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Dive into the research topics where Juan Liu is active.

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Featured researches published by Juan Liu.


Oncotarget | 2015

Ibrutinib selectively and irreversibly targets EGFR (L858R, Del19) mutant but is moderately resistant to EGFR (T790M) mutant NSCLC Cells

Hong Wu; Aoli Wang; Wei Zhang; Beilei Wang; Cheng Chen; Wenchao Wang; Chen Hu; Zi Ye; Zheng Zhao; Li Wang; Xixiang Li; Kailin Yu; Juan Liu; Jiaxin Wu; Xiao-E Yan; Peng Zhao; Jinhua Wang; Chu Wang; Ellen Weisberg; Nathanael S. Gray; Cai-Hong Yun; Jing Liu; Liang Chen; Qingsong Liu

Through comprehensive comparison study, we found that ibrutinib, a clinically approved covalent BTK kinase inhibitor, was highly active against EGFR (L858R, del19) mutant driven NSCLC cells, but moderately active to the T790M ‘gatekeeper’ mutant cells and not active to wild-type EGFR NSCLC cells. Ibrutinib strongly affected EGFR mediated signaling pathways and induced apoptosis and cell cycle arrest (G0/G1) in mutant EGFR but not wt EGFR cells. However, ibrutinib only slowed down tumor progression in PC-9 and H1975 xenograft models. MEK kinase inhibitor, GSK1120212, could potentiate ibrutinibs effect against the EGFR (L858R/T790M) mutation in vitro but not in vivo. These results suggest that special drug administration might be required to achieve best clinical response in the ongoing phase I/II clinical trial with ibrutinib for NSCLC.


Environmental Earth Sciences | 2014

Adsorption of arsenic(V) on bone char: batch, column and modeling studies

Jing Liu; Xi Huang; Juan Liu; Weiqing Wang; Wei Zhang; Faqin Dong

Bone char has been used as a low-cost adsorbent for the removal of As(V) from waste water. The batch experiments show that the Langmuir isotherm describes well the adsorption behavior. The adsorption process follows a pseudo-second-order kinetic model. The column experiments were conducted at pHxa0=xa04 and 10xa0mg/L an initial concentration of As(V). The breakthrough curves were investigated for various conditions, such as different flow rates, column bed heights, adsorption cycles, coexisting cations and anions such as Mn2+, Al3+, PO43−, SO42− and SiO32−. The convection–diffusion equation was used to model the experimental transport data of As(V) for these conditions. It has been found that the coexisting cations can enhance As(V) immobilization and increase retardation factor (Rf), and coexisting anions significantly decrease the diffusion coefficient (DL) of As(V). The secondary adsorption phenomena were observed in the breakthrough curves of column studies of As(V) with cations, especially Mn2+. The regeneration experiments using distilled water and 0.1xa0mol/L NaOH solution were done to evaluate the desorption degree. The total desorbed amounts from whole column for three experiments decreased from 8.98 to 7.67xa0mg and the desorption degrees increased from 0.51 to 0.71 unexpectedly, which indicates that the regeneration operation is feasible. Finally, the chemical analysis of column effluents and infrared spectroscopic analysis of absorbent both revealed that the ligand exchange and electrostatic interaction are the main removal mechanisms.


Mineralogical Magazine | 2014

Experimental and model studies on comparison of As(III and V) removal from synthetic acid mine drainage by bone char

Jing Liu; Xi Huang; Juan Liu; Weiqing Wang; Wei Zhang; Faqing Dong

Abstract Acid mine drainage (AMD) commonly contains elevated concentrations of As(III) and/or As(V) due to oxidation of arsenic-containing sulfides. Bone char has been used as a low-cost filling material for passive treatment. The breakthrough curves of As(III) and As(V) were studied in column experiments conducted at different flow rates, adsorption cycle times, and with different coexisting cations and anions to compare their transport behaviours. The experimental data were fitted by the Convection- Diffusion Equation (CDE) and Thomas model with the aim of obtaining retardation factors of As(III) and As(V) and their maximum adsorption capacities, respectively. The maximum adsorption capacities of As(III) and As(V) are 0.214 and 0.335 mg/g, respectively. Coexisting Mn2+ and Al3+ ions can shorten the equilibrium time of As(V) adsorption from 25 h to 8 h, but they have little effect on As(III). The retardation factors of As(III) and As(V) calculated by the CDE model decrease with adsorption cycles from 37 to 20 and 51 to 32, respectively. The Mn2+ and Al3+ ions could enhance retention ability with adsorption cycle time, especially Mn2+ for As(V). Secondary adsorption phenomena were observed only in breakthrough curves of As(V) in the presence of Mn2+ and Al3+. The competitive influences of coexisting arsenic species is As(V) > As(III). Regeneration experiments using distilled water and NaOH solution were completed to quantify the degree of desorption of both As(III) and As(V). The results show that As(V) adsorbed on bone char has better desorption performance than As(III), and the average degrees of desorption of As(III) and As(V) for three desorption experiments are 75% and 31%, respectively.


Oncotarget | 2016

Dual inhibition of AKT/FLT3-ITD by A674563 overcomes FLT3 ligand-induced drug resistance in FLT3-ITD positive AML

Aoli Wang; Hong Wu; Cheng Chen; Chen Hu; Ziping Qi; Wenchao Wang; Kailin Yu; Xiaochuan Liu; Fengming Zou; Zheng Zhao; Jiaxin Wu; Juan Liu; Feiyang Liu; Li Wang; Richard Stone; Ilene A. Galinksy; James D. Griffin; Shanchun Zhang; Ellen Weisberg; Jing Liu; Qingsong Liu

The FLT3-ITD mutation is one of the most prevalent oncogenic mutations in AML. Several FLT3 kinase inhibitors have shown impressive activity in clinical evaluation, however clinical responses are usually transient and clinical effects are rapidly lost due to drug resistance. One of the resistance mechanisms in the AML refractory patients involves FLT3-ligand induced reactivation of AKT and/or ERK signaling via FLT3 wt kinase. Via a screen of numerous AKT kinase inhibitors, we identified the well-established orally available AKT inhibitor, A674563, as a dual suppressor of AKT and FLT3-ITD. A674563 suppressed FLT3-ITD positive AML both in vitro and in vivo. More importantly, compared to other FLT3 inhibitors, A674563 is able to overcome FLT3 ligand-induced drug resistance through simultaneous inhibition of FLT3-ITD- and AKT-mediated signaling. Our findings suggest that A674563 might be a potential drug candidate for overcoming FLT3 ligand-mediated drug resistance in FLT3-ITD positive AML.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016

Discovery of N-((1-(4-(3-(3-((6,7-Dimethoxyquinolin-3-yl)oxy)phenyl)ureido)-2-(trifluoromethyl)phenyl)piperidin-4-yl)methyl)propionamide (CHMFL-KIT-8140) as a Highly Potent Type II Inhibitor Capable of Inhibiting the T670I “Gatekeeper” Mutant of cKIT Kinase

Binhua Li; Aoli Wang; Juan Liu; Ziping Qi; Xiaochuan Liu; Kailin Yu; Hong Wu; Cheng Chen; Chen Hu; Wenchao Wang; Jiaxin Wu; Zhenquan Hu; Ling Ye; Fengming Zou; Feiyang Liu; Beilei Wang; Li Wang; Tao Ren; Shaojuan Zhang; Mingfeng Bai; Shanchun Zhang; Jing Liu; Qingsong Liu

cKIT kinase inhibitors, e.g., imatinib, could induce drug-acquired mutations such as cKIT T670I that rendered drug resistance after chronic treatment. Through a type II kinase inhibitor design approach we discovered a highly potent type II cKIT kinase inhibitor compound 35 (CHMFL-KIT-8140), which potently inhibited both cKIT wt (IC50 = 33 nM) and cKIT gatekeeper T670I mutant (IC50 = 99 nM). Compound 35 displayed strong antiproliferative effect against GISTs cancer cell lines GIST-T1 (cKIT wt, GI50 = 4 nM) and GIST-5R (cKIT T670I, GI50 = 26 nM). In the cellular context it strongly inhibited c-KIT mediated signaling pathways and induced apoptosis. In the BaF3-TEL-cKIT-T670I isogenic cell inoculated xenograft mouse model, 35 exhibited dose dependent tumor growth suppression efficacy and 100 mg/kg dosage provided 47.7% tumor growth inhibition (TGI) without obvious toxicity. We believe compound 35 would be a good pharmacological tool for exploration of the cKIT-T670I mutant mediated pathology in GISTs.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015

Discovery of (R)-1-(3-(4-Amino-3-(4-phenoxyphenyl)-1H-pyrazolo[3,4-d]pyrimidin-1-yl)piperidin-1-yl)-2-(dimethylamino)ethanone (CHMFL-FLT3-122) as a Potent and Orally Available FLT3 Kinase Inhibitor for FLT3-ITD Positive Acute Myeloid Leukemia.

Xixiang Li; Aoli Wang; Kailin Yu; Ziping Qi; Cheng Chen; Wenchao Wang; Chen Hu; Hong Wu; Jiaxin Wu; Zheng Zhao; Juan Liu; Fengming Zou; Li Wang; Beilei Wang; Wei Wang; Shanchun Zhang; Jing Liu; Qingsong Liu

FLT3-ITD mutant has been observed in about 30% of AML patients and extensively studied as a drug discovery target. On the basis of the structure of PCI-32765 (ibrutinib), a BTK kinase inhibitor that was recently reported to bear FLT3 kinase activity through a structure-guided drug design approach, we have discovered compound 18 (CHMFL-FLT3-122), which displayed an IC50 of 40 nM against FLT3 kinase and achieved selectivity over BTK kinase (over 10-fold). It significantly inhibited the proliferation of FLT3-ITD positive AML cancer cell lines MV4-11 (GI50 = 22 nM), MOLM13/14 (GI50 = 21 nM/42 nM). More importantly, 18 demonstrated 170-fold selectivity between FLT3 kinase and c-KIT kinase (GI50 = 11 nM versus 1900 nM) in the TEL-fusion isogenic BaF3 cells indicating a potential to avoid the FLT3/c-KIT dual inhibition induced myelosuppression toxicity. In the cellular context it strongly affected FLT3-ITD mediated signaling pathways and induced apoptosis by arresting the cell cycle into the G0/G1 phase. In the in vivo studies 18 demonstrated a good bioavailability (30%) and significantly suppressed the tumor growth in MV4-11 cell inoculated xenograft model (50 mg/kg) without exhibiting obvious toxicity. Compound 18 might be a potential drug candidate for FLT3-ITD positive AML.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017

Discovery of 2-((3-acrylamido-4-methylphenyl)amino)-N-(2-methyl-5-(3,4,5-trimethoxybenzamido)phenyl)-4-(methylamino)pyrimidine-5-carboxamide (CHMFL-BMX-078) as a Highly Potent and Selective Type II Irreversible Bone Marrow Kinase in the X Chromosome (BMX) Kinase Inhibitor.

Xiaofei Liang; Fengchao Lv; Beilei Wang; Kailin Yu; Hong Wu; Ziping Qi; Zongru Jiang; Cheng Chen; Aoli Wang; Weili Miao; Wenchao Wang; Zhenquan Hu; Juan Liu; Xiaochuan Liu; Zheng Zhao; Li Wang; Shanchuan Zhang; Zi Ye; Chu Wang; Tao Ren; Yinsheng Wang; Qingsong Liu; Jing Liu

BMX is a member of TEC family nonreceptor tyrosine kinase and is involved in a variety of critical physiological and pathological processes. Through combination of irreversible inhibitor design and type II inhibitor design approaches, we have discovered a highly selective and potent type II irreversible BMX kinase inhibitor compound 41 (CHMFL-BMX-078), which exhibited an IC50 of 11 nM by formation of a covalent bond with cysteine 496 residue in the DFG-out inactive conformation of BMX. It displayed a high selectivity profile (S score(1) = 0.01) against the 468 kinases/mutants in the KINOMEscan evaluation and achieved at least 40-fold selectivity over BTK kinase. Given the fact that BMX mediated signaling pathway is still not fully understood, compound 41 would serve as a useful pharmacological tool to elucidate the detailed mechanism of BMX mediated signaling pathways.


Oncotarget | 2017

Discovery and characterization of a novel irreversible EGFR mutants selective and potent kinase inhibitor CHMFL-EGFR-26 with a distinct binding mode

Chen Hu; Aoli Wang; Hong Wu; Ziping Qi; Xixiang Li; Xiao-E Yan; Cheng Chen; Kailin Yu; Fengming Zou; Wenchao Wang; Wei Wang; Jiaxin Wu; Juan Liu; Beilei Wang; Li Wang; Tao Ren; Shanchun Zhang; Cai-Hong Yun; Jing Liu; Qingsong Liu

EGFR T790M mutation accounts for about 40-55% drug resistance for the first generation EGFR kinase inhibitors in the NSCLC. Starting from ibrutinib, a highly potent irreversible BTK kinase inhibitor, which was also found to be moderately active to EGFR T790M mutant, we discovered a highly potent irreversible EGFR inhibitor CHMFL-EGFR-26, which is selectively potent against EGFR mutants including L858R, del19, and L858R/T790M. It displayed proper selectivity window between the EGFR mutants and the wide-type. CHMFL-EGFR-26 exhibited good selectivity profile among 468 kinases/mutants tested (S score (1)=0.02). In addition, X-ray crystallography revealed a distinct “DFG-in” and “cHelix-out” inactive binding mode between CHMFL-EGFR-26 and EGFR T790M protein. The compound showed highly potent anti-proliferative efficacy against EGFR mutant but not wide-type NSCLC cell lines through effective inhibition of the EGFR mediated signaling pathway, induction of apoptosis and arresting of cell cycle progression. CHMFL-EGFR-26 bore acceptable pharmacokinetic properties and demonstrated dose-dependent tumor growth suppression in the H1975 (EGFR L858R/T790M) and PC-9 (EGFR del19) inoculated xenograft mouse models. Currently CHMFL-EGFR-26 is undergoing extensive pre-clinical evaluation for the clinical trial purpose.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017

Discovery of 4-Methyl-N-(4-((4-methylpiperazin-1-yl)methyl)-3-(trifluoromethyl)phenyl)-3-((1-nicotinoylpiperidin-4-yl)oxy)benzamide (CHMFL-ABL/KIT-155) as a Novel Highly Potent Type II ABL/KIT Dual Kinase Inhibitor with a Distinct Hinge Binding

Qiang Wang; Feiyang Liu; Beilei Wang; Fengming Zou; Ziping Qi; Cheng Chen; Kailin Yu; Chen Hu; Shuang Qi; Wenchao Wang; Zhenquan Hu; Juan Liu; Wei Wang; Li Wang; Qianmao Liang; Shanchun Zhang; Tao Ren; Qingsong Liu; Jing Liu

The discovery of a novel potent type II ABL/c-KIT dual kinase inhibitor compound 34 (CHMFL-ABL/KIT-155), which utilized a hydrogen bond formed by NH on the kinase backbone and carbonyl oxygen of 34 as a unique hinge binding, is described. 34 potently inhibited purified ABL (IC50: 46 nM) and c-KIT kinase (IC50: 75 nM) in the biochemical assays and displayed high selectivity (S Score (1) = 0.03) at the concentration of 1 μM among 468 kinases/mutants in KINOMEscan assay. It exhibited strong antiproliferative activities against BCR-ABL/c-KIT driven CML/GISTs cancer cell lines through blockage of the BCR-ABL/c-KIT mediated signaling pathways, arresting cell cycle progression and induction of apoptosis. 34 possessed a good oral PK property and effectively suppressed the tumor progression in the K562 (CML) and GIST-T1 (GISTs) cells mediated xenograft mouse model. The distinct hinge-binding mode of 34 provided a novel pharmacophore for expanding the chemical structure diversity for the type II kinase inhibitors discovery.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017

Discovery of 1-(4-(4-Amino-3-(4-(2-morpholinoethoxy)phenyl)-1H-pyrazolo[3,4-d]pyrimidin-1-yl)phenyl)-3-(5-(tert-butyl)isoxazol-3-yl)urea (CHMFL-FLT3-213) as a Highly Potent Type II FLT3 Kinase Inhibitor Capable of Overcoming a Variety of FLT3 Kinase Mutants in FLT3-ITD Positive AML

Aoli Wang; Xixiang Li; Cheng Chen; Hong Wu; Ziping Qi; Chen Hu; Kailin Yu; Jiaxin Wu; Juan Liu; Xiaochuan Liu; Zhenquan Hu; Wei Wang; Wenliang Wang; Wenchao Wang; Li Wang; Beilei Wang; Qingwang Liu; Lili Li; Jian Ge; Tao Ren; Shanchun Zhang; Ruixiang Xia; Jing Liu; Qingsong Liu

FLT3-ITD mutant has been observed in about 30% of AML patients and extensively studied as a drug discovery target. On the basis of our previous study that ibrutinib (9) exhibited selective and moderate inhibitory activity against FLT3-ITD positive AML cells, through a structure-guided drug design approach, we have discovered a new type II FLT3 kinase inhibitor, compound 14 (CHMFL-FLT3-213), which exhibited highly potent inhibitory effects against FLT3-ITD mutant and associated oncogenic mutations (including FLT3-D835Y/H/V, FLT3-ITD-D835Y/I/N/A/G/Del, and FLT3-ITD-F691L). In the cellular context 14 strongly affected FLT3-ITD mediated signaling pathways and induced apoptosis by arresting cell cycle into G0/G1 phase. In the in vivo studies 14 demonstrated an acceptable bioavailability (F = 19%) and significantly suppressed the tumor growth in MV4-11 cell inoculated xenograft model (15 mg kg-1 day-1, TGI = 97%) without exhibiting obvious toxicity. Compound 14 might be a potential drug candidate for FLT3-ITD positive AML.

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Jing Liu

Southwest University of Science and Technology

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Kailin Yu

University of Science and Technology of China

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Qingsong Liu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Wenchao Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Aoli Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Chen Hu

University of Science and Technology of China

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Hong Wu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Ziping Qi

University of Science and Technology of China

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Beilei Wang

City University of Hong Kong

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