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Featured researches published by Gregory E. Agoston.


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2008

Significant antitumor activity in vivo following treatment with the microtubule agent ENMD-1198

Theresa M. LaVallee; Patricia Burke; Glenn M. Swartz; Ernest Hamel; Gregory E. Agoston; Jamshed H. Shah; Lita Suwandi; Art Hanson; William E. Fogler; Carolyn Sidor; Anthony M. Treston

Clinical studies using the microtubule-targeting agent 2-methoxyestradiol (2ME2; Panzem) in cancer patients show that treatment is associated with clinical benefit, including prolonged stable disease, complete and partial responses, and an excellent safety profile. Studies have shown that 2ME2 is metabolized by conjugation at positions 3 and 17 and oxidation at position 17. To define structure-activity relationships for these positions of 2ME2 and to generate metabolically stable analogues with improved anti-tubulin properties, a series of analogues was generated and three lead analogues were selected, ENMD-1198, ENMD-1200, and ENMD-1237. These molecules showed improved metabolic stability with >65% remaining after 2-h incubation with hepatocytes. Pharmacokinetic studies showed that oral administration of the compounds resulted in increased plasma levels compared with 2ME2. All three analogues bind the colchicine binding site of tubulin, induce G2-M cell cycle arrest and apoptosis, and reduce hypoxia-inducible factor-1α levels. ENMD-1198 and ENMD-1200 showed improved in vitro antiproliferative activities. Significant reductions in tumor volumes compared with vehicle-treated mice were observed in an orthotopic breast carcinoma (MDA-MB-231) xenograft model following daily oral treatment with all compounds (ANOVA, P < 0.05). Significantly improved median survival time was observed with ENMD-1198 and ENMD-1237 (200 mg/kg/d) in a Lewis lung carcinoma metastatic model (P < 0.05). In both tumor models, the high-dose group of ENMD-1198 showed antitumor activity equivalent to that of cyclophosphamide. ENMD-1198 was selected as the lead molecule in this analogue series and is currently in a phase I clinical trial in patients with refractory solid tumors. [Mol Cancer Ther 2008;7(6):1472–82]


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2011

N-Substituted Benztropine Analogs: Selective Dopamine Transporter Ligands with a Fast Onset of Action and Minimal Cocaine-Like Behavioral Effects

Su-Min Li; Theresa Kopajtic; Matthew J. O'Callaghan; Gregory E. Agoston; Jianjing Cao; Amy Hauck Newman; Jonathan Katz

Previous studies suggested that differences between the behavioral effects of cocaine and analogs of benztropine were related to the relatively slow onset of action of the latter compounds. Several N-substituted benztropine analogs with a relatively fast onset of effects were studied to assess whether a fast onset of effects would render the effects more similar to those of cocaine. Only one of the compounds increased locomotor activity, and the increases were modest compared with those of 10 to 20 mg/kg cocaine. In rats trained to discriminate 10 mg/kg cocaine from saline none of the compounds produced more than 40% cocaine-like responds up to 2 h after injection. None of the compounds produced place-conditioning when examined up to 90 min after injection, indicating minimal abuse liability. The compounds had 5.6 to 30 nM affinities at the dopamine transporter (DAT), with uniformly lower affinities at norepinephrine and serotonin transporters (from 490-4600 and 1420–7350 nM, respectively). Affinities at muscarinic M1 receptors were from 100- to 300-fold lower than DAT affinities, suggesting minimal contribution of those sites to the behavioral effects of the compounds. Affinities at histaminic H1 sites were from 11- to 43-fold lower than those for the DAT. The compounds also had affinity for sigma, 5-hydroxytryptamine1 (5-HT1), and 5-HT2 receptors that may have contributed to their behavioral effects. Together, the results indicate that a slow onset of action is not a necessary condition for reduced cocaine-like effects of atypical DAT ligands and suggest several mechanisms that may contribute to the reduced cocaine-like efficacy of these compounds.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Synthesis and antitumor activities of 3-modified 2-methoxyestradiol analogs

Lita Suwandi; Gregory E. Agoston; Jamshed H. Shah; Arthur D. Hanson; Xiaoguo H. Zhan; Theresa M. LaVallee; Anthony M. Treston

The syntheses of 2-methoxyestradiol analogs with modifications at the 3-position are described. The analogs were assessed for their antiproliferative, antiangiogenic, and estrogenic activities. Several lead substituents were identified with similar or improved antitumor activities and reduced metabolic liability compared to 2-methoxyestradiol.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 1997

A novel photoaffinity label for the dopamine transporter based on N-substituted 3α-[bis(4'-fluorophenyl)methoxy]tropane

Gregory E. Agoston; Roxanne Vaughan; John R. Lever; Sari Izenwasser; Phyllis D. Terry; Amy Hauck Newman

Abstract A novel photoaffinity label for the dopamine transporter (DAT) based on N-substituted 3α-[bis(4′-fluorophenyl)methoxy]tropane has been synthesized in five steps and has been characterized. Preliminary binding studies indicated this ligand bound irreversibly to the dopamine transporter. Preparation of the 125I analog and its photoactivation in the presence of membrane bound DAT demonstrated it covalently binds to the DAT.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2009

Synthesis of 2- and 17-substituted estrone analogs and their antiproliferative structure–activity relationships compared to 2-methoxyestradiol

Jamshed H. Shah; Gregory E. Agoston; Lita Suwandi; Kimberly A. Hunsucker; Victor Pribluda; Xiaoguo H. Zhan; Glenn M. Swartz; Theresa M. LaVallee; Anthony M. Treston

A novel series of 17-modified and 2,17-modified analogs of 2-methoxyestradiol (2ME2) were synthesized and characterized. These analogs were designed to retain or potentiate the biological activities of 2ME2 and have diminished metabolic liability. The analogs were evaluated for antiproliferative activity against MDA-MB-231 breast tumor cells, antiangiogenic activity in HUVEC, and estrogenic activity on MCF-7 cell proliferation. Several analogs were evaluated for metabolic stability in human liver microsomes and in vivo in a rat cassette dosing model. This study lead to several 17-modified analogs of 2ME2 that have similar or improved antiproliferative and antiangiogenic activity, lack estrogenic properties and have improved metabolic stability compared to 2ME2.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2008

Stereoselective synthesis of 3,3-diarylacrylonitriles as tubulin polymerization inhibitors.

Zhenglai Fang; Yunlong Song; Taradas Sarkar; Ernest Hamel; William E. Fogler; Gregory E. Agoston; Phillip E. Fanwick; Mark Cushman

A series of 3,3-diarylacrylonitriles were synthesized stereoselectively as tubulin polymerization inhibitors for potential use in cancer chemotherapy. This synthetic route features stannylcupration and palladium-catalyzed Stille cross-coupling chemistry, allowing both E and Z isomers of 3,3-diarylacrylonitriles to be prepared in a very short sequence of reactions.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Synthesis, antiproliferative, and pharmacokinetic properties of 3- and 17-double-modified analogs of 2-methoxyestradiol.

Gregory E. Agoston; Jamshed H. Shah; Lita Suwandi; Arthur D. Hanson; Xiaoguo Zhan; Theresa M. LaVallee; Victor Pribluda; Anthony M. Treston

The syntheses of 21 analogs of 2-methoxyestradiol are presented, including ENMD-1198 which was selected for advancement into Phase 1 clinical trials in oncology. These analogs were evaluated for antiproliferative activity using breast tumor MDA-MB-231 cells, for antiangiogenic activity in HUVEC proliferation assays, and for estrogenic activity in MCF-7 cell proliferation. The most active analogs were evaluated for iv and oral pharmacokinetic properties via cassette dosing in rat and in mice pharmacokinetic models.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 1997

Novel N-substituted 3α-[bis(4'-fluorophenyl)methoxy]tropane analogues : Selective ligands for the dopamine transporter

Gregory E. Agoston; Jae H. Wu; Sari Izenwasser; Clifford George; Jonathan L. Katz; Richard H. Kline; Amy Hauck Newman


Archive | 2005

Compositions and methods comprising proteinase activated receptor antagonists

Gregory E. Agoston; Todd Hembrough; Theresa M. Lavallee; Jamshed H. Shah; Lita Suwandi; Anthony M. Treston


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2004

Effects of N-substituted analogs of benztropine: Diminished cocaine-like effects in dopamine transporter ligands

Jonathan L. Katz; Theresa Kopajtic; Gregory E. Agoston; Amy Hauck Newman

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Anthony M. Treston

National Institutes of Health

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Jamshed H. Shah

National Institutes of Health

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Amy Hauck Newman

National Institute on Drug Abuse

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Mark R. Bray

University Health Network

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Jonathan L. Katz

National Institutes of Health

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