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Featured researches published by John R. Toomey.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 1999

Antithrombotic Efficacy of a Novel Murine Antihuman Factor IX Antibody in Rats

Giora Z. Feuerstein; Arun Patel; John R. Toomey; Peter Bugelski; Andrew J. Nichols; William R. Church; Richard E. Valocik; Paul F. Koster; Audrey Baker; Michael Neal Blackburn

A murine antihuman factor IX monoclonal antibody (BC2) has been generated and evaluated for its capacity to prolong the activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT) in vitro and ex vivo and to prevent arterial thrombosis in a rat model in vivo. BC2 extended aPTT to a maximum of 60 to 80 seconds at 100 to 1000 nmol/L in vitro (rat and human plasma, respectively) and ex vivo (rat) after dosing of rats up to 6 mg/kg in vivo. BC2, administered as bolus (1 to 6 mg/kg) followed by infusion (0.3 to 2 mg x kg(-1) x h(-1)), dose-dependently prevented thrombosis of an injured rat carotid artery (FeCl(3)-patch model), increased time to artery occlusion, and reduced incidence of vessel occlusion. BC2 efficacy in preventing arterial thrombosis exceeded that of heparin (bolus 15 to 120 U/kg followed by infusion 0.5 to 4.0 U x kg(-1) x min(-1)), whereas the latter rendered the blood incoagulable (aPTT>1000 seconds). BC2 demonstrated complete antithrombotic efficacy also as a single bolus given either as prevessel or postvessel injury as evidenced by reduction of thrombus mass (from 4.18+/-0.49 to 1.80 +/-0.3 mg, P<0.001), increasing vessel patency time (from 14.9+/-0.9 minutes to 58.3+/-1.7 minutes, P<0.001) and decreasing incidence of vessel occlusion from 100% to 0% in vehicle- versus BC2-treated rats, respectively. BC2 (3 mg/kg, IV) administered in a single bolus resulted in 50% reduction in thrombus mass (P<0.01), extended vessel patency time (P<0.001), extended aPTT only 4-fold, and had no effect on blood loss via a tail surgical wound; heparin, at doses that reduced thrombus mass to a similar extent, extended aPTT beyond 1000 seconds (over 500-fold) and increased blood loss from 1.8+/-0.7 to 3.3 +/-0.6 mL (P<0.001). These data suggest that BC2 may provide enhanced therapeutic efficacy in humans at lesser interference with blood hemostasis than heparin.


Thrombosis Research | 2000

Comparing the Antithrombotic Efficacy of a Humanized Anti-factor IX(a) Monoclonal Antibody (SB 249417) to the Low Molecular Weight Heparin Enoxaparin In a Rat Model of Arterial Thrombosis

John R. Toomey; Michael Neal Blackburn; Barbara L. Storer; Richard E. Valocik; Paul F. Koster; Giora Z. Feuerstein

A humanized inhibitory anti-factor IX(a) antibody (SB 249417) has been compared to enoxaparin (Lovenox) in a rat model of arterial thrombosis. Pretreatment of rats with either SB 249417 (3.0 mg/kg, i. v.) or enoxaparin (30.0 mg/kg, i.v. or s.c.) resulted in comparable and significant reductions in thrombus formation. However, the efficacious dose of enoxaparin resulted in >30-fold increase in the aPTT over baseline, while the efficacious dose of SB 249417 prolonged the aPTT by only approximately 3-fold. Additionally, pretreatment with SB 249417 resulted in sustained blood flow and arterial patency throughout the experiment in >80% of rats treated. In contrast, <30% of rats pretreated with enoxaparin remained patent throughout the experiment. The data in this report indicate that the selective inhibition of factor IX(a) with the monoclonal antibody SB 249417 produces a superior antithrombotic profile to that of the low molecular weight heparin enoxaparin.


Journal of Cardiovascular Pharmacology | 2008

Antithrombotic potential of GW813893: a novel, orally active, active-site directed factor Xa inhibitor.

Melanie Abboud; Saul Needle; Cynthia L. Burns-Kurtis; Richard E. Valocik; Paul F. Koster; Augustin Amour; Chuen Chan; David W. Brown; Laiq Chaudry; Ping Zhou; Angela Patikis; Champa Patel; Anthony J. Pateman; Robert J. Young; Nigel S. Watson; John R. Toomey

Background: Factor Xa (FXa) has been a target of considerable interest for drug development efforts aimed at suppressing thrombosis. In this report, a new orally active, small molecule, active-site directed FXa inhibitor, GW813893, has been profiled in a succession of in vitro and in vivo assays involved in its preclinical characterization as a potential antithrombotic therapeutic. Methods: In vitro profiling of GW813893 consisted of assessing its inhibitory potential against FXa and a broad panel of related and unrelated enzymes and receptors. Additionally, the FXa inhibition potential of GW813893 was assessed in prothrombinase and plasma-based clotting assays. In vivo characterization of GW813893 consisted of thrombosis studies in a rat inferior vena cava model, a rat carotid artery thrombosis model, and a rabbit jugular thrombosis model. Bleeding studies were conducted in a rat tail transection model. Ex vivo determinations of compound effects on FX and clotting activity were also undertaken. Results: GW813893 was more than 90-fold selective over all enzymes tested, and it inhibited FXa and prothrombinase activity with a Ki of 4.0 nM and 9.7 nM, respectively. In vivo, GW813893 concentration-dependently suppressed thrombotic activity in all models tested. The antithrombotic activity correlated with the suppression of plasma-based clotting activity and the inhibition of plasma FX activity (P < 0.02). Over the antithrombotic dose-range, an increased bleeding diathesis was not observed. Conclusion: These experiments demonstrate that GW813893 is a potent, selective, orally active inhibitor of FXa. The data suggest that GW813893 has robust antithrombotic potential at doses that have no detectable hemostasis liability. Collectively, the profile suggests that GW813893 has the preclinical pharmacology underpinnings of an oral antithrombotic therapeutic.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1997

Effect of tissue factor deficiency on mouse and tumor development

John R. Toomey; Kenneth E. Kratzer; Nina Lasky; George J. Broze


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1991

Localization of the human tissue factor recognition determinant of human factor VIIa

John R. Toomey; K. J. Smith; Darrel W. Stafford


Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 1999

An inhibitory anti-factor IX antibody effectively reduces thrombus formation in a rat model of venous thrombosis

Giora Z. Feuerstein; John R. Toomey; Richard E. Valocik; Paul F. Koster; Arun Patel; Michael Neal Blackburn


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1996

Receptor-mediated Endocytosis of Coagulation Factor Xa Requires Cell Surface-bound Tissue Factor Pathway Inhibitor

Guyu Ho; John R. Toomey; George J. Broze; Alan L. Schwartz


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1988

Localization of a factor VIII-inhibiting antibody epitope to a region between residues 338 and 362 of factor VIII heavy chain

Jerry Ware; John R. Toomey; Darrel W. Stafford


Biochemistry | 1992

The endothelial cell binding determinant of human factor IX resides in the .gamma.-carboxyglutamic acid domain

John R. Toomey; Kenneth J. Smith; Harold R. Roberts; Darrel W. Stafford


Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 1989

Epitope localization of anti-factor VIII monoclonal antibodies determined by recombinant peptides

Jerry Ware; John R. Toomey; Darrel W. Stafford

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Darrel W. Stafford

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Robert N. Willette

Thomas Jefferson University

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George J. Broze

Washington University in St. Louis

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Jerry Ware

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Alan L. Schwartz

Washington University in St. Louis

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Daniel S. Matasic

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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