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Dive into the research topics where Haisong Ju is active.

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Featured researches published by Haisong Ju.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Englerin A Agonizes the TRPC4/C5 Cation Channels to Inhibit Tumor Cell Line Proliferation.

Cheryl Carson; Pichai Raman; Jennifer Tullai; Lei Xu; Martin Henault; Emily Thomas; Sarita Yeola; Jianmin Lao; Mark McPate; J. Martin Verkuyl; George Marsh; Jason Sarber; Adam Amaral; Scott Bailey; Danuta Lubicka; Helen Pham; Nicolette Miranda; Jian Ding; Hai-Ming Tang; Haisong Ju; Pamela Tranter; Nan Ji; Philipp Krastel; Rishi K. Jain; Andrew M. Schumacher; Joseph Loureiro; Elizabeth George; Giuliano Berellini; Nathan T. Ross; Simon Bushell

Englerin A is a structurally unique natural product reported to selectively inhibit growth of renal cell carcinoma cell lines. A large scale phenotypic cell profiling experiment (CLiP) of englerin A on ¬over 500 well characterized cancer cell lines showed that englerin A inhibits growth of a subset of tumor cell lines from many lineages, not just renal cell carcinomas. Expression of the TRPC4 cation channel was the cell line feature that best correlated with sensitivity to englerin A, suggesting the hypothesis that TRPC4 is the efficacy target for englerin A. Genetic experiments demonstrate that TRPC4 expression is both necessary and sufficient for englerin A induced growth inhibition. Englerin A induces calcium influx and membrane depolarization in cells expressing high levels of TRPC4 or its close ortholog TRPC5. Electrophysiology experiments confirmed that englerin A is a TRPC4 agonist. Both the englerin A induced current and the englerin A induced growth inhibition can be blocked by the TRPC4/C5 inhibitor ML204. These experiments confirm that activation of TRPC4/C5 channels inhibits tumor cell line proliferation and confirms the TRPC4 target hypothesis generated by the cell line profiling. In selectivity assays englerin A weakly inhibits TRPA1, TRPV3/V4, and TRPM8 which suggests that englerin A may bind a common feature of TRP ion channels. In vivo experiments show that englerin A is lethal in rodents near doses needed to activate the TRPC4 channel. This toxicity suggests that englerin A itself is probably unsuitable for further drug development. However, since englerin A can be synthesized in the laboratory, it may be a useful chemical starting point to identify novel modulators of other TRP family channels.


Frontiers in Pharmacology | 2012

Cardiac Safety Implications of hNav1.5 Blockade and a Framework for Pre-Clinical Evaluation

Gül Erdemli; Albert M. Kim; Haisong Ju; Clayton Springer; Robert C. Penland; Peter Hoffmann

The human cardiac sodium channel (hNav1.5, encoded by the SCN5A gene) is critical for action potential generation and propagation in the heart. Drug-induced sodium channel inhibition decreases the rate of cardiomyocyte depolarization and consequently conduction velocity and can have serious implications for cardiac safety. Genetic mutations in hNav1.5 have also been linked to a number of cardiac diseases. Therefore, off-target hNav1.5 inhibition may be considered a risk marker for a drug candidate. Given the potential safety implications for patients and the costs of late stage drug development, detection, and mitigation of hNav1.5 liabilities early in drug discovery and development becomes important. In this review, we describe a pre-clinical strategy to identify hNav1.5 liabilities that incorporates in vitro, in vivo, and in silico techniques and the application of this information in the integrated risk assessment at different stages of drug discovery and development.


Toxicological Sciences | 2016

Histone Deacetylase Inhibitors Prolong Cardiac Repolarization through Transcriptional Mechanisms

Stan Spence; Mark Deurinck; Haisong Ju; Martin Traebert; Leeanne Mclean; Jennifer Marlowe; Corinne Emotte; Elaine Tritto; Min Tseng; Michael Shultz; Gregory Friedrichs

Histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors are an emerging class of anticancer agents that modify gene expression by altering the acetylation status of lysine residues of histone proteins, thereby inducing transcription, cell cycle arrest, differentiation, and cell death or apoptosis of cancer cells. In the clinical setting, treatment with HDAC inhibitors has been associated with delayed cardiac repolarization and in rare instances a lethal ventricular tachyarrhythmia known as torsades de pointes. The mechanism(s) of HDAC inhibitor-induced effects on cardiac repolarization is unknown. We demonstrate that administration of structurally diverse HDAC inhibitors to dogs causes delayed but persistent increases in the heart rate corrected QT interval (QTc), an in vivo measure of cardiac repolarization, at timepoints far removed from the Tmax for parent drug and metabolites. Transcriptional profiling of ventricular myocardium from dogs treated with various HDAC inhibitors demonstrated effects on genes involved in protein trafficking, scaffolding and insertion of various ion channels into the cell membrane as well as genes for specific ion channel subunits involved in cardiac repolarization. Extensive in vitro ion channel profiling of various structural classes of HDAC inhibitors (and their major metabolites) by binding and acute patch clamp assays failed to show any consistent correlations with direct ion channel blockade. Drug-induced rescue of an intracellular trafficking-deficient mutant potassium ion channel, hERG (G601S), and decreased maturation (glycosylation) of wild-type hERG expressed by CHO cells in vitro correlated with prolongation of QTc intervals observed in vivo The results suggest that HDAC inhibitor-induced prolongation of cardiac repolarization may be mediated in part by transcriptional changes of genes required for ion channel trafficking and localization to the sarcolemma. These data have broad implications for the development of these drug classes and suggest that the optimal time to assess potentially transcriptionally mediated physiologic effects will be delayed relative to an epigenetic drugs Tmax/Cmax.


Heart Rhythm | 2012

Differentiating electrophysiological effects and cardiac safety of drugs based on the electrocardiogram: A blinded validation

Tengxian Liu; Martin Traebert; Haisong Ju; Willi Suter; Donglin Guo; Peter Hoffmann; Peter R. Kowey; Gan-Xin Yan


Journal of Pharmacological and Toxicological Methods | 2015

Compound X increases heart weight: Ultrasound and telemetry evaluation in the rat

Haisong Ju; Kenneth Hershman; Shufang Zhao; Carrie LaDuke; Lee Williams; Cynthia Carey; Gregory S. Friedrichs


Journal of Pharmacological and Toxicological Methods | 2016

Decreased ejection fraction induced by a MEK inhibitor in spontaneously hypertensive and Wistar rats: Reversibility following co-administration of lisinopril

Haisong Ju; Shufang Zhao; Lori Martin; Eileen Wolak; Suzette Hahn; Neeta Shenoy; Sudeep Chandra; Greg Friedrichs; Stan Spence


Journal of Pharmacological and Toxicological Methods | 2016

Off-target cardiac Na-channel inhibition in preclinical and clinical development—A case study

Mark Deurinck; Ingrid Pruimboom; Haisong Ju; Berengere Dumotier; Martin Traebert


Journal of Pharmacological and Toxicological Methods | 2016

Investigation of hemodynamic changes induced by CompoundX in Wistar Han rats

Hai-Ming Tang; Meghan Flaherty; Daher Ibrahim Aibo; Dana Walker; Neeta Shenoy; Igor Vostiar; Daniel Stiehl; Haisong Ju; Gregory S. Friedrichs


Antitargets and Drug Safety | 2015

Circulating Biomarkers for Drug‐Induced Cardiotoxicity: Reverse Translation from Patients to Nonclinical Species

Gül Erdemli; Haisong Ju; Sarita Pereira


Journal of Pharmacological and Toxicological Methods | 2014

In vitro blinded validation study in rabbit heart using isolated Purkinje fibers and wedge preparations

Berengere Dumotier; Martin Traebert; Haisong Ju; Friedrichs Greg

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Gan-Xin Yan

Lankenau Institute for Medical Research

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