Jeremy Baryza
Novartis
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jeremy Baryza.
Journal of Virology | 2009
Jason Borawski; Philip Troke; Xiaoling Puyang; Veronica Gibaja; ShanChaun Zhao; Craig Mickanin; Juliet Leighton-Davies; C. Wilson; Vic E. Myer; Ivan Cornella-Taracido; Jeremy Baryza; John A. Tallarico; Gerard Joberty; Marcus Bantscheff; Markus Schirle; Tewis Bouwmeester; Joanna E. Mathy; Kai Lin; Teresa Compton; Mark Labow; Brigitte Wiedmann; L. Alex Gaither
ABSTRACT Host factor pathways are known to be essential for hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection and replication in human liver cells. To search for novel host factor proteins required for HCV replication, we screened a subgenomic genotype 1b replicon cell line (Luc-1b) with a kinome and druggable collection of 20,779 siRNAs. We identified and validated several enzymes required for HCV replication, including class III phosphatidylinositol 4-kinases (PI4KA and PI4KB), carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase 2, aspartate transcarbamylase, and dihydroorotase (CAD), and mevalonate (diphospho) decarboxylase. Knockdown of PI4KA could inhibit the replication and/or HCV RNA levels of the two subgenomic genotype 1b clones (SG-1b and Luc-1b), two subgenomic genotype 1a clones (SG-1a and Luc-1a), JFH-1 genotype 2a infectious virus (JFH1-2a), and the genomic genotype 1a (FL-1a) replicon. In contrast, PI4KB knockdown inhibited replication and/or HCV RNA levels of Luc-1b, SG-1b, and Luc-1a replicons. The small molecule inhibitor, PIK93, was found to block subgenomic genotype 1b (Luc-1b), subgenomic genotype 1a (Luc-1a), and genomic genotype 2a (JFH1-2a) infectious virus replication in the nanomolar range. PIK93 was characterized by using quantitative chemical proteomics and in vitro biochemical assays to demonstrate PIK93 is a bone fide PI4KA and PI4KB inhibitor. Our data demonstrate that genetic or pharmacological modulation of PI4KA and PI4KB inhibits multiple genotypes of HCV and represents a novel druggable class of therapeutic targets for HCV infection.
Virology | 2010
L. Alex Gaither; Jason Borawski; Leah J. Anderson; Kara Balabanis; Piroska Dévay; Gerard Joberty; Christina Rau; Markus Schirle; Tewis Bouwmeester; Craig Mickanin; ShanChuan Zhao; Chad Vickers; Lac Lee; Gejing Deng; Jeremy Baryza; Roger Aki Fujimoto; Kai Lin; Teresa Compton; Brigitte Wiedmann
Three cyclophilin inhibitors (DEBIO-025, SCY635, and NIM811) are currently in clinical trials for hepatitis C therapy. The mechanism of action of these, however, is not completely understood. There are at least 16 cyclophilins expressed in human cells which are involved in a diverse set of cellular processes. Large-scale siRNA experiments, chemoproteomic assays with cyclophilin binding compounds, and mRNA profiling of HCV replicon containing cells were used to identify the cyclophilins that are instrumental to HCV replication. The previously reported cyclophilin A was confirmed and additional cyclophilin containing pathways were identified. Together, the experiments provide strong evidence that NIM811 reduces viral replication by inhibition of multiple cyclophilins and pathways with protein trafficking as the most strongly and persistently affected pathway.
Drug Metabolism and Disposition | 2014
Jesper Christensen; Karine Litherland; Thomas Faller; Esther van de Kerkhof; Francois Natt; Jürg Hunziker; Julien Boos; Iwan Beuvink; Keith Bowman; Jeremy Baryza; Mike Beverly; Chandra Vargeese; Olivier Heudi; Markus Stoeckli; Joel Krauser; Piet Swart
Absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion properties of a small interfering RNA (siRNA) formulated in a lipid nanoparticle (LNP) vehicle were determined in male CD-1 mice following a single intravenous administration of LNP-formulated [3H]-SSB siRNA, at a target dose of 2.5 mg/kg. Tissue distribution of the [3H]-SSB siRNA was determined using quantitative whole-body autoradiography, and the biostability was determined by both liquid chromatography mass spectrometry (LC-MS) with radiodetection and reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction techniques. Furthermore, the pharmacokinetics and distribution of the cationic lipid (one of the main excipients of the LNP vehicle) were investigated by LC-MS and matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization mass spectrometry imaging techniques, respectively. Following i.v. administration of [3H]-SSB siRNA in the LNP vehicle, the concentration of parent guide strand could be determined up to 168 hours p.d. (post dose), which was ascribed to the use of the vehicle. This was significantly longer than what was observed after i.v. administration of the unformulated [3H]-SSB siRNA, where no intact parent guide strand could be observed 5 minutes post dosing. The disposition of the siRNA was determined by the pharmacokinetics of the formulated LNP vehicle itself. In this study, the radioactivity was widely distributed throughout the body, and the total radioactivity concentration was determined in selected tissues. The highest concentrations of radioactivity were found in the spleen, liver, esophagus, stomach, adrenal, and seminal vesicle wall. In conclusion, the LNP vehicle was found to drive the kinetics and biodistribution of the SSB siRNA. The renal clearance was significantly reduced and its exposure in plasma significantly increased compared with the unformulated [3H]-SSB siRNA.
Molecular Pharmaceutics | 2015
Stephen C. Wilson; Jeremy Baryza; Aimee J. Reynolds; Keith Bowman; Mark E. Keegan; Stephany M. Standley; Noah Gardner; Parul Parmar; Vahide Ozlem Agir; Sunita Yadav; Adnan Zunic; Chandra Vargeese; Cameron C. Lee; Srinivasan Rajan
Small interfering RNA (siRNA) is a novel therapeutic modality that benefits from nanoparticle mediated delivery. The most clinically advanced siRNA-containing nanoparticles are polymer-coated supramolecular assemblies of siRNA and lipids (lipid nanoparticles or LNPs), which protect the siRNA from nucleases, modulate pharmacokinetics of the siRNA, and enable selective delivery of siRNA to target cells. Understanding the mechanisms of assembly and delivery of such systems is complicated by the complexity of the dynamic supramolecular assembly as well as by its subsequent interactions with the biological milieu. We have developed an ex vivo method that provides insight into how LNPs behave when contacted with biological fluids. Pulsed gradient spin echo (PGSE) NMR was used to directly measure the kinetics of poly(ethylene) glycol (PEG) shedding from siRNA encapsulated LNPs in rat serum. The method represents a molecularly specific, real-time, quantitative, and label-free way to monitor the behavior of a nanoparticle surface coating. We believe that this method has broad implications in gaining mechanistic insights into how nanoparticle-based drug delivery vehicles behave in biofluids and is versatile enough to be applied to a diversity of systems.
Archive | 2010
Jeremy Baryza; Keith Bowman; Andrew Geall; Tanzina Labonte; Cameron Lee; Chandra Vargeese; Laura West; Junping Zhao
Archive | 2009
Jeremy Baryza; Andrew Geall; Sushma Kommareddy; Jennifer Philips
Molecular Pharmaceutics | 2015
Da Ma; Shaomin Tian; Jeremy Baryza; J. Christopher Luft; Joseph M. DeSimone
Macromolecular Chemistry and Physics | 2011
Yves Matter; Ramona Enea; Olivier Casse; Cameron Lee; Jeremy Baryza; Wolfgang Meier
Cell | 2018
Anthony M. Mustoe; Steven Busan; Greggory M. Rice; Christine E. Hajdin; Brant K. Peterson; Vera Ruda; Neil Kubica; Razvan Nutiu; Jeremy Baryza; Kevin M. Weeks
Archive | 2015
Jeremy Baryza; Marcel J. J. Blommers; César Fernández; Erin Geno; Alvar D. Gossert; Paulette Greenidge; Dieter Huesken; Juerg Hunziker; Francois Natt; Anup Patnaik; Andrew Patterson; Jean-Michel Rondeau; Jan Weiler; Meicheng Zhu