Elizabeth A. Davenport
GlaxoSmithKline
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Elizabeth A. Davenport.
Science Translational Medicine | 2012
Kevin S. Thorneloe; Mui Cheung; Weike Bao; Hasan Alsaid; Stephen C. Lenhard; Ming-Yuan Jian; Melissa H. Costell; Kristeen Maniscalco-Hauk; John A. Krawiec; Alan R. Olzinski; Earl Gordon; Irina M. Lozinskaya; Lou Elefante; Pu Qin; Daniel S. Matasic; Chris James; James Tunstead; Brian T. Donovan; Lorena A. Kallal; Anna Waszkiewicz; Kalindi Vaidya; Elizabeth A. Davenport; J. Larkin; Mark Burgert; Linda N. Casillas; Robert W. Marquis; Guosen Ye; Hilary Schenck Eidam; Krista B. Goodman; John R. Toomey
Transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 (TRPV4) channels are expressed in human heart failure lungs, which can be blocked to prevent and resolve heart failure–induced pulmonary edema. Ion Channel Blockade Prevents Pulmonary Edema Heart failure affects not only the heart and vessels but also the lungs. As blood pressure builds up in the lung’s vessels, fluid leaks into the lungs. Treatment options are limited for these patients, mostly because the mechanism underlying pulmonary edema is unclear. Here, Thorneloe and colleagues implicate the activation of the transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 (TRPV4) ion channel in the onset of edema during heart failure and show that a small-molecule drug can prevent such leakage. Activation of the ion channel TRPV4 results in pulmonary edema in animal lungs. The authors first confirmed that TRPV4 was expressed in normal human lungs and then demonstrated that it was increased in lung tissue from patients with a history of congestive heart failure. Using a small-molecule screen, Thorneloe et al. discovered GSK2193874. In human cells in vitro and mouse lungs ex vivo, the small molecule effectively blocked TRPV4 channels to maintain endothelial (vessel) layer integrity. A related study by Huh et al. (this issue) shows that the drug indeed prevents vascular leakage of human cell cultures in vitro. The GSK2193874 analog GSK2263095 displayed similar activity in canine lungs ex vivo. In vivo in rat models of heart failure, the authors found that the drug was effective in both preventing and reversing pulmonary edema. The molecule only protected against lung permeability at high (pathological) pulmonary venous pressure. Thorneloe and colleagues showed that GSK2193874 blocked TRPV4 activity across species, including in human cells, without adversely affecting heart rate or arterial pressure. This suggests that TRPV4 blockers might be used therapeutically to treat patients with heart failure–induced pulmonary edema. Pulmonary edema resulting from high pulmonary venous pressure (PVP) is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in heart failure (HF) patients, but current treatment options demonstrate substantial limitations. Recent evidence from rodent lungs suggests that PVP-induced edema is driven by activation of pulmonary capillary endothelial transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 (TRPV4) channels. To examine the therapeutic potential of this mechanism, we evaluated TRPV4 expression in human congestive HF lungs and developed small-molecule TRPV4 channel blockers for testing in animal models of HF. TRPV4 immunolabeling of human lung sections demonstrated expression of TRPV4 in the pulmonary vasculature that was enhanced in sections from HF patients compared to controls. GSK2193874 was identified as a selective, orally active TRPV4 blocker that inhibits Ca2+ influx through recombinant TRPV4 channels and native endothelial TRPV4 currents. In isolated rodent and canine lungs, TRPV4 blockade prevented the increased vascular permeability and resultant pulmonary edema associated with elevated PVP. Furthermore, in both acute and chronic HF models, GSK2193874 pretreatment inhibited the formation of pulmonary edema and enhanced arterial oxygenation. Finally, GSK2193874 treatment resolved pulmonary edema already established by myocardial infarction in mice. These findings identify a crucial role for TRPV4 in the formation of HF-induced pulmonary edema and suggest that TRPV4 blockade is a potential therapeutic strategy for HF patients.
Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2009
Cynthia M. Rominger; Weilin Tiger Bee; Robert A. Copeland; Elizabeth A. Davenport; Aidan G. Gilmartin; Richard R. Gontarek; Keith R. Hornberger; Lorena A. Kallal; Zhihong Lai; Kenneth W. M. Lawrie; Quinn Lu; Lynette J. McMillan; Maggie Truong; Peter J. Tummino; B. Turunen; M. Will; William J. Zuercher; David H. Rominger
The Smoothened receptor (Smo) mediates hedgehog (Hh) signaling critical for development, cell growth, and migration, as well as stem cell maintenance. Aberrant Hh signaling pathway activation has been implicated in a variety of cancers, and small-molecule antagonists of Smo have entered human clinical trials for the treatment of cancer. Here, we report the biochemical characterization of allosteric interactions of agonists and antagonists for Smo. Binding of two radioligands, [3H]3-chloro-N-[trans-4-(methylamino)cyclohexyl]-N-{[3-(4-pyridinyl)-phenyl]methyl}-1-benzothiophene-2-carboxamide (SAG-1.3) (agonist) and [3H]cyclopamine (antagonist), was characterized using human Smo expressed in human embryonic kidney 293F membranes. We observed full displacement of [3H]cyclopamine by all Smo agonist and antagonist ligands examined. N-[(1E)-(3,5-Dimethyl-1-phenyl-1H-pyrazol-4-yl)methylidene]-4-(phenylmethyl)-1-piperazinamine (SANT-1), an antagonist, did not fully inhibit the binding of [3H]SAG-1.3. In a functional cell-based β-lactamase reporter gene assay, SANT-1 and N-[3-(1H-benzimidazol-2-yl)-4-chlorophenyl]-3,4,5-tris(ethyloxy)-benzamide (SANT-2) fully inhibited 3-chloro-4,7-difluoro-N-[trans-4-(methylamino)cyclohexyl]-N-{[3-(4-pyridinyl)phenyl]methyl}-1-benzothiophene-2-carboxamide (SAG-1.5)-induced Hh pathway activation. Detailed “Schild-type” radioligand binding analysis with [3H]SAG-1.3 revealed that two structurally distinct Smoothened receptor antagonists, SANT-1 and SANT-2, bound in a manner consistent with that of allosteric modulation. Our mechanism of action characterization of radioligand binding to Smo combined with functional data provides a better understanding of small-molecule interactions with Smo and their influence on the Hh pathway.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013
David G. Washburn; Dennis A. Holt; Jason W. Dodson; Jeff J. McAtee; Lamont Terrell; Linda S. Barton; Sharada Manns; Anna Waszkiewicz; Christina Pritchard; Dan J. Gillie; Dwight M. Morrow; Elizabeth A. Davenport; Irina M. Lozinskaya; Jeffrey Guss; Jonathan B. Basilla; Lorena Kallal Negron; Michael Klein; Robert N. Willette; Rusty E. Fries; Timothy C. Jensen; Xiaoping Xu; Christine G. Schnackenberg; Joseph P. Marino
Lead optimization of piperidine amide HTS hits, based on an anilino-thiazole core, led to the identification of analogs which displayed low nanomolar blocking activity at the canonical transient receptor channels 3 and 6 (TRPC3 & 6) based on FLIPR (carbachol stimulated) and electrophysiology (OAG stimulated) assays. In addition, the anilino-thiazole amides displayed good selectivity over other TRP channels (TRPA1, TRPV1, and TRPV4), as well as against cardiac ion channels (CaV1.2, hERG, and NaV1.5). The high oxidation potential of the aliphatic piperidine and aniline groups, as well as the lability of the thiazole amide group contributed to the high clearance observed for this class of compounds. Conversion of an isoquinoline amide to a naphthyridine amide markedly reduced clearance for the bicyclic piperidines, and improved oral bioavailability for this compound series, however TRPC3 and TRPC6 blocking activity was reduced substantially. Although the most potent anilino-thiazole amides ultimately lacked oral exposure in rodents and were not suitable for chronic dosing, analogs such as 14-19, 22, and 23 are potentially valuable in vitro tool compounds for investigating the role of TRPC3 and TRPC6 in cardiovascular disease.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010
Reema K. Thalji; Nambi Aiyar; Elizabeth A. Davenport; Joseph A. Erhardt; Lorena A. Kallal; Dwight M. Morrow; Shobha Senadhi; Cynthia L. Burns-Kurtis; Joseph P. Marino
Benzofuran-substituted urea analogs have been identified as novel P2Y(1) receptor antagonists. Structure-activity relationship studies around the urea and the benzofuran moieties resulted in compounds having improved potency. Several analogs were shown to inhibit ADP-mediated platelet activation.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008
Ángel I. Morales-Ramos; John S. Mecom; Terry Kiesow; Todd L. Graybill; Gregory D. Brown; Nambi Aiyar; Elizabeth A. Davenport; Lorena A. Kallal; Beth A. Knapp-Reed; Peng Li; Allyn T. Londregan; Dwight M. Morrow; Shobha Senadhi; Reema K. Thalji; Steve Zhao; Cynthia L. Burns-Kurtis; Joseph P. Marino
High-throughput screening of the GSK compound collection against the P2Y(1) receptor identified a novel series of tetrahydro-4-quinolinamine antagonists. Optimal substitution around the piperidine group was pivotal for ensuring activity. An exemplar analog from this series was shown to inhibit platelet aggregation.
Methods of Molecular Biology | 2009
Elizabeth A. Davenport; Parvathi Nuthulaganti; Robert S. Ames
BacMam viruses are modified baculoviruses that contain mammalian expression cassettes for viral gene delivery and transient expression in mammalian cells. They are easily, inexpensively, and rapidly generated and provide a versatile solution for G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) cell-based assay development. Using BacMam technology, target gene expression levels are easily controlled and simultaneous delivery of multiple genes is possible, for example, coexpression of a receptor and a G protein or a reporter gene. BacMam viruses are compatible with the GPCR cell-based assay formats typically used in high-throughput screening and provide an unparalleled level of experimental flexibility that is simply not possible when using stable recombinant cell lines.
Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2010
Patricia M. Seitz; Rona Cooper; Gregory J. Gatto; Fernando Ramón; Thomas D. Sweitzer; Douglas G. Johns; Elizabeth A. Davenport; Robert S. Ames; Lorena A. Kallal
Superoxide affects many normal and pathogenic cellular processes, and the detection of superoxide produced by cells is therefore of interest for potential therapeutic applications. To develop a high-throughput cell-based assay for the detection of extracellular superoxide production that could be run in a 384-well or 1536-well format, 2 luminescent reagents, Lucigenin and Diogenes, and one fluorescent reagent, Oxyburst Green BSA, were tested. HL-60 cells, which had been differentiated to a neutrophil-like phenotype with DMSO and frozen in large batches, were used in assays. All 3 superoxide detection reagents performed well statistically in terms of IC50 reproducibility and met a desired Z′ value requirement of >0.4. When tested against a 1408-compound test set at 5 or 10 µM compound concentration, a higher hit rate was obtained with the 2 luminescent reagents compared with that obtained with the fluorescent Oxyburst Green BSA reagent. The Oxyburst Green BSA assay was ultimately chosen for compound profiling and high-throughput screening activities. This 1536 superoxide detection assay using cryopreserved differentiated HL-60 cells represents a shifting paradigm toward the utilization of more therapeutically relevant cells in early drug development activities.
Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2012
Weilin Tiger Bee; Wensheng Xie; Maggie Truong; M. Will; B. Turunen; William J. Zuercher; Lynette J. McMillan; Hu Li; Keith R. Hornberger; Elizabeth A. Davenport; Robert S. Ames; Lorena A. Kallal
In this study, the development of an image-based high-content screening (HCS) binding assay for the seven-transmembrane (7TM) receptor Smoothened (Smo) is described. Using BacMam-based gene delivery of Smo, BODIPY-cyclopamine as a fluorescent probe, and a confocal imaging system, a robust 384-well assay that could be used for high-throughput compound profiling activities was developed. The statistically robust HCS binding assay was developed through optimization of multiple parameters, including cell transduction conditions, Smo expression levels, the image analysis algorithm, and staining procedures. Evaluation of structurally diverse compounds, including functional Smo activators, inhibitors, and related analogs, demonstrated good compound potency correlations between high-content imaging binding, membrane fluorescence polarization binding, and gene reporter assays. Statistical analysis of data from a screening test set of compounds at a single 10-µM concentration suggested that the high-content imaging Smo binding assay is amenable for use in hit identification. The 384-well HCS assay was rapidly developed and met statistical assay performance targets, thus demonstrating its utility as a fluorescent whole-cell binding assay suitable for compound screening and profiling.
Cancer Research | 2013
Julia Billiard; Roland S. Annan; Jennifer L. Ariazi; Jacques Briand; Kristin K. Brown; Nino Campobasso; Subhas J. Chakravorty; Deping Chai; Mariela Colón; Elizabeth A. Davenport; Christopher S Dodson; Nathan Gaul; Seth Gilbert; Anthony J. Jurewicz; Hong Lu; Dean E. McNulty; Jeanelle McSurdy-Freed; Lisa A. Miller; Kelvin Nurse; Paru Nuthulaganti; Chad Quinn; Jessica Schneck; Gilbert F. Scott; Tony Shaw; Christian S. Sherk; Angela Smallwood; Sharon Sweitzer; James P. Villa; Gregory Waitt; Richard Wooster
Proceedings: AACR 104th Annual Meeting 2013; Apr 6-10, 2013; Washington, DC Many cancer cells generate energy by rapidly converting glucose to lactate in the cytosol, a process termed aerobic glycolysis. This metabolic phenotype is recognized as one of the hallmarks of cancer and is enabled by lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), which catalyzes pyruvate to lactate inter-conversion. We find that hepatocellular carcinoma cells express micromolar quantities of LDH5 and that LDH5 protein down-regulation takes about 5 days allowing time for the cells to adapt their metabolism. Since metabolic processes happen in minutes, addressing consequences of LDH5 inhibition by protein down-regulation is inadequate. We screened the GSK compound library and identified a series of quinoline acids as NADH-competitive LDH5 inhibitors. Subsequent lead optimization yielded molecules with LDH5 inhibitory potencies as low as 2-3 nM and selectivity over LDH1 on the order of 10-100-fold. These molecules were cell-permeable and did not have any appreciable activity against a panel of approximately fifty common enzymes, receptors and ion channels, making them the most potent and selective LDH5 inhibitors identified to date. Using these tool inhibitors, we find that rapid chemical inhibition of LDH5 in Snu398 hepatocellular carcinoma cells results in profound inhibition of lactate production and increase in pyruvate as measured by mass spectrometric analysis. Real-time analysis by NMR spectroscopy of live Snu398 cells fed with 13C-labeled glucose demonstrated that chemical LDH5 inhibition led to a rapid decrease in glucose uptake and concomitant slow-down of lactate production. Comprehensive analysis of more than 500 metabolites upon LDH5 inhibition in Snu398 cells revealed that the cytosolic glycolysis pathway was significantly impeded with some up-stream intermediates increasing as much as 40-fold. As the cell lost its ability for cytosolic glucose processing, the TCA cycle activity increased indicating that pyruvate entered the mitochondria and restored their activity resulting in increased oxygen consumption upon LDH5 inhibition. Several pathways that rely on glycolytic and TCA intermediates were also upregulated, including fatty acid metabolism and pentose phosphate pathway. LDH5 inhibition also strongly potentiated PKM2 activity. These profound metabolic alterations greatly impaired cell survival and induced cell death in Snu398 cells. In summary, we have shown that rapid chemical inhibition of LDH5 leads to profound metabolic alterations and impairs cell survival in hepatocellular carcinoma cells making it a compelling strategy for treating solid tumors relying on aerobic glycolysis. Citation Format: Julia Billiard, Roland Annan, Jennifer Ariazi, Jacques Briand, Kristin Brown, Nino Campobasso, Subhas Chakravorty, Deping Chai, Mariela Colon, Elizabeth Davenport, Christopher Dodson, Nathan Gaul, Seth Gilbert, Anthony Jurewicz, Hong Lu, Dean McNulty, Jeanelle McSurdy-Freed, Lisa Miller, Kelvin Nurse, Paru Rao Nuthulaganti, Chad Quinn, Jessica Schneck, Gilbert Scott, Tony Shaw, Christian Sherk, Angela Smallwood, Sharon Sweitzer, James Villa, Gregory Waitt, Richard Wooster, Kevin Duffy. Rapid LDH5 inhibition reverses malignant metabolic phenotype and impairs survival of hepatocellular carcinoma cells . [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 104th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2013 Apr 6-10; Washington, DC. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2013;73(8 Suppl):Abstract nr 5418. doi:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2013-5418
Primary and Stem Cells: Gene Transfer Technologies and Applications | 2011
Elizabeth A. Davenport; Robert S. Ames