurs in a transcription-independent fashion.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2001

2-Aryl indole NK1 receptor antagonists: optimisation of the 2-Aryl ring and the indole nitrogen substituent

Kevin Dinnell; Gary G. Chicchi; Madhumeeta J Dhar; Jason Matthew Elliott; Gregory John Hollingworth; Marc M. Kurtz; Mark Peter Ridgill; Wayne Rycroft; Kwei-Lan Tsao; Angela R. Williams; Christopher John Swain

Novel 2-aryl indole hNK1 receptor ligands were prepared utilising palladium cross-coupling chemistry of a late intermediate as a key step. Compounds with high hNK1 receptor binding affinity and good brain penetration (e.g., 9d) were synthesised.

Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge