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Dive into the research topics where Gordon Crosby is active.

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Featured researches published by Gordon Crosby.


Life Sciences | 1984

Characterization of the binding of 3H-SCH 23390, a selective D-1 receptor antagonist ligand, in rat striatum

William Billard; Vilma Ruperto; Gordon Crosby; Louis C. Iorio; Allen Barnett

A novel benzazepine, SCH 23390, has recently been described as a very potent and selective dopamine D-1 receptor antagonist based on its potent inhibition of dopamine sensitive adenylate cyclase and its selective displacement of 3H-piflutixol from rat striatal receptor sites. In the present study, the in vitro binding of 3H-SCH 23390 to specific striatal receptor sites has been characterized. Binding was saturable and stereospecific, and the results of both saturation and competition studies are consistent with the binding of 3H-SCH 23390 to a single striatal site. A KD of 0.53 nM was obtained through Scatchard analysis. Relative potencies of a variety of neuroleptics in competing with 3H-SCH 23390 and also 3H-spiperone support an interpretation that the single site to which 3H-SCH 23390 binds is the D-1 dopamine receptor. Also, the binding capacity of 3H-SCH 23390 (69 pmoles/gm wet weight) is in agreement with published values for the binding capacities of 3H-piflutixol and 3H-flupentixol. These data, coupled with the low level of non-specific binding encountered with this radioligand (4-8% of total binding at normally employed ligand concentration of 0.3 nM), its high specific activity and its negligible binding to plastic and glass surfaces make it ideally suited for studying interactions with this receptor.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2000

Design and synthesis of piperidinyl piperidine analogues as potent and selective M2 muscarinic receptor antagonists.

Yuguang Wang; Samuel Chackalamannil; Zhiyong Hu; John W. Clader; William J. Greenlee; William Billard; Herbert Binch; Gordon Crosby; Vilma Ruperto; Ruth A. Duffy; Robert D. McQuade; Jean E. Lachowicz

Identification of a number of highly potent M2 receptor antagonists with >100-fold selectivity against the M1 and M3 receptor subtypes is described. In the rat microdialysis assay, this series of compounds showed pronounced enhancement of brain acetylcholine release after oral administration.


European Journal of Pharmacology | 2001

SCH 57790, a selective muscarinic M2 receptor antagonist, releases acetylcholine and produces cognitive enhancement in laboratory animals

Galen J. Carey; William Billard; Herbert Binch; Mary Cohen-Williams; Gordon Crosby; Michael Grzelak; Henry Guzik; Joseph A. Kozlowski; Derek B. Lowe; Annamarie Pond; Richard P. Tedesco; Robert W. Watkins; Vicki L. Coffin

The present studies were designed to assess whether the novel muscarinic M(2) receptor antagonist 4-cyclohexyl-alpha-[4[[4-methoxyphenyl]sulphinyl]-phenyl]-1-piperazineacetonitrile (SCH 57790) could increase acetylcholine release in the central nervous system (CNS) and enhance cognitive performance in rodents and nonhuman primates. In vivo microdialysis studies show that SCH 57790 (0.1-10 mg/kg, p.o.) produced dose-related increases in acetylcholine release from rat hippocampus, cortex, and striatum. SCH 57790 (0.003-1.0 mg/kg) increased retention times in young rat passive avoidance responding when given either before or after training. Also, SCH 57790 reversed scopolamine-induced deficits in mice in a passive avoidance task. In a working memory operant task in squirrel monkeys, administration of SCH 57790 (0.01-0.03 mg/kg) improved performance under a schedule of fixed-ratio discrimination with titrating delay. The effects observed with SCH 57790 in behavioral studies were qualitatively similar to the effects produced by the clinically used cholinesterase inhibitor donepezil, suggesting that blockade of muscarinic M(2) receptors is a viable approach to enhancing cognitive performance.


Life Sciences | 2001

Facilitation of acetylcholine release and improvement in cognition by a selective M2 muscarinic antagonist, SCH 72788.

Jean E. Lachowicz; Ruth A. Duffy; Vilma Ruperto; Joseph A. Kozlowski; Guowei Zhou; John W. Clader; William Billard; Herbert Binch; Gordon Crosby; Mary Cohen-Williams; Catherine D. Strader; Victoria Coffin

Current treatment of Alzheimers Disease (AD) requires acetylcholinesterase inhibition to increase acetylcholine (ACh) concentrations in the synaptic cleft. Another mechanism by which ACh levels can be increased is blockade of presynaptic M2 muscarinic autoreceptors that regulate ACh release. An antagonist designed for this purpose must be highly selective for M2 receptors to avoid blocking postsynaptic M1 receptors, which mediate the cognitive effects of ACh. Structure-activity studies of substituted methylpiperadines led to the synthesis of 4-[4-[1(S)-[4-[(1,3-benzodioxol-5-yl)sulfonyl]phenyl]ethyl]-3(R)-methyl-1-piperazinyl]-4-methyl-1-(propylsulfonyl)piperidine. This compound, SCH 72788, binds to cloned human M2 receptors expressed in CHO cells with an affinity of 0.5 nM, and its affinity at M1 receptors is 84-fold lower. SCH 72788 is a functional M2 antagonist that competitively inhibits the ability of the agonist oxotremorine-M to inhibit adenylyl cyclase activity. In an in vivo microdialysis paradigm, SCH 72788 increases ACh release from the striatum of conscious rats. The compound is also active in a rodent model of cognition, the young rat passive avoidance response paradigm. The effects of SCH 72788 suggest that M2 receptor antagonists may be useful for treating the cognitive decline observed in AD and other dementias.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 1991

[3H]SCH 39166, A New D1‐Selective Radioligand: In Vitro and In Vivo Binding Analyses

Robert D. McQuade; Ruth A. Duffy; Cheryl C. Anderson; Gordon Crosby; Vicki L. Coffin; Richard E. Chipkin; Allen Barnett

SCH 39166 {(‐)‐trans‐6,7,7a,8,9,13b‐hexahydro‐3‐chloro‐2‐hydroxy‐N‐ methyl‐5H ‐ benzo ‐[d]naphtho[2,1b]azepine} has recently been described as a selective D1 antagonist and has entered clinical trials for the treatment of schizophrenia. The tritiated analogue of this compound, [3H]SCH 39166, has now been synthesized and characterized for its in vitro and in vivo binding profiles. [3H]SCH 39166 binds to D1 receptors in a saturable. high‐affinity fashion, with a KDof 0.79 nM. In competition studies, D1‐selective antagonists like SCH 23390 displaced the binding of [3H]SCH 39166 with nanomolar affinities, whereas antagonists of other receptors exhibited poor affinity. In vivo, [3H]SCH 39166 bound to receptors in rat striatum in a fashion suggestive of D1 selectivity. Further. when the time course for the binding of [3H]SCH 39166 was compared with the behavioral time course of the unlabeled compound, the two durations of action were virtually indistinguishable. Similar studies were performed for SCH 23390 and its tritiated analogue, but the in vivo binding of this radioligand exhibited a duration of action far greater than the behavioral activity of the unlabeled drug. In concert, these data demonstrate that [3H]SCH 39166 selectively labels D1 receptors in vitro and in vivo, and that this drug is superior for in vivo imaging of the D1 receptor.


Life Sciences | 1988

Selective affinity of the benzodiazepines quazepam and 2-oxo-quazepam for BZ1 binding site and demonstration of 3H-2-oxo-quazepam as a BZ1 selective radioligand

William Billard; Gordon Crosby; Louis C. Iorio; Richard E. Chipkin; Allen Barnett

Quazepam and 2-oxo-quazepam are novel benzodiazepines containing a trifluoroethyl substituent on the ring nitrogen at position #1. Detailed competition binding experiments (25 to 30 concs.) at 4 degrees C were undertaken with these compounds versus 3H-flunitrazepam using synaptic membranes from rat cortex or cerebellum. Unlike other benzodiazepines, both quazepam and 2-oxo-quazepam distinguished two populations of 3H-flunitrazepam binding sites in rat cortex which were present in roughly equal proportions and for which the compounds displayed a greater than 20-fold difference in affinity. In cerebellum, no such discrimination of sites was noted for 2-oxo-quazepam, but quazepam did distinguish a small, low affinity (15% of total) population of sites. 3H-2-oxo-quazepam was prepared and used in competition studies to substantiate the conclusion that these compounds discriminate two populations of benzodiazepine sites in rat cortex. This new radioligand was shown to specifically label BZ binding sites with high affinity in a saturable manner. The competition experiments were then conducted using 3H-2-oxo-quazepam at a radioligand concentration sufficiently low (0.5 nM) to ensure that only the higher affinity binding sites which 2-oxo-quazepam discriminates would be occupied. Competition experiments in both cortex and cerebellum under these conditions indicated single site binding for unlabelled quazepam and 2-oxo-quazepam in every instance. This suggests that 3H-2-oxo-quazepam should be a useful new tool for selectively labeling and studying the BZ1 population of benzodiazepine binding sites.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2002

Substituted 2-(R)-Methyl piperazines as muscarinic M2 selective ligands

Joseph A. Kozlowski; Guowei Zhou; Jayaram R. Tagat; Sue-Ing Lin; Stuart W. McCombie; Vilma Ruperto; Ruth A. Duffy; Robert A McQuade; Gordon Crosby; Lisa A. Taylor; William Billard; Herbert Binch; Jean E. Lachowicz

A novel series of 2-(R)-methyl-substituted piperazines (e.g., 2) is described. They are potent M(2) selective ligands that have >100-fold selectivity versus the M(1) receptor. In the rat microdialysis assay, compound 14 showed significantly enchanced levels of acetylcholine after oral administration.


European Journal of Pharmacology | 1992

Effect of SCH 39166, a novel dopamine D1 receptor antagonist, on [3H]acetylcholine release in rat striatal slices

C.E. Tedford; Gordon Crosby; Louis C. Iorio; Richard E. Chipkin

SCH 39166 is a novel and selective dopamine D1 receptor antagonist. It has been reported to have potential antipsychotic properties and reduced extrapyramidal side-effect liabilities (EPS). The current studies investigated the pharmacological effects of SCH 39166 on striatal cholinergic function in order to further characterize its dopamine D1 receptor selectivity and to address its EPS liability. Electrically stimulated [3H]acetylcholine (ACh) release from rat striatal slices was measured and comparisons were made between SCH 39166, SCH 23390, (-)-sulpiride, haloperidol or apomorphine on their effect on [3H]ACh release. Results indicated that apomorphine inhibited [3H]ACh release from striatal slices (IC50 = 0.31 microM). (-)-Sulpiride and haloperidol completely reversed the inhibition of [3H]ACh release seen with apomorphine. In contrast, SCH 39166, as well as, SCH 23390 did not reverse the inhibition of [3H]ACh release induced by apomorphine. These findings indicate that dopamine D2 receptors are primarily involved in modulation of [3H]ACh release. Furthermore, selective dopamine D1 receptor antagonists, such as SCH 39166, are ineffective in modulating striatal [3H]ACh release, suggesting that striatal cholinergic hyperactivity and possibly EPS will not be a consequence of dopamine D1 receptor blockade.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2000

Diphenyl sulfoxides as selective antagonists of the muscarinic M2 receptor

Joseph A. Kozlowski; Derek B. Lowe; Henry Guzik; Guowei Zhou; Vilma Ruperto; Ruth A. Duffy; Robert D. McQuade; Gordon Crosby; Lisa A. Taylor; William Billard; Herbert Binch; Jean E. Lachowicz

Structure activity studies on [4-(phenylsulfonyl)phenyl]methylpiperazine led to the discovery of 4-cyclohexyl-alpha-[4-[[4-methoxyphenyl(S)-sufinyl]phenyl]-1-pi perazineacetonitrile, 1, an M2 selective muscarinic antagonist. Affinity at the cloned human M2 receptor was 2.7 nM; the M1/M2 selectivity is 40-fold.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2000

Benzylidene ketal derivatives as M2 muscarinic receptor antagonists

Craig D. Boyle; Samuel Chackalamannil; Lian-Yong Chen; Sundeep Dugar; Pradeep Pushpavanam; William Billard; Herbert Binch; Gordon Crosby; Mary Cohen-Williams; Vicki L. Coffin; Ruth A. Duffy; Vilma Ruperto; Jean E. Lachowicz

Benzylidene ketal derivatives were investigated as selective M2 receptor antagonists for the treatment of Alzheimers disease. Compound 10 was discovered to have subnanomolar M2 receptor affinity and 100-fold selectivity against other muscarinic receptors. Also, 10 demonstrated in vivo efficacy in rodent models of muscarinic activity and cognition.

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