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Featured researches published by John B. Nicholas.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2012

Virologic Escape during Danoprevir (ITMN-191/RG7227) Monotherapy Is Hepatitis C Virus Subtype Dependent and Associated with R155K Substitution

Sharlene R. Lim; Xiaoli Qin; S. Susser; John B. Nicholas; Christian Lange; Eva Herrmann; Jin Hong; Ann Arfsten; Lisa Hooi; Williamson Ziegler Bradford; Isabel Nájera; Patrick Smith; Stefan Zeuzem; Karl Kossen; Christophe Sarrazin; Scott D. Seiwert

ABSTRACT Danoprevir is a hepatitis C virus (HCV) NS3/4A protease inhibitor that promotes multi-log10 reductions in HCV RNA when administered as a 14-day monotherapy to patients with genotype 1 chronic HCV. Of these patients, 14/37 experienced a continuous decline in HCV RNA, 13/37 a plateau, and 10/37 a rebound. The rebound and continuous-decline groups experienced similar median declines in HCV RNA through day 7, but their results diverged notably at day 14. Plateau group patients experienced a lesser, but sustained, median HCV RNA decline. Baseline danoprevir susceptibility was similar across response groups but was reduced significantly at day 14 in the rebound group. Viral rebound in genotype 1b was uncommon (found in 2/23 patients). Population-based sequence analysis of NS3 and NS4A identified treatment-emergent substitutions at four amino acid positions in the protease domain of NS3 (positions 71, 155, 168, and 170), but only two (155 and 168) were in close proximity to the danoprevir binding site and carried substitutions that impacted danoprevir potency. R155K was the predominant route to reduced danoprevir susceptibility and was observed in virus isolated from all 10 rebound, 2/13 plateau, and 1/14 continuous-decline patients. Virus in one rebound patient additionally carried partial R155Q and D168E substitutions. Treatment-emergent substitutions in plateau patients were less frequently observed and more variable. Single-rebound patients carried virus with R155Q, D168V, or D168T. Clonal sequence analysis and drug susceptibility testing indicated that only a single patient displayed multiple resistance pathways. These data indicate the ascendant importance of R155K for viral escape during danoprevir treatment and may have implications for the clinical use of this agent.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2017

Preclinical Characterization and Human Microdose Pharmacokinetics of ITMN-8187, a Nonmacrocyclic Inhibitor of the Hepatitis C Virus NS3 Protease.

Ravi Rajagopalan; Lin Pan; Caralee Schaefer; John B. Nicholas; Sharlene Lim; Shawn Misialek; Sarah K. Stevens; Lisa Hooi; Natalia Aleskovski; Donald Ruhrmund; Karl Kossen; Lea Huang; Sophia Yap; Leonid Beigelman; Vladimir Serebryany; Jyanwei Liu; Srikonda Sastry; Scott D. Seiwert; Brad O. Buckman

Abstract The current paradigm for the treatment of chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection involves combinations of agents that act directly on steps of the HCV life cycle. Here we report the preclinical characteristics of ITMN-8187, a nonmacrocyclic inhibitor of the NS3/4A HCV protease. X-ray crystallographic studies of ITMN-8187 and simeprevir binding to NS3/4A protease demonstrated good agreement between structures. Low nanomolar biochemical potency was maintained against NS3/4A derived from HCV genotypes 1, 2b, 4, 5, and 6. In cell-based potency assays, half-maximal reduction of genotype 1a and 1b HCV replicon RNA was afforded by 11 and 4 nM doses of ITMN-8187, respectively. Combinations of ITMN-8187 with other directly acting antiviral agents in vitro displayed additive antiviral efficacy. A 30-mg/kg of body weight dose of ITMN-8187 administered for 4 days yielded significant viral load reductions through day 5 in a chimeric mouse model of HCV. A 3-mg/kg oral dose administered to rats, dogs, or monkeys yielded concentrations in plasma 16 h after dosing that exceeded the half-maximal effective concentration of ITMN-8187. Human microdose pharmacokinetics showed low intersubject variability and prolonged oral absorption with first-order elimination kinetics compatible with once-daily dosing. These preclinical characteristics compare favorably with those of other NS3/4A inhibitors approved for the treatment of chronic HCV infection.


Archive | 2013

ANTI-FIBROTIC PYRIDINONES

Brad O. Buckman; John B. Nicholas; Johnnie Y. Ramphal; Kumaraswamy Emayan; Scott D. Seiwert


Archive | 2011

SUBSTITUTED PROLINE INHIBITORS OF HEPATITIS C VIRUS REPLICATION

Brad O. Buckman; John B. Nicholas; Vladimir Serebryany; Scott D. Seiwert


Archive | 2010

Cyclic peptide inhibitors of hepatitis c virus replication

Brad O. Buckman; John B. Nicholas; Leonid Beigelman; Vladimir Serebryany; Antitsa Dimitrova Stoycheva; Timothy Thrailkill; Scott D. Seiwert


Archive | 2017

compostos, composição farmacêutica, método para tratar condição fibrótica, quantidade terapeuticamente efetiva de composto, de sal farmaceuticamente aceitável deste ou de composição farmacêutica e usos das mesmas e de compostos e/ou composição farmacêutica

Brad O. Buckman; John B. Nicholas; Johnnie Y. Ramphal; Kumaraswamy Emayan; Scott D. Seiwert


Archive | 2017

compostos ou sais farmaceuticamente aceitáveis dos mesmos e composições farmacêuticas e respectivos usos de quantidades eficazes e métodos para tratar, prevenir, reverter, parar ou retardar a prograssão de doença ou condição selecionada de fibrose, câncer ou distúrbios respiratórios e modular a atividade de receptor em célula

Brad O. Buckman; John B. Nicholas; Kumaraswamy Emayan; Scott D. Seiwert


Archive | 2014

ANTAGONISTAS DEL RECEPTOR DEL ACIDO LISOFOSFATIDICO

John B. Nicholas; Kumaraswamy Emayan; Brad O. Buckman; Scott D. Seiwert


European Respiratory Journal | 2014

Biochemical and functional characterization of lysyl oxidase like 2 (LOXL2) inhibitors

Ravi Rajagopalan; Shawn Misialek; Jin-Xing Huang; Lisa Hooi; Hemanth Ramesha; John B. Nicholas; John Ramphal; Kumar Emayan; Lin Pan; Sophia Yap; Lea Huang; Scott D. Seiwert; Brad O. Buckman


18th International Colloquium on Lung and Airway Fibrosis | 2014

Identification of Novel Small-Molecule LOXL2 Inhibitors by High Throughput Screening

John B. Nicholas; Kumar Emayan; John Ramphal; Shawn Misialek; Ravi Rajagopalan; Jin-Xing Huang; Yan Huang; Sophia Yap; Liang Liu; Lin Pan; Scott D. Seiwert; Brad O. Buckman

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Scott D. Seiwert

University of Colorado Boulder

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Karl Kossen

University of Colorado Boulder

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Kumar Emayan

Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals

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Christian Lange

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Eva Herrmann

Goethe University Frankfurt

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S. Susser

Goethe University Frankfurt

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