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Dive into the research topics where Christopher W. Boyce is active.

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Featured researches published by Christopher W. Boyce.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Reduction of hERG inhibitory activity in the 4-piperidinyl urea series of H3 antagonists.

Michael Berlin; Yoon Joo Lee; Christopher W. Boyce; Yi Wang; Robert Aslanian; Kevin D. McCormick; Steve Sorota; Shirley M. Williams; Robert E. West; Walter A. Korfmacher

Structural features of the substituted 4-piperidinyl urea analogs 1, responsible for the H3 antagonist activity, have been identified. Structure-activity relationship of the H3 receptor affinity, hERG ion channel inhibitory activity and their separation is described. Preliminary pharmacokinetic evaluation of the compounds of the series is addressed.


Pulmonary Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2013

Pharmacological characterization of the late phase reduction in lung functions and correlations with microvascular leakage and lung edema in allergen-challenged Brown Norway rats

Peter Mauser; Aileen House; Howard Jones; Craig Correll; Christopher W. Boyce; Richard W. Chapman

Late phase airflow obstruction and reduction in forced vital capacity are characteristic features of human asthma. Airway microvascular leakage and lung edema are also present in the inflammatory phase of asthma, but the impact of this vascular response on lung functions has not been precisely defined. This study was designed to evaluate the role of increased lung microvascular leakage and edema on the late phase changes in forced vital capacity (FVC) and peak expiratory flow (PEF) in allergen-challenged Brown Norway rats using pharmacological inhibitors of the allergic inflammatory response. Rats were sensitized and challenged with ovalbumin aerosol and forced expiratory lung functions (FVC, PEF) and wet and dry lung weights were measured 48 h after antigen challenge. Ovalbumin challenge reduced FVC (63% reduction) and PEF (33% reduction) and increased wet (65% increase) and dry (51% increase) lung weights. The antigen-induced reduction in FVC and PEF was completely inhibited by oral treatment with betamethasone and partially attenuated by inhibitors of arachidonic acid metabolism including indomethacin (cyclooxygenase inhibitor), 7-TM and MK-7246 (CRTH2 antagonists) and montelukast (CysLT1 receptor antagonist). Antagonists of histamine H1 receptors (mepyramine) and 5-HT receptors (methysergide) had no significant effects indicating that these pre-formed mast cell mediators were not involved. There was a highly significant (P < 0.005) correlation for the inhibition of FVC reduction and increase in wet and dry lung weights by these pharmacological agents. These results strongly support the hypothesis that lung microvascular leakage and the associated lung edema contribute to the reduction in forced expiratory lung functions in antigen-challenged Brown Norway rats and identify an important role for the cyclooxygenase and lipoxygenase products of arachidonic acid metabolism in these responses.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

Synthesis and SAR studies of benzimidazolone derivatives as histamine H3-receptor antagonists.

Qingbei Zeng; Stuart B. Rosenblum; Zhaoxia Yang; Yueheng Jiang; Kevin D. McCormick; Robert Aslanian; Luli Duguma; Joseph A. Kozlowski; Neng-Yang Shih; John A. Hey; Robert West; Walter A. Korfmacher; Michael Berlin; Christopher W. Boyce

A novel series of benzimidazolone-containing histamine H3-receptor antagonists were prepared and their structure-activity relationship was explored. These benzimidazolone analogs demonstrate potent H3-receptor binding affinities, no P450 enzyme inhibition, and strong H3 functional activity. Compound 1o exhibits the best overall profile with H3Ki=0.95nM and rat AUC=12.9μMh.


American Journal of Rhinology & Allergy | 2013

Role of α2-adrenoceptors in electrical field stimulation-induced contraction of pig nasal mucosa and pharmacologic characterization of a novel α2C-adrenoceptor agonist.

Michel R. Corboz; Maria A. Rivelli; Himanshu Shah; Christopher W. Boyce; Kevin D. McCormick; Richard W. Chapman; John C. Hunter

Background Blood vessels of the nasal mucosa are richly innervated by sympathetic nerves and neural mechanism is of great interest in upper respiratory tract disorders. This study was designed to determine the role of α2-adrenoceptors and, more specifically, α2C-adrenoceptors, on neurogenic sympathetic vasoconstrictor responses in pig nasal mucosa, and to define the pharmacologic profile of a novel selective α2C-adrenoreceptor agonist. Methods Electrical field stimulation (EFS) was applied to nasal mucosa strips placed in an organ bath and attached to force displacement transducers for continuous recording of isometric tension. The affinity and functional activity of compound B for α2C-adrenoceptors were determined by binding analysis and the ability of compound B to stimulate [35S]GTPγS binding to the receptors. Compound B was also tested in a postjunctional α2C-adrenoreceptor bioassay. Results EFS-induced contractions were partly blocked by the α2-adrenoreceptor antagonist yohimbine (41.1%) and the α2C-adrenoreceptor antagonist JP-1302 had no effect. The α2-adrenoreceptor agonist clonidine, but not compound B, exerted a significant blockade (70.6%). Compound B had high affinity (Ki = 18 nM), produced potent agonist (EC50 = 279 nM) and good efficacy (Emax = 73%) responses at the α2C-adrenoceptors, and displayed good functional agonist potency in the human saphenous vein α2C-adrenoreceptor bioassay (pD2 = 6.2). Conclusion (1) Neurogenic vasomotor contractility is largely regulated through an α-adrenergic mechanism; (2) pig nasal mucosa possesses post- and prejunctional α2-adrenoceptors; (3) the α2C-adrenoreceptor subtype does not seem to be involved; and (4) compound B is a novel, highly selective, and potent α2C-adrenoreceptor agonist.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2014

Pharmacological Evaluation of Selective α2c-Adrenergic Agonists in Experimental Animal Models of Nasal Congestion

Yanlin Jia; Garfield G. Mingo; John C. Hunter; Gissela Lieber; Jairam Palamanda; Hong Mei; Christopher W. Boyce; Michael C. Koss; Yongxin Yu; Milenko Cicmil; John A. Hey; Robbie McLeod

Nasal congestion is one of the most troublesome symptoms of many upper airways diseases. We characterized the effect of selective α2c-adrenergic agonists in animal models of nasal congestion. In porcine mucosa tissue, compound A and compound B contracted nasal veins with only modest effects on arteries. In in vivo experiments, we examined the nasal decongestant dose-response characteristics, pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic relationship, duration of action, potential development of tolerance, and topical efficacy of α2c-adrenergic agonists. Acoustic rhinometry was used to determine nasal cavity dimensions following intranasal compound 48/80 (1%, 75 µl). In feline experiments, compound 48/80 decreased nasal cavity volume and minimum cross-sectional areas by 77% and 40%, respectively. Oral administration of compound A (0.1–3.0 mg/kg), compound B (0.3–5.0 mg/kg), and d-pseudoephedrine (0.3 and 1.0 mg/kg) produced dose-dependent decongestion. Unlike d-pseudoephedrine, compounds A and B did not alter systolic blood pressure. The plasma exposure of compound A to produce a robust decongestion (EC80) was 500 nM, which related well to the duration of action of approximately 4.0 hours. No tolerance to the decongestant effect of compound A (1.0 mg/kg p.o.) was observed. To study the topical efficacies of compounds A and B, the drugs were given topically 30 minutes after compound 48/80 (a therapeutic paradigm) where both agents reversed nasal congestion. Finally, nasal-decongestive activity was confirmed in the dog. We demonstrate that α2c-adrenergic agonists behave as nasal decongestants without cardiovascular actions in animal models of upper airway congestion.


Archive | 2014

Novel compounds that are erk inhibitors

Kevin J. Wilson; David J. Witter; Matthew H. Daniels; Angie R. Angeles; Phieng Siliphaivanh; David L. Sloman; Brendan M. O'boyle; Danielle Falcone; Catherine White; Ron Ferguson; Wei Zhou; Kathryn Lipford; Umar Faruk Mansoor; Salem Fevrier; Xianhai Huang; Ravi Kurukulasuriya; Judson E. Richard; Shuyi Tang; Christopher W. Boyce; Joseph A. Kozlowski; Raman K. Bakshi; Ganesh Babu Karunakaran


Archive | 2009

Compounds that are erk inhibitors

Kevin J. Wilson; David J. Witter; Phieng Siliphaivanh; Kathryn Lipford; David L. Sloman; Danielle Falcone; Brendan M. O'boyle; Umar Faruk Mansoor; Jongwon Lim; Joey L. Methot; Christopher W. Boyce; Lei Chen; Matthew H. Daniels; Salem Fevrier; Xianhai Huang; Ravi Kurukulasuriya; Ling Tong; Wei Zhou; Joseph A. Kozlowski; Milana Maletic; Bidhan A. Shinkre; Jayanth Thiruvellore Thatai; Raman K. Bakshi; Ganesh Babu Karunakaran


Archive | 2011

Quinazolinone-type compounds as crth2 antagonists

Robert Aslanian; Christopher W. Boyce; Robert Mazzola; Brian A. McKittrick; Kevin D. McCormick; Anandan Palani; Jun Qin; Haiqun Tang; Dong Xiao; Younong Yu; John P. Caldwell; Elizabeth Helen Kelley; Hongjun Zhang; Phieng Siliphaivanh; Rachel N. Maccoss; Joey L. Methot; Jolicia Polivina Gauuan; Qin Jiang; Andrew J. Leyhane; Purakkattle Biju; Li Dong; Xianhai Huang; Ning Shao; Wei Zhou; Pawan Dhondi; Ashwin U. Rao


Archive | 2008

Derivatives and analogs of chroman as functionally selective alpha2c adrenoreceptor agonists

Junying Zheng; Kevin D. McCormick; Jianhua Chao; Christopher W. Boyce; Robert Aslanian; Younong Yu


Archive | 2009

BIARYL SPIROAMINOOXAZOLINE ANALOGUES AS ALPHA2C ADRENERGIC RECEPTOR MODULATORS

Kevin D. McCormick; Li Dong; Christopher W. Boyce; Lera Ruiz Manuel De; Salem Fevrier; Jie Wu; Junying Zheng; Younong Yu; Jianhua Chao; Walter Won; Ashwin U. Rao; Rongze Kuang; Pauline C. Ting; Xianhai Huang; Ning Shao; Anandan Palani; Michael Berlin; Robert Aslanian

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