Henry A. Charlier
Boise State University
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Featured researches published by Henry A. Charlier.
Cardiovascular Toxicology | 2005
Richard D. Olson; Hervé Gambliel; Robert E. Vestal; Susan E. Shadle; Henry A. Charlier; Barry J. Cusack
Utilizing a model of chronic doxorubicin cardiomyopathy, this study examines the relationship between changes in expression and function of calcium handling proteins and contractile dysfunction. Apossible mechanism to account for this relationship is suggested. New Zealand white rabbits were injected with either doxorubicin (1 mg/kg, twice weekly for 8 wk) or 0.9% NaCl. Gene transcript, protein levels, and the function of several proteins from the left ventricle were assessed. Protein levels of sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca2+ transporting ATPase (SERCA2a and b), Ca2+ release channel (RYR2), calsequestrin, Na/Ca exchanger, mRNA levels of RYR2, and [3H]-ryanodine binding (Bmax) to RYR2 were significantly decreased in doxorubicin-treated rabbits; protein levels of phospholamban, dihydropyridine receptor α2 subunit, and SR Ca2+ loading rates were not decreased. However, only protein levels of SERCA2 and RYR2, mRNA levels of RYR2, and Bmax of RYR2 significantly regressed with left-ventricular fractional shortening. Analysis of contractile function of atrial preparations isolated from doxorubicin-treated rabbits revealed that doxorubicin diminished contractility (dF/dt) of rest-potentiated contractions consistent with SR dysfunction. Serum concentrations of free triiodothyronine (T3) decreased in doxorubicin-treated rabbits. Our results suggest that chronic doxorubicin administration in the rabbit causes a SR-dependent contractile dysfunction that may result, in part from decreased T3.
Cardiovascular Toxicology | 2005
Andrew M. Slupe; Berea Williams; Corianton Larson; Laura M. Lee; Toby Primbs; Amanda J. Bruesch; Chad Bjorklund; Don L. Warner; Jeffrey M. Peloquin; Susan E. Shadle; Hervé Gambliel; Barry J. Cusack; Richard D. Olson; Henry A. Charlier
Carbonyl reductase (CR) catalyzes the nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH)-dependent reduction of several carbonyls. Anthracyclines used to treat cancer are reduced by CR at the C13 carbonyl and the resulting metabolites are implicated in the cardiotoxicity associated with anthracycline therapy. CR also is believed to have a role in detoxifying quinones, raising the question whether CR catalyzes reduction of anthracycline quinones. Steadystate kinetic studies were done with several anthraquinone-containing compounds, including 13-deoxydoxorubicin and daunorubicinol, which lack the C13 carbonyl, thus unmasking the anthraquinone for study. kcat and kcat/Km values for 13-deoxydoxorubicin and daunorubicinol were nearly identical, indicating that that the efficiency of quinone reduction was unaffected by the differences at the C13 position. kcat and kcat/Km values were much smaller for the analogs than for the parent compounds, suggesting that the C13 carbonyl is preferred as a substrate over the quinone. CR also reduced structurally related quinone molecules with less favorable catalytic efficiency. Modeling studies with doxorubicin and carbonyl reductase revealed that methionine 234 sterically hinder the rings adjacent to the quinone, thus accounting for the lower catalytic efficiency. Reduction of the anthraquinones may further define the role of CR in anthracycline metabolism and may influence anthracycline cytotoxic and cardiotoxic mechanisms.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2010
Solomon Berhe; Andrew M. Slupe; Choice Luster; Henry A. Charlier; Don L. Warner; Leon H. Zalkow; Edward M. Burgess; Nkechi M. Enwerem; Oladapo Bakare
A series of indazole-dione derivatives were synthesized by the 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition reaction of appropriate substituted benzoquinones or naphthoquinones and N-carboalkoxyamino diazopropane derivatives. These compounds were evaluated for their effects on human carbonyl reductase. Several of the analogs were found to serve as substrates for carbonyl reductase with a wide range of catalytic efficiencies, while four analogs display inhibitory activities with IC(50) values ranging from 3-5 microM. Two of the inhibitors were studied in greater detail and were found to be noncompetitive inhibitors against both NADPH and menadione with K(I) values ranging between 2 and 11 microM. Computational studies suggest that conformation of the compounds may determine whether the indazole-diones bind productively to yield product or nonproductively to inhibit the enzyme.
Molecular Pharmacology | 2005
Henry A. Charlier; Richard D. Olson; Carissa M. Thornock; Wendy K. Mercer; David R. Olson; T. Stephen Broyles; Dawn J. Muhlestein; Corianton Larson; Barry J. Cusack; Susan E. Shadle
Biochemistry | 1994
Henry A. Charlier; Jennifer A. Runquist; Henry M. Miziorko
Cancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology | 2006
Barry J. Cusack; Hervé Gambliel; Beth Musser; Nicholas Hadjokas; Susan E. Shadle; Henry A. Charlier; Richard D. Olson
Biochemistry | 1997
Henry A. Charlier; Chakravarthy Narasimhan; Henry M. Miziorko
Archive | 2010
Gongxin Yu; Eric C. Brown; Henry A. Charlier
Journal of Chemical Crystallography | 2013
Michael Hilton; Nikolay Gerasimchuk; Svitlana Silchenko; Henry A. Charlier
Archive | 2007
Henry A. Charlier; Christopher K. Ewing