Kathleen A. Sullivan
Merck & Co.
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Featured researches published by Kathleen A. Sullivan.
FEBS Letters | 1997
Andrew D. Howard; Carina Tan; Lin-Lin Shiao; Oksana C. Palyha; Karen Kulju McKee; David H. Weinberg; Scott D. Feighner; Margaret A. Cascieri; Roy G. Smith; Lex H.T. Van der Ploeg; Kathleen A. Sullivan
Galanin (GAL) is a widely distributed neuropeptide with diverse biological effects including modulation of hormone release, antinociception and modification of feeding behavior. Its effects are mediated through G‐protein‐coupled receptors (GPCR) for which only a single type has been cloned, GAL receptor 1 (GALR1). We describe the cloning of a second galanin receptor type, GALR2, from rat hypothalamus. The GALR2 amino acid sequence is 38% identical to GALR1 and is pharmacologically similar to GALR1 when expressed in COS‐7 cells. GALR2 is encoded by a single gene containing at least one intron and expressed in a diverse range of tissues.
Journal of Neurochemistry | 2002
Lee F. Kolakowski; Gary P. O'Neill; Andrew D. Howard; Suzanne R. Broussard; Kathleen A. Sullivan; Scott D. Feighner; Marek Sawzdargo; Tuan V. Nguyen; Stacia Kargman; Lin-Lin Shiao; Donna L. Hreniuk; Carina P. Tan; Jilly F. Evans; Mark Abramovitz; Anne Chateauneuf; Nathalie Coulombe; Gordon Y. K. Ng; Michael P. Johnson; Anita Tharian; Habibeh Khoshbouei; Susan R. George; Roy G. Smith; Brian F. O'Dowd
Abstract: Galanin is a 29‐ or 30‐amino acid peptide with wide‐ranging effects on hormone release, feeding behavior, smooth muscle contractility, and somatosensory neuronal function. Three distinct galanin receptor (GALR) subtypes, designated GALR1, 2, and 3, have been cloned from the rat. We report here the cloning of the human GALR2 and GALR3 genes, an initial characterization of their pharmacology with respect to radioligand binding and signal transduction pathways, and a profile of their expression in brain and peripheral tissues. Human GALR2 and GALR3 show, respectively, 92 and 89% amino acid sequence identity with their rat homologues. Radioligand binding studies with 125I‐galanin show that recombinant human GALR2 binds with high affinity to human galanin (KD = 0.3 nM). Human GALR3 binds galanin with less affinity (IC50 of 12 nM for porcine galanin and 75 nM for human galanin). Human GALR2 was shown to couple to phospholipase C and elevation of intracellular calcium levels as assessed by aequorin luminescence in HEK‐293 cells and by Xenopus melanophore pigment aggregation and dispersion assays, in contrast to human GALR1 and human GALR3, which signal predominantly through inhibition of adenylate cyclase. GALR2 mRNA shows a wide distribution in the brain (mammillary nuclei, dentate gyrus, cingulate gyrus, and posterior hypothalamic, supraoptic, and arcuate nuclei), and restricted peripheral tissue distribution with highest mRNA levels detected in human small intestine. In comparison, whereas GALR3 mRNA was expressed in many areas of the rat brain, there was abundant expression in the primary olfactory cortex, olfactory tubercle, the islands of Calleja, the hippocampal CA regions of Ammons horn, and the dentate gyrus. GALR3 mRNA was highly expressed in human testis and was detectable in adrenal gland and pancreas. The genes for human GALR2 and 3 were localized to chromosomes 17q25 and 22q12.2–13.1, respectively.
American Journal of Transplantation | 2008
Jean Kwun; S. M. Hazinedaroglu; Erik Schadde; H. A. Kayaoglu; John H. Fechner; Huaizhong Hu; Drew A. Roenneburg; Jose Torrealba; L. Shiao; Xuening Hong; R. Peng; J. W. Szewczyk; Kathleen A. Sullivan; Julie A. DeMartino; Stuart J. Knechtle
Previous studies showed that absence of chemokine receptor Cxcr3 or its blockade prolong mouse cardiac allograft survival. We evaluated the effect of the CXCR3 receptor antagonist MRL‐957 on cardiac allograft survival, and also examined the impact of anti‐CXCR3 mAb in human CXCR3 knock‐in mice. We found only a moderate increase in graft survival (10.5 and 16.6 days, p < 0.05) using either the antagonist or the antibody, respectively, compared to control (8.7 days). We re‐evaluated cardiac allograft survival with two different lines of Cxcr3−/‐ mice. Interestingly, in our hands, neither of the independently derived Cxcr3−/‐ lines showed remarkable prolongation, with mean graft survival of 9.5 and 10.8 days, respectively. There was no difference in the number of infiltrating mononuclear cells, expansion of splenic T cells or IFN‐γ production of alloreactive T cells. Mechanistically, an increased other chemokine receptor fraction in the graft infiltrating CD8 T cells in Cxcr3−/‐ recipients compared to wild‐type recipients suggested compensatory T‐cell trafficking in the absence of Cxcr3. We conclude Cxcr3 may contribute to, but does not govern, leukocyte trafficking in this transplant model.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997
Gary G. Chicchi; Michael P. Graziano; Greg Koch; Patricia J. Hey; Kathleen A. Sullivan; Pasquale P. Vicario; Margaret A. Cascieri
Deletion of residues 252-259 within the putative second intracellular loop of the human glucagon receptor results in a protein with high affinity for glucagon but with attenuated agonist activation of adenylyl cyclase. The Δ252-259 mutant has 4-fold higher affinity for glucagon than does the wild type receptor. The nonhydrolyzable GTP analog, guanosine 5′-(β,γ-imido)triphosphate (Gpp(NH)p), inhibits binding of 125I-glucagon to the wild type receptor but not to the Δ252-259 mutant. Divalent cations such as MgCl2 and CaCl2 stimulate the binding of 125I-glucagon to the wild type receptor by increasing glucagon affinity. The rate of dissociation of 125I-glucagon is decreased 4-fold by MgCl2 and increased 6-fold by Gpp(NH)p. However, divalent cations do not affect the binding of 125I-glucagon to the Δ252-259 mutant. The rate of dissociation of 125I-glucagon from the Δ252-259 mutant protein is equivalent to the rate of dissociation from the wild type receptor in the presence of MgCl2. These data suggest that at least three conformations of the glucagon receptor can exist in the membrane based on their differing affinities for 125I-glucagon. Deletion of residues 252-259 appears to lock the protein in the conformation promoted by divalent cations and prevents the protein from normal coupling to Gs.
European Journal of Pharmacology | 2000
Jerry Di Salvo; Greg Koch; Kristine E. Johnson; Allan D. Blake; Bruce L. Daugherty; Julie A. DeMartino; Anna Sirotina-Meisher; Yong Liu; Martin S. Springer; Margaret A. Cascieri; Kathleen A. Sullivan
The alpha chemokine receptor CXCR4 and its only characterized chemokine ligand, stromal cell-derived factor-1 (SDF-1), are postulated to be important in the development of the B-cell arm of the immune system. In addition, CXCR4 is a critical coreceptor in support of viral entry by T-cell line tropic strains (X4) of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1), viral variants which predominate in some infected individuals in end stage disease. SDF-1 can block X4-tropic HIV-1 infection of CD4+ target cells in vitro, and allelic variants of the human gene encoding SDF-1 in vivo correlate with delayed disease progression. Therefore, CXCR4 may be an appropriate target for therapeutic intervention in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), and knowledge of the pharmacology of SDF-1 binding to its cognate receptor will be important in the interpretation of these experiments. We report here a Kd derived using a competition binding assay of 4.5 nM for CXCR4 endogenously expressed on peripheral blood monocytes and T-cells. This affinity is similar to that which SDF-1 exhibits when binding to endogenous CXCR4 on an established immortal Jurkat T-cell line as well as recombinant CXCR4 transfected into Chinese Hamster Ovary (CHO) cells. We also demonstrate that the determined affinity of SDF-1 for CXCR4 is reflective of its ability to induce a CXCR4-mediated signal transduction in these different cell types. Furthermore, using Bordetella pertussis toxin, we observe that high affinity binding of SDF-1 to CXCR4 is independent of the G-protein coupled state of the receptor, as uncoupling of G-protein did not lead to the appearance of measurable low affinity SDF-1 binding sites. Moreover, binding affinity and receptor number were unaffected by uncoupling for both recombinant and endogenously expressed CXCR4. Thus, SDF-1 is novel among agonist ligands of G protein-coupled receptors in that it appears to have equal affinity for both the G protein-coupled and uncoupled states of CXCR4.
Transgenic Research | 1999
Lin–Lin Shiao; Margaret A. Cascieri; Myrna E. Trumbauer; Howard Y. Chen; Kathleen A. Sullivan
The process of evaluating the in vivo efficacy of non–peptidyl receptor antagonists in animal models is frequently complicated by failure of compounds displaying high affinity against the human receptors to show measurable affinity at the corresponding rodent receptors. In order to generate a suitable animal model in which to evaluate the in vivo activity of non–peptidyl glucagon receptor antagonists, we have utilized a direct targeting approach to replace the murine glucagon receptor with the human glucagon receptor gene by homologous recombination. Specific expression of the human glucagon receptor (GR) in the livers of transgenic mice was confirmed with an RNase protection assay, and the pharmacology of the human GRs expressed in the livers of these mice parallels that of human GR in a recombinant CHO cell line with respect to both binding of 125I–glucagon and the ability of glucagon to stimulate cAMP production. L–168,049, a non–peptidyl GR antagonist selective for the human GR shows a 3.5 fold higher affinity for liver membrane preparations of human GR expressing mice (IC50=172±98nM) in the presence of MgCl2 in marked contrast to the measured affinity of the murine receptor (IC50=611±97nM) for this non–peptidyl antagonist. The human receptors expressed are functional as measured by the ability of glucagon to stimulate cAMP production and the selectivity of this antagonist for the human receptor is further verified by its ability to block glucagon–stimulated cyclase activity with 5 fold higher potency (IC50=97.2±13.9nM) than for the murine receptor (IC50=504±247nM). Thus we have developed a novel animal model for evaluating GR antagonists in vivo. These mice offer the advantage that the regulatory sequences which direct tissue specific and temporal expression of the GR have been unaltered and thus expression of the human gene in these mice remains in the normal chromosomal context.
Hypertension | 2013
Xiaoyan Zhou; Zuo Zhang; Myung K. Shin; Sarah Horwitz; John M. Levorse; Lei Zhu; Wanda Sharif-Rodriguez; Denis Y. Streltsov; Maya Dajee; Melba Hernandez; Yi Pan; Olga Urosevic-Price; Li Wang; Gail Forrest; Daphne Szeto; Yonghua Zhu; Yan Cui; Bindhu Michael; Leslie Ann Balogh; Paul A. Welling; James B. Wade; Sophie Roy; Kathleen A. Sullivan
The renal outer medullary potassium channel (ROMK, KCNJ1) mediates potassium recycling and facilitates sodium reabsorption through the Na+/K+/2Cl− cotransporter in the loop of Henle and potassium secretion at the cortical collecting duct. Human genetic studies indicate that ROMK homozygous loss-of-function mutations cause type II Bartter syndrome, featuring polyuria, renal salt wasting, and hypotension; humans heterozygous for ROMK mutations identified in the Framingham Heart Study have reduced blood pressure. ROMK null mice recapitulate many of the features of type II Bartter syndrome. We have generated an ROMK knockout rat model in Dahl salt-sensitive background by using zinc finger nuclease technology and investigated the effects of knocking out ROMK on systemic and renal hemodynamics and kidney histology in the Dahl salt-sensitive rats. The ROMK−/− pups recapitulated features identified in the ROMK null mice. The ROMK+/− rats, when challenged with a 4% salt diet, exhibited a reduced blood pressure compared with their ROMK+/+ littermates. More importantly, when challenged with an 8% salt diet, the Dahl salt-sensitive rats with 50% less ROMK expression showed increased protection from salt-induced blood pressure elevation and signs of protection from renal injury. Our findings in ROMK knockout Dahl salt-sensitive rats, together with the previous reports in humans and mice, underscore a critical role of ROMK in blood pressure regulation.
Journal of Immunology | 2007
Jean Kwun; Huaizhong Hu; Erik Schadde; Drew A. Roenneburg; Kathleen A. Sullivan; Julie A. DeMartino; William J. Burlingham; Stuart J. Knechtle
Chemokine-chemokine receptor interactions and the subsequent recruitment of T lymphocytes to the graft are believed to be among the initial events in the development of acute and chronic rejection of heart transplants. We sought to determine the role of chemokine receptor Cxcr3 on the development of acute and chronic rejection in a multiple minor Ag mismatched mouse heart transplant model. The frequencies and kinetics of immunodominant H60 (LTFNYRNL) miHA-specific CD8 T cells in wild-type or Cxcr3−/− C57BL/6 recipients were monitored using MHC class I tetramer after BALB/b donor hearts were transplanted. Acceptance of grafts, severity of rejection, and infiltration of T cells were not altered in Cxcr3−/− recipients. However, graft survival was moderately prolonged in Cxcr3−/− recipient mice undergoing acute rejection. Analyses of splenocytes, PBLs, and graft-infiltrating cells revealed increased alloreactive T cells (H60-specific CD8 T cells) in the peripheral blood and spleen but not in the graft. Adoptively transferred Cxcr3−/− CD8 T cells in the BALB/b heart-bearing B6 scid mice showed retention of alloreactive CD8 T cells in the blood but less infiltration into the graft. Cxcr3−/− recipients with long-term graft survival also showed a marked decrease of CD8+ T cell infiltration and reduced neo-intimal hyperplasia. These data indicate that Cxcr3 plays a critical role in the trafficking as well as activation of alloreactive T cells. This role is most eminent in a transplant model when a less complex inflammatory milieu is involved such as a well-matched graft and chronic rejection.
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013
Ping Liu; Terence G. Hamill; Marc D. Chioda; Harry R. Chobanian; Selena Fung; Yan Guo; Linda Chang; Raman K. Bakshi; Qingmei Hong; James Dellureficio; Linus S. Lin; Catherine Abbadie; Jessica Alexander; Hong Jin; Suzanne M. Mandala; Lin-Lin Shiao; Wenping Li; Sandra Sanabria; David J. Williams; Zhizhen Zeng; Richard Hajdu; Nina Jochnowitz; Mark Rosenbach; Bindhu V. Karanam; Maria Madeira; Gino Salituro; Joyce R. Powell; Ling Xu; Jenna L. Terebetski; Joseph F. Leone
We report herein the discovery of a fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) positron emission tomography (PET) tracer. Starting from a pyrazole lead, medicinal chemistry efforts directed toward reducing lipophilicity led to the synthesis of a series of imidazole analogues. Compound 6 was chosen for further profiling due to its appropriate physical chemical properties and excellent FAAH inhibition potency across species. [(11)C]-6 (MK-3168) exhibited good brain uptake and FAAH-specific signal in rhesus monkeys and is a suitable PET tracer for imaging FAAH in the brain.
Hypertension | 2017
Xiaoyan Zhou; Michael J. Forrest; Wanda Sharif-Rodriguez; Gail Forrest; Daphne Szeto; Olga Urosevic-Price; Yonghua Zhu; Andra Stevenson; Yuchen Zhou; Sloan Stribling; Maya Dajee; Shawn P. Walsh; Alexander Pasternak; Kathleen A. Sullivan
The renal outer medullary potassium (ROMK) channel mediates potassium recycling and facilitates sodium reabsorption through the Na+/K+/2Cl− cotransporter in the loop of Henle and potassium secretion at the cortical collecting duct. Evidence from the phenotype of humans and rodents with functional ROMK deficiency supports the contention that selective ROMK inhibitors (ROMKi) will represent a novel diuretic with potential of therapeutic benefit for hypertension. ROMKi have recently been synthesized by Merck & Co, Inc. The present studies were designed to examine the effects of ROMKi B on systemic hemodynamics, renal function and structure, and vascular function in Dahl salt-sensitive rats. Four experimental groups—control, high-salt diet alone; ROMKi B 3 mg·kg−1·d−1; ROMKi B 10 mg·kg−1·d−1; and hydrochlorothiazide 25 mg·kg−1·d−1—were included in prophylactic (from week 1 to week 9 on high-salt diet) and therapeutic studies (from week 5 to week 9 on high-salt diet), respectively. ROMKi B produced sustained blood pressure reduction and improved renal and vascular function and histological alterations induced by a high-salt diet. ROMKi B was superior to hydrochlorothiazide at reducing blood pressure. Furthermore, ROMKi B provided beneficial effects on both the plasma lipid profile and bone mineral density. Chronic ROMK inhibition not only prevented but also reversed the development of hypertension and end-organ damage in Dahl salt-sensitive rats. Our findings suggest a potential utility of ROMKi B as a novel antihypertensive agent, particularly for the treatment of the salt-sensitive hypertension patient population.