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Dive into the research topics where James Lee Toth is active.

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Featured researches published by James Lee Toth.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015

Dual Exosite-binding Inhibitors of Insulin-degrading Enzyme Challenge Its Role as the Primary Mediator of Insulin Clearance in Vivo.

Timothy B. Durham; James Lee Toth; Valentine J. Klimkowski; Julia X.C. Cao; Angela M. Siesky; Jesline Alexander-Chacko; Ginger Y. Wu; Jeffrey T. Dixon; James E McGee; Yong Wang; Sherry Y. Guo; Rachel Nicole Cavitt; John F. Schindler; Stefan Jon Thibodeaux; Nathan A. Calvert; Michael J. Coghlan; Dana Sindelar; Michael E. Christe; Vladislav V. Kiselyov; M. Dodson Michael; Kyle W. Sloop

Background: Insulin-degrading enzyme (IDE) is the best characterized catabolic enzyme implicated in insulin proteolysis. Results: Newly discovered dual exosite IDE inhibitors do not significantly affect insulin action or clearance. Conclusion: IDE catabolism does not appear to be the primary mechanism of insulin clearance in vivo. Significance: These IDE inhibitors will enable broader investigation of IDE function. Insulin-degrading enzyme (IDE, insulysin) is the best characterized catabolic enzyme implicated in proteolysis of insulin. Recently, a peptide inhibitor of IDE has been shown to affect levels of insulin, amylin, and glucagon in vivo. However, IDE−/− mice display variable phenotypes relating to fasting plasma insulin levels, glucose tolerance, and insulin sensitivity depending on the cohort and age of animals. Here, we interrogated the importance of IDE-mediated catabolism on insulin clearance in vivo. Using a structure-based design, we linked two newly identified ligands binding at unique IDE exosites together to construct a potent series of novel inhibitors. These compounds do not interact with the catalytic zinc of the protease. Because one of these inhibitors (NTE-1) was determined to have pharmacokinetic properties sufficient to sustain plasma levels >50 times its IDE IC50 value, studies in rodents were conducted. In oral glucose tolerance tests with diet-induced obese mice, NTE-1 treatment improved the glucose excursion. Yet in insulin tolerance tests and euglycemic clamp experiments, NTE-1 did not enhance insulin action or increase plasma insulin levels. Importantly, IDE inhibition with NTE-1 did result in elevated plasma amylin levels, suggesting the in vivo role of IDE action on amylin may be more significant than an effect on insulin. Furthermore, using the inhibitors described in this report, we demonstrate that in HEK cells IDE has little impact on insulin clearance. In total, evidence from our studies supports a minimal role for IDE in insulin metabolism in vivo and suggests IDE may be more important in helping regulate amylin clearance.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Identification of potent and selective hydantoin inhibitors of aggrecanase-1 and aggrecanase-2 that are efficacious in both chemical and surgical models of osteoarthritis.

Timothy B. Durham; Valentine J. Klimkowski; Christopher John Rito; Jothirajah Marimuthu; James Lee Toth; Chin Liu; Jim D. Durbin; Stephanie L. Stout; Lisa A. Adams; Craig Swearingen; C. Lin; Mark Chambers; Kannan Thirunavukkarasu; Michael Robert Wiley

A disintegrin and metalloproteinase with thrombospondin motifs-4 (ADAMTS-4) and ADAMTS-5 are zinc metalloproteases commonly referred to as aggrecanase-1 and aggrecanase-2, respectively. These enzymes are involved in the degradation of aggrecan, a key component of cartilage. Inhibitors of these enzymes could be potential osteoarthritis (OA) therapies. A series of hydantoin inhibitors of ADAMTS-4 and ADAMTS-5 were identified from a screening campaign and optimized through structure-based drug design to give hydantoin 13. Hydantoin 13 had excellent selectivity over other zinc metalloproteases such as TACE, MMP2, MMP3, MMP13, and MMP14. The compound also produced efficacy in both a chemically induced and surgical model of OA in rats.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017

Discovery of N-(6-Fluoro-1-oxo-1,2-dihydroisoquinolin-7-yl)-5-[(3R)-3-hydroxypyrrolidin-1-yl]thiophene-2-sulfonamide (LSN 3213128), a Potent and Selective Nonclassical Antifolate Aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide Ribonucleotide Formyltransferase (AICARFT) Inhibitor Effective at Tumor Suppression in a Cancer Xenograft Model

Kevin Robert Fales; F. George Njoroge; Harold B. Brooks; Stefan J. Thibodeaux; Alicia Torrado; Chong Si; James Lee Toth; Jefferson R. Mc Cowan; Kenneth D. Roth; Kenneth Jeff Thrasher; Kwame Frimpong; Matthew R. Lee; Robert Dean Dally; Timothy Alan Shepherd; Timothy B. Durham; Brandon J. Margolis; Zhipei Wu; Yong Wang; Shane Atwell; Jing Wang; Yu-Hua Hui; Timothy I. Meier; Susan A. Konicek; Sandaruwan Geeganage

A hallmark of cancer is unbridled proliferation that can result in increased demand for de novo synthesis of purine and pyrimidine bases required for DNA and RNA biosynthesis. These synthetic pathways are frequently upregulated in cancer and involve various folate-dependent enzymes. Antifolates have a proven record as clinically used oncolytic agents. Our recent research efforts have produced LSN 3213128 (compound 28a), a novel, selective, nonclassical, orally bioavailable antifolate with potent and specific inhibitory activity for aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide ribonucleotide formyltransferase (AICARFT), an enzyme in the purine biosynthetic pathway. Inhibition of AICARFT with compound 28a results in dramatic elevation of 5-aminoimidazole 4-carboxamide ribonucleotide (ZMP) and growth inhibition in NCI-H460 and MDA-MB-231met2 cancer cell lines. Treatment with this inhibitor in a murine based xenograft model of triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) resulted in tumor growth inhibition.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016

Use of Osmotic Pumps to Establish the Pharmacokinetic–Pharmacodynamic Relationship and Define Desirable Human Performance Characteristics for Aggrecanase Inhibitors

Michael Robert Wiley; Timothy B. Durham; Lisa A. Adams; Mark Chambers; C. Lin; Chin Liu; Jothirajah Marimuthu; Peter G. Mitchell; Daniel R. Mudra; Craig Swearingen; James Lee Toth; Jennifer Weller; Kannan Thirunavukkarasu

The development of reliable relationships between in vivo target engagement, pharmacodynamic activity, and efficacy in chronic disease models is beneficial for enabling hypothesis-driven drug discovery and facilitating the development of patient-focused candidate selection criteria. Toward those ends, osmotic infusion pumps can be useful for overcoming limitations in the PK properties of proof-of-concept (POC) compounds to accelerate the development of such relationships. In this report, we describe the application of this strategy to the development of hydantoin-derived aggrecanase inhibitors (eg, 3) for the treatment of osteoarthiritis (OA). Potent, selective inhibitors were efficacious in both chemical and surgical models of OA when exposures were sustained in excess of 10 times the plasma IC50. The use of these data for establishing patient-focused candidate selection criteria is exemplified with the characterization of compound 8, which is projected to sustain the desired level of target engagement at a dose of 45 mg qd.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017

A Highly Selective Hydantoin Inhibitor of Aggrecanase-1 and Aggrecanase-2 with a Low Projected Human Dose

Timothy B. Durham; Jothirajah Marimuthu; James Lee Toth; Chin Liu; Lisa A. Adams; Daniel R. Mudra; Craig Swearingen; C. Lin; Mark Chambers; Kannan Thirunavukkarasu; Michael Robert Wiley

Aggrecanase-1 and -2 (ADAMTS-4 and ADAMTS-5) are zinc metalloproteases involved in the degradation of aggrecan in cartilage. Inhibitors could provide a means of altering the progression of osteoarthritis. We report the identification of 7 which had good oral pharmacokinetics in rats and showed efficacy in a rat chemical model of osteoarthritis. The projected human dose required to achieve sustained plasma levels ≥10 times the hADAMTS-5 IC50 is 5 mg q.d.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Characterization of a novel AICARFT inhibitor which potently elevates ZMP and has anti-tumor activity in murine models

Harold B. Brooks; Timothy I. Meier; Sandaruwan Geeganage; Kevin Robert Fales; Kenneth Jeff Thrasher; Susan A. Konicek; Charles D. Spencer; Stefan J. Thibodeaux; Robert Foreman; Yu-Hua Hui; Kenneth D. Roth; Yue-Wei Qian; Tao Wang; Shuang Luo; Alicia Torrado; Chong Si; James Lee Toth; Jefferson R. Mc Cowan; Kwame Frimpong; Matthew R. Lee; Robert Dean Dally; Timothy Alan Shepherd; Timothy B. Durham; Yong Wang; Zhipei Wu; Philip W. Iversen; F. George Njoroge

AICARFT is a folate dependent catalytic site within the ATIC gene, part of the purine biosynthetic pathway, a pathway frequently upregulated in cancers. LSN3213128 is a potent (16 nM) anti-folate inhibitor of AICARFT and selective relative to TS, SHMT1, MTHFD1, MTHFD2 and MTHFD2L. Increases in ZMP, accompanied by activation of AMPK and cell growth inhibition, were observed with treatment of LY3213128. These effects on ZMP and proliferation were dependent on folate levels. In human breast MDA-MB-231met2 and lung NCI-H460 cell lines, growth inhibition was rescued by hypoxanthine, but not in the A9 murine cell line which is deficient in purine salvage. In athymic nude mice, LSN3213128 robustly elevates ZMP in MDA-MB-231met2, NCI-H460 and A9 tumors in a time and dose dependent manner. Significant tumor growth inhibition in human breast MDA-MB231met2 and lung NCI-H460 xenografts and in the syngeneic A9 tumor model were observed with oral administration of LSN3213128. Strikingly, AMPK appeared activated within the tumors and did not change even at high levels of intratumoral ZMP after weeks of dosing. These results support the evaluation of LSN3213128 as an antineoplastic agent.


Archive | 2007

Biphenyl amide lactam derivatives as inhibitors of 11- beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase 1

Thomas Daniel Aicher; Zhaogen Chen; Ronald Jay Hinklin; Gary Alan Hite; Alexei Pavlovych Krasutsky; Renhua Li; Jefferson R. McCowan; Ashraf Saeed; Nancy June Snyder; James Lee Toth; Owen Brendan Wallace; Leonard L. Winneroski; Yanping Xu; Jeremy Schulenburg York


Fems Immunology and Medical Microbiology | 2005

Identification of antimicrobial compounds active against intracellular Staphylococcus aureus.

François Malouin; Eric Brouillette; Alejandro Martinez; Bobbi J. Boyll; James Lee Toth; Jennifer L. Gage; Norris E. Allen


Archive | 2007

Thiazole pyrazolopyrimidines as crf1 receptor antagonists

Zhaogen Chen; Chafiq Hamdouchi; Erik James Hembre; Philip Arthur Hipskind; Jason Kenneth Myers; Takako Takakuwa; James Lee Toth


Archive | 2007

Thiophene pyrazolopyrimidine compounds

Zhaogen Chen; Chafiq Hamdouchi; Erik James Hembre; Philip Arthur Hipskind; Shaojuan Jia; James Lee Toth

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C. Lin

Eli Lilly and Company

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Chong Si

Eli Lilly and Company

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