Colleen A. McNaney
Bristol-Myers Squibb
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Colleen A. McNaney.
Assay and Drug Development Technologies | 2008
Colleen A. McNaney; Dieter M. Drexler; Serhiy Hnatyshyn; Tatyana Zvyaga; Jay O. Knipe; James V. Belcastro; Mark Sanders
An automated process is described for the detailed assessment of the in vitro metabolic stability properties of drug candidates in support of pharmaceutical property profiling. Compounds are incubated with liver microsomes using a robotic liquid handler. Aliquots are taken at various time points, and the resulting samples are quantitatively analyzed by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry utilizing ion trap mass spectrometers to determine the amount of compound remaining. From these data metabolism rates can be calculated. A high degree of automation is achieved through custom software, which is employed for instrument setup, data processing, and results reporting. The assay setup is highly configurable, allowing for any combination of up to six user-selected time points, variable substrate concentration, and microsomes or other biologically active media. The data, based on relative substrate depletion, affords an estimate of metabolic stability through the calculation of half-life (t(1/2)) and intrinsic clearance, which are used to differentiate and rank order drug leads. In general, t(1/2) is the time necessary for the metabolism, following first-order kinetics, of 50% of the initial compound. Intrinsic clearance is the proportionality constant between rate of metabolism of a compound and its concentration at the enzyme site. Described here is the setup of the assay, and data from assay test compounds are presented.
Chemical Research in Toxicology | 2011
Donald G. Robertson; Stefan Ruepp; Steven A. Stryker; Serhiy Hnatyshyn; Petia Shipkova; Nelly Aranibar; Colleen A. McNaney; Oliver Fiehn; Michael D. Reily
The overnight (16-h) fast is one of the most common experimental manipulations performed in rodent studies. Despite its ubiquitous employment, a comprehensive evaluation of metabolomic and transcriptomic sequelae of fasting in conjunction with routine clinical pathology evaluation has not been undertaken. This study assessed the impact of a 16-h fast on urine and serum metabolic profiles, transcript profiles of liver, psoas muscle, and jejunum as well as on routine laboratory clinical pathology parameters. Fasting rats had an approximate 12% relative weight decrease compared to ad libitum fed animals, and urine volume was significantly increased. Fasting had no effect on hematology parameters, though several changes were evident in serum and urine clinical chemistry data. In general, metabolic changes in biofluids were modest in magnitude but broad in extent, with a majority of measured urinary metabolites and from 1/3 to 1/2 of monitored serum metabolites significantly affected. Increases in fatty acids and bile acids dominated the upregulated metabolites. Downregulated serum metabolites were dominated by diet-derived and/or gut-microflora derived metabolites. Major transcriptional changes included genes with roles in fatty acid, carbohydrate, cholesterol, and bile acid metabolism indicating decreased activity in glycolytic pathways and a shift toward increased utilization of fatty acids. Typically, several genes within these metabolic pathways, including key rate limiting genes, changed simultaneously, and those changes were frequently correlative to changes in clinical pathology parameters or metabolomic data. Importantly, up- or down-regulation of a variety of cytochrome P450s, transporters, and transferases was evident. Taken together, these data indicate profound consequences of fasting on systemic biochemistry and raise the potential for unanticipated interactions, particularly when metabolomic or transcriptomic data are primary end points.
Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry | 2013
Yulia Benitex; Colleen A. McNaney; David Luchetti; Eric Schaeffer; Timothy Olah; Daniel G. Morgan; Dieter M. Drexler
RATIONALE Research on disorders of the central nervous system (CNS) has shown that an imbalance in the levels of specific endogenous neurotransmitters may underlie certain CNS diseases. These alterations in neurotransmitter levels may provide insight into pathophysiology, but can also serve as disease and pharmacodynamic biomarkers. To measure these potential biomarkers in vivo, the relevant sample matrix is cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), which is in equilibrium with the brains interstitial fluid and circulates through the ventricular system of the brain and spinal cord. Accurate analysis of these potential biomarkers can be challenging due to low CSF sample volume, low analyte levels, and potential interferences from other endogenous compounds. METHODS A protocol has been established for effective method development of bioanalytical assays for endogenous compounds in CSF. Database searches and standard-addition experiments are employed to qualify sample preparation and specificity of the detection thus evaluating accuracy and precision. RESULTS This protocol was applied to the study of the histaminergic neurotransmitter system and the analysis of histamine and its metabolite 1-methylhistamine in rat CSF. CONCLUSIONS The protocol resulted in a specific and sensitive novel method utilizing pre-column derivatization ultra high performance liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry (UHPLC/MS/MS), which is also capable of separating an endogenous interfering compound, identified as taurine, from the analytes of interest.
Bioanalysis | 2015
Omar S Barnaby; Yulia Benitex; Joseph L. Cantone; Colleen A. McNaney; Timothy Olah; Dieter M. Drexler
The analysis of endogenous and exogenous analytes in biological matrices presents several challenges to the bioanalyst. These analytes are often present at low concentrations, typically in complex matrices, and may have physicochemical properties that are not amenable to LC-MS analysis. The bioanalyst thus relies heavily on the formation of analyte derivatives for the efficient quantification of these compounds. These derivatives are also critically employed to derive information on the biology of living systems, potential drug or disease targets, and biomarkers of drug efficacy, safety, or disease progression. In this perspective, we demonstrate how analyte derivatives are applied in modern bioanalytical workflows and we discuss the potential use of these derivatives in the future.
Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2014
Jeremy Stewart; Dieter M. Drexler; John E. Leet; Colleen A. McNaney; John J. Herbst
Plastic labware is used in all processes of modern pharmaceutical research, including compound storage and biological assays. The use of these plastics has created vast increases in productivity and cost savings as experiments moved from glass test tubes and capillary pipettes to plastic microplates and multichannel liquid handlers. One consequence of the use of plastic labware, however, is the potential release of contaminants and their resultant effects on biological assays. We report herein the identification of biologically active substances released from a commonly used plastic microplate. The active contaminants were identified by gas chromatography–mass spectroscopy as dodecan-1-ol, dodecyl 3-(3-dodecoxy-3-oxopropyl)sulfanylpropanoate, and dodecanoic acid, and they were found to be selective monoamine oxidase-B inhibitors.
Drug Metabolism and Disposition | 2017
Hong Shen; David M. Nelson; Regina V. Oliveira; Yueping Zhang; Colleen A. McNaney; Xiaomei Gu; Weiqi Chen; Ching Su; Michael D. Reily; Petia Shipkova; Jinping Gan; Yurong Lai; Punit Marathe; W. Griffith Humphreys
Perturbation of organic anion transporter (OAT) 1- and OAT3-mediated transport can alter the exposure, efficacy, and safety of drugs. Although there have been reports of the endogenous biomarkers for OAT1/3, none of these have all of the characteristics required for a clinical useful biomarker. Cynomolgus monkeys were treated with intravenous probenecid (PROB) at a dose of 40 mg/kg in this study. As expected, PROB increased the area under the plasma concentration-time curve (AUC) of coadministered furosemide, a known substrate of OAT1 and OAT3, by 4.1-fold, consistent with the values reported in humans (3.1- to 3.7-fold). Of the 233 plasma metabolites analyzed using a liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS)–based metabolomics method, 29 metabolites, including pyridoxic acid (PDA) and homovanillic acid (HVA), were significantly increased after either 1 or 3 hours in plasma from the monkeys pretreated with PROB compared with the treated animals. The plasma of animals was then subjected to targeted LC-MS/MS analysis, which confirmed that the PDA and HVA AUCs increased by approximately 2- to 3-fold by PROB pretreatments. PROB also increased the plasma concentrations of hexadecanedioic acid (HDA) and tetradecanedioic acid (TDA), although the increases were not statistically significant. Moreover, transporter profiling assessed using stable cell lines constitutively expressing transporters demonstrated that PDA and HVA are substrates for human OAT1, OAT3, OAT2 (HVA), and OAT4 (PDA), but not OCT2, MATE1, MATE2K, OATP1B1, OATP1B3, and sodium taurocholate cotransporting polypeptide. Collectively, these findings suggest that PDA and HVA might serve as blood-based endogenous probes of cynomolgus monkey OAT1 and OAT3, and investigation of PDA and HVA as circulating endogenous biomarkers of human OAT1 and OAT3 function is warranted.
Journal of Applied Bioanalysis | 2018
Dieter M. Drexler; Colleen A. McNaney; Yingzi Wang; Xiaohua Huang; Michael D. Reily
The constantly evolving complexities of the drug discovery and development process necessitate continued advancements of supporting LC-MS bioanalytical assays by improving critical analytical figures of merit such as specificity and sensitivity along with accuracy and precision (Figure 1). The principal objective of quantitative assays is to correctly and consistently/repeatedly measure the real values thus affording quality data with high accuracy and high precision. In some cases, when only a change of the levels of endogenous compounds from baseline is monitored, an assay with low accuracy and high precision may be sufficient [1,2]. Occasionally, assays with high accuracy and low precision or even assays with low accuracy and low precision might suitable for fit-for-purpose analysis. In LC-MS bioanalysis, dry reference standards are used to prepare stock solutions followed by serial dilution to provide calibration solutions and curves against which the samples and analytes are then quantified. The analytical errors interrelated to the mass and volume measurements needed for the preparation of these solutions JOURNAL OF APPLIED BIOANALYSIS, January 2018, p. 26-31. http://dx.doi.org/10.17145/jab.18.005 (ISSN 2405-710X) Vol. 4, No. 1
Bioanalysis | 2014
Yulia Benitex; Fu-ni Luan; Eric Shields; Colleen A. McNaney; Daniel G. Morgan; Timothy Olah; Dieter M. Drexler
BACKGROUND (1R,4R,5S,6R)-4-amino-2-oxabicyclo[3.1.0]hexane-4,6-dicarboxylic acid, also known as LY379268, a group II metabotropic glutamate receptor agonist, has been widely used in neuroscience as a model compound in studies evaluating antipsychotic drugs for the treatment of schizophrenia. MATERIALS & METHODS So far, no reports describing methods of the bioanalysis of LY379268 have been published. Here, a novel method is presented for determining LY379268 in rat plasma employing precolumn derivatization with pentafluorobenzoyl chloride reagent coupled to liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry. CONCLUSION Chemical derivatization of a low-molecular-weight and highly polar molecule yields a derivative that is retained on a reversed-phase liquid chromatography column with improved tandem mass spectrometric response.
Analytical Biochemistry | 2014
Colleen A. McNaney; Yulia Benitex; David Luchetti; Jeffrey M. Labasi; Timothy Olah; Daniel G. Morgan; Dieter M. Drexler
L-serine-O-phosphate (L-SOP), the precursor of L-serine, is a potent agonist against the group III metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs) and, thus, is of interest as a potential biomarker for monitoring modulation of neurotransmitter release. So far, no reports are available on the analysis of L-SOP in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). Here a novel method is presented to determine L-SOP levels in CSF employing precolumn derivatization with (5-N-succinimidoxy-5-oxopentyl)triphenylphosphonium bromide (SPTPP) coupled to liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (derivatization-LC/MS, d-LC/MS).
Assay and Drug Development Technologies | 2007
Dieter M. Drexler; James V. Belcastro; Kenneth E.J. Dickinson; Kurt J. Edinger; Serhiy Hnatyshyn; Jonathan L. Josephs; Robert Langish; Colleen A. McNaney; Kenneth S. Santone; Petia Shipkova; Adrienne A. Tymiak; Tatyana Zvyaga; Mark Sanders