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Dive into the research topics where Jayana P. Lineswala is active.

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Featured researches published by Jayana P. Lineswala.


Molecular Pain | 2007

Delayed functional expression of neuronal chemokine receptors following focal nerve demyelination in the rat: a mechanism for the development of chronic sensitization of peripheral nociceptors

Sonia K. Bhangoo; Dongjun Ren; Richard J. Miller; Kenneth Henry; Jayana P. Lineswala; Chafiq Hamdouchi; Baolin Li; Patrick E Monahan; David M. Chan; Matthew S. Ripsch; Fletcher A. White

BackgroundAnimal and clinical studies have revealed that focal peripheral nerve axon demyelination is accompanied by nociceptive pain behavior. C-C and C-X-C chemokines and their receptors have been strongly implicated in demyelinating polyneuropathies and persistent pain syndromes. Herein, we studied the degree to which chronic nociceptive pain behavior is correlated with the neuronal expression of chemokines and their receptors following unilateral lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC)-induced focal demyelination of the sciatic nerve in rats.ResultsFocal nerve demyelination increased behavioral reflex responsiveness to mechanical stimuli between postoperative day (POD) 3 and POD28 in both the hindpaw ipsilateral and contralateral to the nerve injury. This behavior was accompanied by a bilateral increase in the numbers of primary sensory neurons expressing the chemokine receptors CCR2, CCR5, and CXCR4 by POD14, with no change in the pattern of CXCR3 expression. Significant increases in the numbers of neurons expressing the chemokines monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1/CCL2), Regulated on Activation, Normal T Expressed and Secreted (RANTES/CCL5) and interferon γ-inducing protein-10 (IP-10/CXCL10) were also evident following nerve injury, although neuronal expression pattern of stromal cell derived factor-1α (SDF1/CXCL12) did not change. Functional studies demonstrated that acutely dissociated sensory neurons derived from LPC-injured animals responded with increased [Ca2+]i following exposure to MCP-1, IP-10, SDF1 and RANTES on POD 14 and 28, but these responses were largely absent by POD35. On days 14 and 28, rats received either saline or a CCR2 receptor antagonist isomer (CCR2 RA-[R]) or its inactive enantiomer (CCR2 RA-[S]) by intraperitoneal (i.p.) injection. CCR2 RA-[R] treatment of nerve-injured rats produced stereospecific bilateral reversal of tactile hyperalgesia.ConclusionThese results suggest that the presence of chemokine signaling by both injured and adjacent, uninjured sensory neurons is correlated with the maintenance phase of a persistent pain state, suggesting that chemokine receptor antagonists may be an important therapeutic intervention for chronic pain.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

Lavendamycin antitumor agents: structure-based design, synthesis, and NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase 1 (NQO1) model validation with molecular docking and biological studies.

Mary Hassani; Wen Cai; Katherine H. Koelsch; David C. Holley; Anthony S. Rose; Fatemeh Olang; Jayana P. Lineswala; William G. Holloway; John M. Gerdes; Mohammad Behforouz; Howard D. Beall

A 1H69 crystal structure-based in silico model of the NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase 1 (NQO1) active site has been developed to facilitate NQO1-directed lavendamycin antitumor agent development. Lavendamycin analogues were designed as NQO1 substrates utilizing structure-based design criteria. Computational docking studies were performed using the model to predict NQO1 substrate specificity. Designed N-acyllavendamycin esters and amides were synthesized by Pictet-Spengler condensation. Metabolism and cytotoxicity studies were performed on the analogues with recombinant human NQO1 and human colon adenocarcinoma cells (NQO1-deficient BE and NQO1-rich BE-NQ). Docking and biological data were found to be correlated where analogues 12, 13, 14, 15, and 16 were categorized as good, poor, poor, poor, and good NQO1 substrates, respectively. Our results demonstrated that the ligand design criteria were valid, resulting in the discovery of two good NQO1 substrates. The observed consistency between the docking and biological data suggests that the model possesses practical predictive power.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016

The Discovery, Preclinical, and Early Clinical Development of Potent and Selective GPR40 Agonists for the Treatment of Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (LY2881835, LY2922083, and LY2922470)

Chafiq Hamdouchi; Steven D. Kahl; Anjana Patel Lewis; Guemalli R. Cardona; Richard W. Zink; Keyue Chen; Thomas E. Eessalu; James Ficorilli; Marialuisa C. Marcelo; Keith A. Otto; Kelly L. Wilbur; Jayana P. Lineswala; Jared L. Piper; D. Scott Coffey; Stephanie Ann Sweetana; Joseph Haas; Dawn A. Brooks; Edward J. Pratt; Ruth M. Belin; Mark A. Deeg; Xiaosu Ma; Ellen A. Cannady; Jason T. Johnson; Nathan Yumibe; Qi Chen; Pranab Maiti; Chahrzad Montrose-Rafizadeh; Yanyun Chen; Anne Reifel Miller

The G protein-coupled receptor 40 (GPR40) also known as free fatty acid receptor 1 (FFAR1) is highly expressed in pancreatic, islet β-cells and responds to endogenous fatty acids, resulting in amplification of insulin secretion only in the presence of elevated glucose levels. Hypothesis driven structural modifications to endogenous FFAs, focused on breaking planarity and reducing lipophilicity, led to the identification of spiropiperidine and tetrahydroquinoline acid derivatives as GPR40 agonists with unique pharmacology, selectivity, and pharmacokinetic properties. Compounds 1 (LY2881835), 2 (LY2922083), and 3 (LY2922470) demonstrated potent, efficacious, and durable dose-dependent reductions in glucose levels along with significant increases in insulin and GLP-1 secretion during preclinical testing. A clinical study with 3 administered to subjects with T2DM provided proof of concept of 3 as a potential glucose-lowering therapy. This manuscript summarizes the scientific rationale, medicinal chemistry, preclinical, and early development data of this new class of GPR40 agonists.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2018

Discovery of LY3104607: A Potent and Selective G Protein-Coupled Receptor 40 (GPR40) Agonist with Optimized Pharmacokinetic Properties to Support Once Daily Oral Treatment in Patients with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus

Chafiq Hamdouchi; Pranab Maiti; Alan M. Warshawsky; Amy C. DeBaillie; Keith A. Otto; Kelly L. Wilbur; Steven D. Kahl; Anjana Patel Lewis; Guemalli R. Cardona; Richard W. Zink; Keyue Chen; Siddaramaiah Cr; Jayana P. Lineswala; Grace L. Neathery; Cecilia Bouaichi; Benjamin A. Diseroad; Alison N. Campbell; Stephanie Ann Sweetana; Lisa A. Adams; Over Cabrera; Xiaosu Ma; Nathan Yumibe; Chahrzad Montrose-Rafizadeh; Yanyun Chen; Anne Reifel Miller

As a part of our program to identify potent GPR40 agonists capable of being dosed orally once daily in humans, we incorporated fused heterocycles into our recently disclosed spiropiperidine and tetrahydroquinoline acid derivatives 1, 2, and 3 with the intention of lowering clearance and improving the maximum absorbable dose (Dabs). Hypothesis-driven structural modifications focused on moving away from the zwitterion-like structure. and mitigating the N-dealkylation and O-dealkylation issues led to triazolopyridine acid derivatives with unique pharmacology and superior pharmacokinetic properties. Compound 4 (LY3104607) demonstrated functional potency and glucose-dependent insulin secretion (GDIS) in primary islets from rats. Potent, efficacious, and durable dose-dependent reductions in glucose levels were seen during glucose tolerance test (GTT) studies. Low clearance, volume of distribution, and high oral bioavailability were observed in all species. The combination of enhanced pharmacology and pharmacokinetic properties supported further development of this compound as a potential glucose-lowering drug candidate.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2005

Novel lavendamycin analogues as antitumor agents : Synthesis, in vitro cytotoxicity, structure-metabolism, and computational molecular modeling studies with NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase 1

Mary Hassani; Wen Cai; David C. Holley; Jayana P. Lineswala; Babu R. Maharjan; G. Reza Ebrahimian; Hassan Seradj; Mark G. Stocksdale; Farahnaz Mohammadi; Christopher C. Marvin; John M. Gerdes; Howard D. Beall; Mohammad Behforouz


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Synthesis, metabolism and in vitro cytotoxicity studies on novel lavendamycin antitumor agents

Wen Cai; Mary Hassani; Rajesh Karki; Ervin D. Walter; Katherine H. Koelsch; Hassan Seradj; Jayana P. Lineswala; Hamid Mirzaei; Jeremy S. York; Fatemeh Olang; Minoo Sedighi; Jennifer S. Lucas; Thomas J. Eads; Anthony S. Rose; Sahba Charkhzarrin; Nicholas G. Hermann; Howard D. Beall; Mohammad Behforouz


Archive | 2011

SPIROPIPERIDINE COMPOUNDS AND PHARMACEUTICAL USE THEREOF FOR TREATING DIABETES

Chafiq Hamdouchi; Jayana P. Lineswala; Pranab Maiti


Archive | 2011

NOVEL SPIROPIPERIDINE COMPOUNDS

Chafiq Hamdouchi; Jayana P. Lineswala; Pranab Maiti


Nature Communications | 2018

Structural basis for GPR40 allosteric agonism and incretin stimulation

Joseph D. Ho; Betty Chau; Logan Rodgers; Frances Lu; Kelly L. Wilbur; Keith A. Otto; Yanyun Chen; Min Song; Jonathan P. Riley; Hsiu-Chiung Yang; Nichole A. Reynolds; Steven D. Kahl; Anjana Patel Lewis; Christopher Groshong; Russell E. Madsen; Kris Conners; Jayana P. Lineswala; Tarun Gheyi; Melbert-Brian Decipulo Saflor; Matthew R. Lee; Jordi Benach; Kenton A. Baker; Chahrzad Montrose-Rafizadeh; Michael J. Genin; Anne Reifel Miller; Chafiq Hamdouchi


Archive | 2017

compostos de espiropiperidina

Chafiq Hamdouchi; Jayana P. Lineswala; Pranab Maiti

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Anne Reifel Miller

SUNY Downstate Medical Center

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