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Dive into the research topics where Derek Maclean is active.

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Featured researches published by Derek Maclean.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2011

Therapeutic Applications of Cell-Penetrating Peptides

Randolph M. Johnson; Stephen D. Harrison; Derek Maclean

Since the discovery over 15 years ago of a protein transcription factor that possessed the ability to cross the plasma membrane, cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs) have been evaluated for the ability to transport diverse cargoes into cells, tissues, and organs. Certain CPPs have been used for the intracellular delivery of information-rich molecules to modulate protein-protein interactions and thereby inhibit key cellular mechanisms of disease. The ability to introduce drugs into cells allows the conventional biodistribution of drugs to be altered in order to favorably impact toxicity, patient compliance, and other treatment factors. In this monograph, we present the current status and future prospects for the application of CPPs to the development of human therapeutics. We discuss some of the advantages and disadvantages of using CPPs in the in vivo setting, and review the current status of a number of preclinical and human clinical studies of CPP-mediated delivery of therapeutics. These include CPP-conjugated moieties directed against a growing variety of targets and disease areas, including cancer, cardiology, pain, and stroke. Our discussion focuses on those therapeutics that have been tested in humans, including a CPP conjugate for the treatment of acute myocardial infarction. The promising results obtained in a number of these studies indicate that CPPs may have an important role in the development of novel therapeutics.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2013

Pharmacology of AMG 416 (velcalcetide), a Novel Peptide Agonist of the Calcium Sensing Receptor, for the Treatment of Secondary Hyperparathyroidism in Hemodialysis Patients

Sarah Walter; Amos Baruch; Jin Dong; James E. Tomlinson; Shawn T. Alexander; Julie Janes; Tom Hunter; Qun Yin; Derek Maclean; Gregory Bell; Dirk Mendel; Randolph M. Johnson; Felix Karim

A novel peptide, AMG 416 (formerly KAI-4169, and with a United States Adopted Name: velcalcetide), has been identified that acts as an agonist of the calcium-sensing receptor (CaSR). This article summarizes the in vitro and in vivo characterization of AMG 416 activity and the potential clinical utility of this novel compound. AMG 416 activates the human CaSR in vitro, acting by a mechanism distinct from that of cinacalcet, the only approved calcimimetic, since it can activate the CaSR both in the presence or the absence of physiologic levels of extracellular calcium. Administration of AMG 416 in vivo into either normal or renally compromised rats results in dose-dependent reductions in parathyroid hormone (PTH) levels and corresponding decreases in serum calcium, regardless of the baseline level of PTH. Treatment of 5/6 nephrectomized rats with AMG 416 resulted in dramatic improvements in their metabolic profile, including lower PTH and serum creatinine levels, reduced amounts of vascular calcification, attenuated parathyroid hyperplasia, and greater expression of the parathyroid gland regulators CaSR, vitamin D receptor, and FGF23 receptor compared with vehicle-treated animals. No drug accumulation was observed under this dosing regimen, and the terminal half-life of AMG 416 was estimated to be 2–4.5 hours. As a long-acting CaSR agonist, AMG 416 is an innovative new therapy for the treatment of hemodialysis patients with secondary hyperparathyroidism.


Molecular Pharmacology | 2015

Critical Cysteine Residues in Both the Calcium-Sensing Receptor and the Allosteric Activator AMG 416 Underlie the Mechanism of Action

Shawn T. Alexander; Thomas Hunter; Sarah Walter; Jin Dong; Derek Maclean; Amos Baruch; Raju Subramanian; James E. Tomlinson

AMG 416 is a novel D-amino acid–containing peptide agonist of the calcium-sensing receptor (CaSR) that is being evaluated for the treatment of secondary hyperparathyroidism in chronic kidney disease patients receiving hemodialysis. The principal amino acid residues and their location in the CaSR that accommodate AMG 416 binding and mode of action have not previously been reported. Herein we establish the importance of a pair of cysteine residues, one from AMG 416 and the other from the CaSR at position 482 (Cys482), and correlate the degree of disulfide bond formation between these residues with the pharmacological activity of AMG 416. KP-2067, a form of the CaSR agonist peptide, was included to establish the role of cysteine in vivo and in disulfide exchange. Studies conducted with AMG 416 in pigs showed a complete lack of pharmacodynamic effect and provided a foundation for determining the peptide agonist interaction site within the human CaSR. Inactivity of AMG 416 on the pig CaSR resulted from a naturally occurring mutation encoding tyrosine for cysteine (Cys) at position 482 in the pig CaSR. Replacing Cys482 in the human CaSR with serine or tyrosine ablated AMG 416 activity. Decidedly, a single substitution of cysteine for tyrosine at position 482 in the native pig CaSR provided a complete gain of activity by the peptide agonist. Direct evidence for this disulfide bond formation between the peptide and receptor was demonstrated using a mass spectrometry assay. The extent of disulfide bond formation was found to correlate with the extent of receptor activation. Notwithstanding the covalent basis of this disulfide bond, the observed in vivo pharmacology of AMG 416 showed readily reversible pharmacodynamics.


Expert Opinion on Drug Discovery | 2008

Non-ATP-competitive kinase inhibitors - enhancing selectivity through new inhibition strategies.

Stephen D. Harrison; Kanad Das; Felix Karim; Derek Maclean; Dirk Mendel

Background: ATP-competitive inhibitors of protein kinases have been successfully developed for life-threatening indications such as cancer. However, owing to the similarity of the ATP binding sites between kinases, it has been challenging to identify specific inhibitors. The progress towards the generation of kinase inhibiting drugs for more chronic indications has been slowed by the concern that low specificity kinase inhibitors will have undesired toxicities. Objective and methods: We have reviewed the scientific and patent literature to summarize alternative strategies that are being used to develop non-ATP-competitive kinase inhibitors with greater selectivity. Results/conclusion: Several new approaches are being taken to achieve selectivity. Among these, the use of small peptide therapeutics is particularly promising and is already yielding drugs that are demonstrating promise in human clinical trials.


BMC Nephrology | 2014

Comparison of AMG 416 and cinacalcet in rodent models of uremia

Sarah Walter; Amos Baruch; Shawn T. Alexander; Julie Janes; Eiketsu Sho; Jin Dong; Qun Yin; Derek Maclean; Dirk Mendel; Felix Karim; Randolph M. Johnson


Archive | 2010

Therapeutic agents for reducing parathyroid hormone levels

Felix Karim; Amos Baruch; Derek Maclean; Kanad Das; Qun Yin


Archive | 2006

Protein kinase c peptide modulators of angiogenesis

Leon E. Chen; Derek Maclean; Sarah Walter


Archive | 2014

Stable liquid formulation of amg 416 (velcalcetide)

Derek Maclean; Qun Yin


Archive | 2013

Therapeutic agent for reducing parathyroid hormone

Felix Karim; カリム フェリックス; Amos Baruch; バルーク アモス; Derek Maclean; マクレーン デレク; Kanad Das; ダス カナド; Qun Yin; チュン イン


Archive | 2010

Therapiemittel zur reduzierung von parathormonspiegeln

Felix Karim; Amos Baruch; Derek Maclean; Kanad Das; Qun Yin

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