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Dive into the research topics where Diane M. Hargrove is active.

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Featured researches published by Diane M. Hargrove.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Isozyme-nonselective N-Substituted Bipiperidylcarboxamide Acetyl-CoA Carboxylase Inhibitors Reduce Tissue Malonyl-CoA Concentrations, Inhibit Fatty Acid Synthesis, and Increase Fatty Acid Oxidation in Cultured Cells and in Experimental Animals

H. James Harwood; Stephen F. Petras; Lorraine D. Shelly; Lawrence M. Zaccaro; David Austen Perry; Michael Raymond Groton Makowski; Diane M. Hargrove; Kelly A. Martin; W. Ross Tracey; Justin Chapman; William P. Magee; Deepak K. Dalvie; Victor F. Soliman; William H. Martin; Christian J. Mularski; Shane A. Eisenbeis

Inhibition of acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC), with its resultant inhibition of fatty acid synthesis and stimulation of fatty acid oxidation, has the potential to favorably affect the multitude of cardiovascular risk factors associated with the metabolic syndrome. To achieve maximal effectiveness, an ACC inhibitor should inhibit both the lipogenic tissue isozyme (ACC1) and the oxidative tissue isozyme (ACC2). Herein, we describe the biochemical and acute physiological properties of CP-610431, an isozyme-nonselective ACC inhibitor identified through high throughput inhibition screening, and CP-640186, an analog with improved metabolic stability. CP-610431 inhibited ACC1 and ACC2 with IC50s of ∼50 nm. Inhibition was reversible, uncompetitive with respect to ATP, and non-competitive with respect to bicarbonate, acetyl-CoA, and citrate, indicating interaction with the enzymatic carboxyl transfer reaction. CP-610431 also inhibited fatty acid synthesis, triglyceride (TG) synthesis, TG secretion, and apolipoprotein B secretion in HepG2 cells (ACC1) with EC50s of 1.6, 1.8, 3.0, and 5.7 μm, without affecting either cholesterol synthesis or apolipoprotein CIII secretion. CP-640186, also inhibited both isozymes with IC50sof ∼55 nm but was 2–3 times more potent than CP-610431 in inhibiting HepG2 cell fatty acid and TG synthesis. CP-640186 also stimulated fatty acid oxidation in C2C12 cells (ACC2) and in rat epitrochlearis muscle strips with EC50s of 57 nm and 1.3 μm. In rats, CP-640186 lowered hepatic, soleus muscle, quadriceps muscle, and cardiac muscle malonyl-CoA with ED50s of 55, 6, 15, and 8 mg/kg. Consequently, CP-640186 inhibited fatty acid synthesis in rats, CD1 mice, and ob/ob mice with ED50s of 13, 11, and 4 mg/kg, and stimulated rat whole body fatty acid oxidation with an ED50 of ∼30 mg/kg. Taken together, These observations indicate that isozyme-nonselective ACC inhibition has the potential to favorably affect risk factors associated with the metabolic syndrome.


Metabolism-clinical and Experimental | 1995

Glucose-dependent action of glucagon-like peptide-1(7-37) in vivo during short- or long-term administration

Diane M. Hargrove; Nancy A. Nardone; Lorna M. Persson; Janice C. Parker; Ralph W. Stevenson

In vitro, truncated glucagon-like peptides [GLP-1(7-36)-amide and GLP-1(7-37)] increase insulin secretion in a glucose-dependent manner, and desensitization to the action of GLP-1(7-37) has been demonstrated acutely with high concentrations. The purpose of these studies was to evaluate the glucose dependency and threshold of GLP-1(7-37) action in normal rats and in a rat model of type II diabetes and to assess the effects of long-term administration in vivo. All studies were conducted in conscious catheterized rats. An intravenous (IV) infusion of GLP-1(7-37) at 0.5, 5, or 50 pmol/min/kg during the second hour of a 2-hour 11-mmol/L hyperglycemic clamp in Sprague-Dawley rats produced a dose-related enhancement of the glucose-induced increase in plasma insulin concentration. A 1-hour infusion of a submaximal dose of GLP-1(7-37) (5 pmol/min/kg IV) in fasted and fed Sprague-Dawley rats produced small transient increases in plasma insulin (incremental increases above basal, 72 +/- 27 and 96 +/- 28 pmol/L, respectively) and decreases in plasma glucose (to levels > or = 5.2 mmol/L). Infusion of GLP-1(7-37) (5 pmol/min/kg IV) during a hyperglycemic clamp at two sequentially increasing concentrations of glucose, 11 and 17 mmol/L, produced incremental increases in insulin of 600 and 1,200 pmol/L, respectively, relative to levels in clamped control rats. Similarly, infusion of GLP-1(7-37) (5 pmol/min/kg IV) in hyperinsulinemic, hyperglycemic Zucker diabetic fatty (ZDF) rats produced a transitory increase in plasma insulin concentration and normalized the plasma glucose concentration.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Discovery of N-benzyl-2-[(4S)-4-(1H-indol-3-ylmethyl)-5-oxo-1-phenyl-4,5-dihydro-6H-[1,2,4]triazolo[4,3-a][1,5]benzodiazepin-6-yl]-N-isopropylacetamide, an orally active, gut-selective CCK1 receptor agonist for the potential treatment of obesity.

Richard L. Elliott; Kimberly O'keefe Cameron; Janice E. Chin; Jeremy A. Bartlett; Elena E. Beretta; Yue Chen; Paul Da Silva Jardine; Jeffrey S. Dubins; Melissa L. Gillaspy; Diane M. Hargrove; Amit S. Kalgutkar; Janet A. LaFlamme; Mary E. Lame; Kelly A. Martin; Tristan S. Maurer; Nancy A. Nardone; Robert M. Oliver; Dennis O. Scott; Dexue Sun; Andrew G. Swick; Catherine E. Trebino; Yingxin Zhang

We describe the design, synthesis, and structure-activity relationships of triazolobenzodiazepinone CCK1 receptor agonists. Analogs in this series demonstrate potent agonist activity as measured by in vitro and in vivo assays for CCK1 agonism. Our efforts resulted in the identification of compound 4a which significantly reduced food intake with minimal systemic exposure in rodents.


Metabolism-clinical and Experimental | 1996

Comparison of the glucose dependency of glucagon-like peptide-1(7–37) and glyburide in vitro and in vivo

Diane M. Hargrove; Nancy A. Nardone; Lorna M. Persson; Kim M. Andrews; Kandace L. Shepherd; Ralph W. Stevenson; Janice C. Parker

The purpose of the present study was to compare the glucose dependency of the insulin secretagogue activity of the sulfonylurea, glyburide, versus that of glucagon-like peptide-1(7-37) [GLP-1(7-37)] in vitro and in vivo. In freshly isolated rat islets, maximally effective concentrations of glyburide (10 micromol/L) and GLP-1(7-37) (10 nmol/L) were equally effective in stimulating insulin secretion in the presence of 15 mmol/L glucose (2.4-fold increase relative to 15 nmol/L glucose alone). At 5 nmol/L glucose, both agents increased insulin secretion, but the effect for glyburide was threefold greater than for GLP-1(7-37) (122% and 41% increase in insulin secretion, respectively). In conscious catheterized rats infused with glucose at a variable rate to clamp plasma glucose concentration at 11 mmol/L, glyburide (1 mg/kg orally) and GLP -1(7-37) (infused intravenously [IV] at 5 pmol/min/kg) produced similar increase in insulin levels (1.8-fold relative to the respective vehicle controls) that were sustained through 60 minutes of measurement. These doses of GLP-1(7-37) and glyburide were then administered to fasted and fed rats (basal plasma glucose concentration, 5.8 and 7.3 mmol/L, respectively). Relative to the vehicle control group, GLP-1(7-37) infusion produced a transitory increase (30%) in plasma insulin concentration and a modest sustained decrease (10% to 20%) in glucose in both fasted and fed rats, whereas glyburide induced a sustained 2.4- and 1.7-fold increase in plasma insulin concentration in fasted and fed rats, respectively, and a 50% decrease in plasma glucose in both fasted and fed rats. Results of these studies demonstrate the higher glucose threshold for the insulin secretagogue activity of GLP-1(7-37) relative to glyburide in vitro and in vivo.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2010

In vitro and in vivo pharmacology of CP-945,598, a potent and selective cannabinoid CB1 receptor antagonist for the management of obesity.

John R. Hadcock; David A. Griffith; Phillip Iredale; Phillip A. Carpino; Robert L. Dow; Shawn C. Black; Rebecca E. O’Connor; Denise Gautreau; Jeffrey S. Lizano; Karen M. Ward; Diane M. Hargrove; Dawn Kelly-Sullivan; Dennis O. Scott

Cannabinoid CB(1) receptor antagonists exhibit pharmacologic properties favorable for the treatment of metabolic disease. CP-945,598 (1-[9-(4-chlorophenyl)-8-(2-chlorophenyl)-9H-purin-6-yl]-4-ethylamino piperidine-4-carboxylic acid amide hydrochloride) is a recently discovered selective, high affinity, competitive CB(1) receptor antagonist that inhibits both basal and cannabinoid agonist-mediated CB(1) receptor signaling in vitro and in vivo. CP-945,598 exhibits sub-nanomolar potency at human CB(1) receptors in both binding (K(i)=0.7 nM) and functional assays (K(i)=0.2 nM). The compound has low affinity (K(i)=7600 nM) for human CB(2) receptors. In vivo, CP-945,598 reverses four cannabinoid agonist-mediated CNS-driven responses (hypo-locomotion, hypothermia, analgesia, and catalepsy) to a synthetic cannabinoid receptor agonist. CP-945,598 exhibits dose and concentration-dependent anorectic activity in two models of acute food intake in rodents, fast-induced re-feeding and spontaneous, nocturnal feeding. CP-945,598 also acutely stimulates energy expenditure in rats and decreases the respiratory quotient indicating a metabolic switch to increased fat oxidation. CP-945,598 at 10mg/kg promoted a 9%, vehicle adjusted weight loss in a 10 day weight loss study in diet-induced obese mice. Concentration/effect relationships combined with ex vivo brain CB(1) receptor occupancy data were used to evaluate efficacy in behavioral, food intake, and energy expenditure studies. Together, these in vitro, ex vivo, and in vivo data indicate that CP-945,598 is a novel CB(1) receptor competitive antagonist that may further our understanding of the endocannabinoid system.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Discovery and evaluation of pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidines as neuropeptide Y1 receptor antagonists.

David A. Griffith; Diane M. Hargrove; Tristan S. Maurer; Charles A. Blum; Stéphane De Lombaert; John Inthavongsay; Lee E. Klade; Christine M. Mack; Colin R. Rose; Martin J. Sanders; Philip A. Carpino

A novel series of pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidine derivatives was synthesized and evaluated as NPY Y1R antagonists. High binding affinity and selectivity were achieved with C3 trisubstituted aryl groups and C7 substituted 2-(tetrahydro-2H-pyran-4-ylamino)ethylamine moieties. Efforts to find close analogs with low plasma clearance in the rat and minimal p-glycoprotein efflux in the mouse were unsuccessful. Compound 2f (CP-671906) inhibited NPY-induced increases in blood pressure and food intake after iv and icv administration, respectively, in Sprague-Dawley (SD) rat models. Oral administration of compound 2f resulted in a modest, but statistically significant, reduction in food intake in a Wistar rat model of feeding behavior. Small inhibitions of food intake were also observed in an overnight fasting/refeeding model in SD rats. These data suggest a potential role for Y1R in the regulation of food intake in rodents.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016

Synthesis and Pharmacological Characterization of Novel Glucagon-like Peptide-2 (GLP-2) Analogues with Low Systemic Clearance

Kazimierz Wiśniewski; Javier Sueiras-Diaz; Guangcheng Jiang; Robert Galyean; Mark Lu; Dorain Thompson; Yung-Chih Wang; Glenn Croston; Alexander Posch; Diane M. Hargrove; Halina Wiśniewska; Regent Laporte; John J. Dwyer; Steve Qi; Karthik Srinivasan; Jennifer Hartwig; Nicky Ferdyan; Monica Mares; John Kraus; Sudarkodi Alagarsamy; Pierre Riviere; Claudio D. Schteingart

Glucagon-like peptide-2 receptor agonists have therapeutic potential for the treatment of intestinal diseases. The native hGLP-2, a 33 amino acid gastrointestinal peptide, is not a suitable clinical candidate, due to its very short half-life in humans. In search of GLP-2 receptor agonists with better pharmacokinetic characteristics, a series of GLP-2 analogues containing Gly substitution at position 2, norleucine in position 10, and hydrophobic substitutions in positions 11 and/or 16 was designed and synthesized. In vitro receptor potency at the human GLP-2, selectivity vs the human GLP-1 and GCG receptors, and PK profile in rats were determined for the new analogues. A number of compounds more potent at the hGLP-2R than the native hormone, showing excellent receptor selectivity and very low systemic clearance (CL) were discovered. Analogues 69 ([Gly(2),Nle(10),D-Thi(11),Phe(16)]hGLP-2-(1-30)-NH2), 72 ([Gly(2),Nle(10),D-Phe(11),Leu(16)]hGLP-2-(1-33)-OH), 73 ([Gly(2),Nle(10),D-Phe(11),Leu(16)]hGLP-2-(1-33)-NH2), 81 ([Gly(2),Nle(10),D-Phe(11),Leu(16)]hGLP-2-(1-33)-NHEt), and 85 ([Gly(2),Nle(10),D-Phe(11),Leu(16)]hGLP-2-(1-33)-NH-((CH2)2O)4-(CH2)2-CONH2) displayed the desired profiles (EC50 (hGLP-2R) < 100 pM, CL in rat <0.3 mL/min/kg, selective vs hGLP-1R and hGCGR). Compound 73 (FE 203799) was selected as a candidate for clinical development.


The 24th American Peptide Symposium | 2015

In Vitro Evaluation of New, Potent, and Selective V2 Receptor Agonists

Kazimierz Wisniewski; Hiroe Tariga; Glenn Croston; Diane M. Hargrove; Pierre Riviere; Gebhard Neyer; Claudio D. Schteingart

The vasopressin analogue desmopressin (dDAVP, 1) is a potent V2 receptor agonist that also activates the related V1b receptor [1]. dDAVP is approved in many countries for the treatment of diabetes insipidus, primary nocturnal enuresis, nocturia, and coagulation disorders including hemophilia A and von Willebrand’s disease. In search of novel, potent, selective and pharmacologically useful peptidic V2R agonists, we synthesized a series of C-terminally truncated [Val4]dDAVP (2) [2] analogs modified in positions 2, 3, 7 and/or at the disulfide bridge. The peptides were evaluated for in vitro potency at the humanV2 receptor (hV2R) and selectivity versus related receptors (hV1aR, hV1bR, hOTR). Here we present comprehensive in vitro data for the new compounds and describe synthetic methods used to prepare the analogues.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1994

Enhanced peripheral glucose utilization in transgenic mice expressing the human GLUT4 gene.

J. L. Treadway; Diane M. Hargrove; N A Nardone; R. K. Mcpherson; J F Russo; Anthony J. Milici; H A Stukenbrok; E M Gibbs; R W Stevenson; Jeffrey E. Pessin


Diabetes | 2001

GLUT4 Overexpression in db/db Mice Dose-Dependently Ameliorates Diabetes But Is Not a Lifelong Cure

Joseph T. Brozinick; Scott C. McCoid; Thomas H. Reynolds; Nancy A. Nardone; Diane M. Hargrove; Ralph W. Stevenson; Samuel W. Cushman; E. Michael Gibbs

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