Janet Lineberger
Merck & Co.
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Featured researches published by Janet Lineberger.
PLOS ONE | 2010
Miguel Aste-Amezaga; Ningyan Zhang; Janet Lineberger; Beth Anne Arnold; Timothy J. Toner; Mingcheng Gu; Lingyi Huang; Salvatore Vitelli; Kim Vo; Peter Haytko; Jing Zhang Zhao; Frederic Baleydier; Sarah L'heureux; Hongfang Wang; Wendy R. Gordon; Elizabeth Thoryk; Marie Blanke Andrawes; Kittichoat Tiyanont; Kimberly Stegmaier; Giovanni Roti; Kenneth N. Ross; Laura L. Franlin; Hui Wang; Fubao Wang; Michael Chastain; Andrew J. Bett; Laurent P. Audoly; Stephen C. Blacklow; Hans E. Huber
Background Notch receptors normally play a key role in guiding a variety of cell fate decisions during development and differentiation of metazoan organisms. On the other hand, dysregulation of Notch1 signaling is associated with many different types of cancer as well as tumor angiogenesis, making Notch1 a potential therapeutic target. Principal Findings Here we report the in vitro activities of inhibitory Notch1 monoclonal antibodies derived from cell-based and solid-phase screening of a phage display library. Two classes of antibodies were found, one directed against the EGF-repeat region that encompasses the ligand-binding domain (LBD), and the second directed against the activation switch of the receptor, the Notch negative regulatory region (NRR). The antibodies are selective for Notch1, inhibiting Jag2-dependent signaling by Notch1 but not by Notch 2 and 3 in reporter gene assays, with EC50 values as low as 5±3 nM and 0.13±0.09 nM for the LBD and NRR antibodies, respectively, and fail to recognize Notch4. While more potent, NRR antibodies are incomplete antagonists of Notch1 signaling. The antagonistic activity of LBD, but not NRR, antibodies is strongly dependent on the activating ligand. Both LBD and NRR antibodies bind to Notch1 on human tumor cell lines and inhibit the expression of sentinel Notch target genes, including HES1, HES5, and DTX1. NRR antibodies also strongly inhibit ligand-independent signaling in heterologous cells transiently expressing Notch1 receptors with diverse NRR “class I” point mutations, the most common type of mutation found in human T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL). In contrast, NRR antibodies failed to antagonize Notch1 receptors bearing rare “class II” or “class III” mutations, in which amino acid insertions generate a duplicated or constitutively sensitive metalloprotease cleavage site. Signaling in T-ALL cell lines bearing class I mutations is partially refractory to inhibitory antibodies as compared to cell-penetrating gamma-secretase inhibitors. Conclusions/Significance Antibodies that compete with Notch1 ligand binding or that bind to the negative regulatory region can act as potent inhibitors of Notch1 signaling. These antibodies may have clinical utility for conditions in which inhibition of signaling by wild-type Notch1 is desired, but are likely to be of limited value for treatment of T-ALLs associated with aberrant Notch1 activation.
Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2009
Sethu Sankaranarayanan; Marie A. Holahan; Dennis Colussi; Ming-Chih Crouthamel; Viswanath Devanarayan; Joan D. Ellis; Amy S. Espeseth; Adam T. Gates; Samuel Graham; Allison R. Gregro; Daria J. Hazuda; Jerome H. Hochman; Katharine M Holloway; Lixia Jin; Jason A. Kahana; Ming-Tain Lai; Janet Lineberger; Georgia B. McGaughey; Keith P. Moore; Philippe G. Nantermet; Beth Pietrak; Eric A. Price; Hemaka A. Rajapakse; Shaun R. Stauffer; Melissa A. Steinbeiser; Guy R. Seabrook; Harold G. Selnick; Xiao-Ping Shi; Matthew G. Stanton; John Swestock
β-Site amyloid precursor protein (APP)-cleaving enzyme (BACE) 1 cleavage of amyloid precursor protein is an essential step in the generation of the potentially neurotoxic and amyloidogenic Aβ42 peptides in Alzheimers disease. Although previous mouse studies have shown brain Aβ lowering after BACE1 inhibition, extension of such studies to nonhuman primates or man was precluded by poor potency, brain penetration, and pharmacokinetics of available inhibitors. In this study, a novel tertiary carbinamine BACE1 inhibitor, tertiary carbinamine (TC)-1, was assessed in a unique cisterna magna ported rhesus monkey model, where the temporal dynamics of Aβ in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and plasma could be evaluated. TC-1, a potent inhibitor (IC50 ∼ 0.4 nM), has excellent passive membrane permeability, low susceptibility to P-glycoprotein transport, and lowered brain Aβ levels in a mouse model. Intravenous infusion of TC-1 led to a significant but transient lowering of CSF and plasma Aβ levels in conscious rhesus monkeys because it underwent CYP3A4-mediated metabolism. Oral codosing of TC-1 with ritonavir, a potent CYP3A4 inhibitor, twice daily over 3.5 days in rhesus monkeys led to sustained plasma TC-1 exposure and a significant and sustained reduction in CSF sAPPβ, Aβ40, Aβ42, and plasma Aβ40 levels. CSF Aβ42 lowering showed an EC50 of ∼20 nM with respect to the CSF [TC-1] levels, demonstrating excellent concordance with its potency in a cell-based assay. These results demonstrate the first in vivo proof of concept of CSF Aβ lowering after oral administration of a BACE1 inhibitor in a nonhuman primate.
Journal of Virology | 2002
Janet Lineberger; Renee Danzeisen; Daria J. Hazuda; Adam J. Simon; Michael D. Miller
ABSTRACT Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) entry into a host cell requires the fusion of virus and cellular membranes that is driven by interaction of the viral envelope glycoproteins gp120 and gp41 (gp120/gp41) with CD4 and a coreceptor, typically either CXCR4 or CCR5. The stoichiometry of gp120/gp41:CD4:CCR5 necessary to initiate membrane fusion is not known. To allow an examination of early events in gp120/gp41-driven membrane fusion, we developed a novel real-time cell-cell fusion assay. Using this assay to study fusion kinetics, we found that altering the cell surface density of gp120/gp41 affected the maximal extent of fusion without dramatically altering fusion kinetics. Collectively, these observations are consistent with the view that gp120/gp41-driven membrane fusion requires the formation of a threshold number of fusion-active intercellular gp120/gp41:CD4:CCR5 complexes. Furthermore, the probability of reaching this threshold is governed, in part, by the surface density of gp120/gp41.
Journals of Gerontology Series A-biological Sciences and Medical Sciences | 2013
Chi-Sung Chiu; Norbert Peekhaus; Hans Weber; Sharon Adamski; Edward M. Murray; Hai Zhuan Zhang; Jing Zhang Zhao; Robin Ernst; Janet Lineberger; Lingyi Huang; Richard Hampton; Beth Anne Arnold; Salvatore Vitelli; Lora Hamuro; Weirong Wang; Nan Wei; Greg M. Dillon; Jiangyong Miao; Stephen E. Alves; Helmut Glantschnig; Fubao Wang; Hilary A. Wilkinson
Myostatin is a highly conserved member of the transforming growth factor-β ligand family known to regulate muscle growth via activation of activin receptors. A fusion protein consisting of the extracellular ligand-binding domain of activin type IIB receptor with the Fc portion of human immunoglobulin G (ActRIIB-Fc) was used to inhibit signaling through this pathway. Here, we study the effects of this fusion protein in adult, 18-month-old, and orchidectomized mice. Significant muscle growth and enhanced muscle function were observed in adult mice treated for 3 days with ActRIIB-Fc. The ActRIIB-Fc-treated mice had enhanced fast fatigable muscle function, with only minor enhancement of fatigue-resistant fiber function. The ActRIIB-Fc-treated 18-month-old mice and orchidectomized mice showed significantly improved muscle function. Treatment with ActRIIB-Fc also increased bone mineral density and serum levels of a marker of bone formation. These observations highlight the potential of targeting ActRIIB receptor to treat age-related and hypogonadism-associated musculoskeletal degeneration.
Journal of Alzheimer's Disease | 2005
Xiao Ping Shi; Katherine Tugusheva; James E. Bruce; Adam Lucka; Elizabeth Chen-Dodson; Binghua Hu; Guo Xin Wu; Eric A. Price; Robert Bruce Register; Janet Lineberger; Ron Miller; Mei Jy Tang; Amy S. Espeseth; Jason Kahana; Abigail Wolfe; Ming Chih Crouthamel; Sethu Sankaranarayanan; Adam J. Simon; Lin Chen; Ming Tain Lai; Beth Pietrak; Jillian DiMuzio; Yueming Li; Min Xu; Qian Huang; Victor M. Garsky; Mohinder K. Sardana; Daria J. Hazuda
Abnormal production and accumulation of amyloid-beta peptide (Abeta) plays a major role in the pathogenesis of Alzheimers disease (AD). beta-secretase (BACE1) is responsible for the cleavage at thebeta-site in amyloid beta protein precursor (AbetaPP/APP) to generate the N-terminus of Abeta. Here we report the stepwise identification and characterization of a novel APP-beta-site mutant, NFEV (APP_NFEV) in vitro and in cells. In vitro, the APP_NFEV exhibits 100-fold enhanced cleavage rate relative to the wild-type substrate (APPwt) and 10-fold increase relative to the Swedish-type mutation variant (APPsw). In cells, it was preferably cleaved among 24 APP beta-site mutations tested. More importantly, the APP_NFEV mutant failed to generate any detectable Abeta peptides in BACE1-KO mouse fibroblast cells. The production of Abeta peptides was restored by co-transfecting human BACE1, demonstrating that BACE1 is the only enzyme responsible for the processing of APP_NFEV in these cells. Analysis of APP_NFEV cleavage products secreted in the media revealed that in cells BACE1 cleaves APP_NFEV at the position between NF and EV, identical to that observed in vitro. A BACE inhibitor blocked the processing of the APP_NFEV beta-site in vitro and in cells. Our data indicates that the NFEV mutant is not only an enhanced substrate for BACE1 in vitro, but also a specific substrate for BACE1 in cells.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2004
Shawn J. Stachel; Craig A. Coburn; Thomas G. Steele; Kristen G. Jones; Elizabeth F. Loutzenhiser; Alison R. Gregro; Hemaka A. Rajapakse; Ming-Tain Lai; Ming-Chih Crouthamel; Min Xu; Katherine Tugusheva; Janet Lineberger; Beth Pietrak; Amy S. Espeseth; Xiao-Ping Shi; Elizabeth Chen-Dodson; M. Katharine Holloway; Sanjeev Munshi; Adam J. Simon; Lawrence Kuo; Joseph P. Vacca
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2006
Shawn J. Stachel; Craig A. Coburn; Sethu Sankaranarayanan; Eric A. Price; Beth Pietrak; Qian Huang; Janet Lineberger; Amy S. Espeseth; Lixia Jin; Joan D. Ellis; M. Katharine Holloway; Sanjeev Munshi; Timothy J. Allison; Daria J. Hazuda; Adam J. Simon; Samuel Graham; Joseph P. Vacca
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005
Amy S. Espeseth; Min Xu; Qian Huang; Craig A. Coburn; Kristen G. Jones; Marc Ferrer; Paul Zuck; Berta Strulovici; Eric A. Price; Guoxin Wu; Abigail Wolfe; Janet Lineberger; Mohinder K. Sardana; Katherine Tugusheva; Beth Pietrak; Ming-Chih Crouthamel; Ming-Tain Lai; Elizabeth Chen Dodson; Renzo Bazzo; Xiao-Ping Shi; Adam J. Simon; Yueming Li; Daria J. Hazuda
Archive | 2002
Daria J. Hazuda; Janet Lineberger; Michael D Miller; Adam J. Simon
Organic Letters | 2003
Christopher L. Lynch; Jeffrey J. Hale; Richard J. Budhu; Amy Gentry; Paul E. Finke; Charles G. Caldwell; Sander G. Mills; Malcolm Maccoss; Dong-Ming Shen; Kevin T. Chapman; Lorraine Malkowitz; Martin S. Springer; Sandra L. Gould; Julie A. DeMartino; Salvatore J. Siciliano; Margaret A. Cascieri; Anthony Carella; Gwen Carver; Karen Holmes; William A. Schleif; Renee Danzeisen; Daria J. Hazuda; Joseph A. Kessler; Janet Lineberger; Michael I. Miller; Emilio A. Emini