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Dive into the research topics where George Maynard is active.

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Featured researches published by George Maynard.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005

Molecular Characterization of the Gerbil C5a Receptor and Identification of a Transmembrane Domain V Amino Acid That Is Crucial for Small Molecule Antagonist Interaction

Stephen M. Waters; Robbin Brodbeck; Jeremy Steflik; Jianying Yu; Carolyn Baltazar; Amy E. Peck; Daniel Severance; Lu Yan Zhang; Kevin P. M. Currie; Bertrand L. Chenard; Alan Hutchison; George Maynard; James E. Krause

Anaphylatoxin C5a is a potent inflammatory mediator associated with pathogenesis and progression of several inflammation-associated disorders. Small molecule C5a receptor (C5aR) antagonist development is hampered by species-specific receptor biology and the associated inability to use standard rat and mouse in vivo models. Gerbil is one rodent species reportedly responsive to small molecule C5aR antagonists with human C5aR affinity. We report the identification of the gerbil C5aR cDNA using a degenerate primer PCR cloning strategy. The nucleotide sequence revealed an open reading frame encoding a 347-amino acid protein. The cloned receptor (expressed in Sf9 cells) bound recombinant human C5a with nanomolar affinity. Alignment of the gerbil C5aR sequence with those from other species showed that a Trp residue in transmembrane domain V is the only transmembrane domain amino acid unique to small molecule C5aR antagonist-responsive species (i.e. gerbil, human, and non-human primate). Site-directed mutagenesis was used to generate human and mouse C5aRs with a residue exchange of this Trp residue. Mutation of Trp to Leu in human C5aR completely eliminated small molecule antagonist-receptor interaction. In contrast, mutation of Leu to Trp in mouse C5aR enabled small molecule antagonist-receptor interaction. This crucial Trp residue is located deeper within transmembrane domain V than residues reportedly involved in C5a- and cyclic peptide C5a antagonist-receptor interaction, suggesting a novel interaction site(s) for small molecule antagonists. These data provide insight into the basis for small molecule antagonist species selectivity and further define sites critical for C5aR activation and function.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2008

Identification and characterization of NDT 9513727 [N,N-bis(1,3-benzodioxol-5-ylmethyl)-1-butyl-2,4-diphenyl-1H-imidazole-5-methanamine], a novel, orally bioavailable C5a receptor inverse agonist.

Robbin Brodbeck; Daniel N. Cortright; Andrzej Kieltyka; Jianying Yu; Carolyn Baltazar; Marianne E. Buck; Robin Meade; George Maynard; Andrew Thurkauf; Du-Shieng Chien; Alan Hutchison; James E. Krause

The complement system represents an innate immune mechanism of host defense that has three effector arms, the C3a receptor, the C5a receptor (C5aR), and the membrane attack complex. Because of its inflammatory and immune-enhancing properties, the biological activity of C5a and its classical receptor have been widely studied. Because specific antagonism of the C5aR could have therapeutic benefit without affecting the protective immune response, the C5aR continues to be a promising target for pharmaceutical research. The lack of specific, potent and orally bioavailable small-molecule antagonists has limited the clinical investigation of the C5aR. We report the discovery of NDT 9513727 [N,N-bis(1,3-benzodioxol-5-ylmethyl)-1-butyl-2,4-diphenyl-1H-imidazole-5-methanamine], a small-molecule, orally bioavailable, selective, and potent inverse agonist of the human C5aR. NDT 9513727 was discovered based on the integrated use of in vitro affinity and functional assays in conjunction with medicinal chemistry. NDT 9513727 inhibited C5a-stimulated responses, including guanosine 5′-3-O-(thio)triphosphate binding, Ca2+ mobilization, oxidative burst, degranulation, cell surface CD11b expression and chemotaxis in various cell types with IC50s from 1.1 to 9.2 nM, respectively. In C5a competition radioligand binding experiments, NDT 9513727 exhibited an IC50 of 11.6 nM. NDT 9513727 effectively inhibited C5a-induced neutropenia in gerbil and cynomolgus macaque in vivo. The findings suggest that NDT 9513727 may be a promising new entity for the treatment of human inflammatory diseases.


Archive | 2001

Heterocyclic compounds as ligands of the GABAA receptor

Daniel Yohannes; George Maynard; Jun Yuan; Linghong Xie; Kyungae Lee; Manuka Ghosh; George P. Luke; Xiaojun Liu; Arthur Nagal; Lawrence A. Vincent; Kevin S. Currie; Zhe-Quing Wang


Archive | 2003

1H-PYRROLO(3,2-B)PYRIDINE-3-CARBOXYLIC ACID AMIDES

George Maynard; Manuka Ghosh; Christopher J. O'Donnell


Archive | 2003

4-imidazol-1-ylmethyl-pyrimidine derivatives_as ligands for gabaa receptors

Linghong Xie; Bingsong Han; Yuelian Xu; George Maynard


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Molecular characterization of the gerbil C5a receptor and identification of a transmembrane domain V amino acid that is crucial for small molecule antagonist interaction. VOLUME 280 (2005) PAGES 40617-40623

Stephen M. Waters; Robbin Brodbeck; Jeremy Steflik; Jianying Yu; Carolyn Baltazar; Amy E. Peck; Daniel Severance; Lu Yan Zhang; Kevin P. M. Currie; Bertrand L. Chenard; Alan Hutchison; George Maynard; James E. Krause


Archive | 2001

Benzimidazole and pyridylimidazole derivatives as ligands for gaba receptors

Guiying Li; John M. Peterson; Pamela Albaugh; Kevin S. Currie; Guolin Cai; Linda M. Gustavson; Kyungae Lee; Alan Hutchison; Vinod Singh; George Maynard; Jun Yuan; Hong Xie Ling; Manuka Ghosh; Nian Liu; George P. Luke; Scott Mitchell; Martin Patrick Allen; Spiros Liras


Archive | 2002

Cycloalkylpyrrole-3-carboxylic acid derivatives and heterocycloalkylpyrrole-3-carboxylic acid derivatives as gaba-a receptor ligands

Daniel Yohannes; Xiaojun Liu; George Maynard


Archive | 2003

Imidazol-1-ylmethyl pyridazine derivatives

Linghong Xie; Bingsong Han; Yuelian Xu; George Maynard


Organic Process Research & Development | 2007

Development of a Scaleable Synthesis of NDT 9533750, a Key Intermediate to a Series of Novel Subtype Preferring GABAA Partial Agonists

Yuelian Xu; Bingsong Han; Zhe-Qing Wang; Kenneth R. Shaw; Bertrand L. Chenard; George Maynard; Linghong Xie

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James E. Krause

Washington University in St. Louis

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