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Featured researches published by Kennan C. Marsh.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2007

ABT-888, an Orally Active Poly(ADP-Ribose) Polymerase Inhibitor that Potentiates DNA-Damaging Agents in Preclinical Tumor Models

Cherrie K. Donawho; Yan Luo; Yanping Luo; Thomas D. Penning; Joy Bauch; Jennifer J. Bouska; Velitchka Bontcheva-Diaz; Bryan F. Cox; Theodore L. DeWeese; Larry E. Dillehay; Debra Ferguson; Nayereh S. Ghoreishi-Haack; David R. Grimm; Ran Guan; Edward K. Han; Rhonda R. Holley-Shanks; Boris Hristov; Kenneth B. Idler; Ken Jarvis; Eric F. Johnson; Lawrence Kleinberg; Vered Klinghofer; Loren M. Lasko; Xuesong Liu; Kennan C. Marsh; Thomas McGonigal; Jonathan A. Meulbroek; Amanda M. Olson; Joann P. Palma; Luis E. Rodriguez

Purpose: To evaluate the preclinical pharmacokinetics and antitumor efficacy of a novel orally bioavailable poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitor, ABT-888. Experimental Design:In vitro potency was determined in a PARP-1 and PARP-2 enzyme assay. In vivo efficacy was evaluated in syngeneic and xenograft models in combination with temozolomide, platinums, cyclophosphamide, and ionizing radiation. Results: ABT-888 is a potent inhibitor of both PARP-1 and PARP-2 with Kis of 5.2 and 2.9 nmol/L, respectively. The compound has good oral bioavailability and crosses the blood-brain barrier. ABT-888 strongly potentiated temozolomide in the B16F10 s.c. murine melanoma model. PARP inhibition dramatically increased the efficacy of temozolomide at ABT-888 doses as low as 3.1 mg/kg/d and a maximal efficacy achieved at 25 mg/kg/d. In the 9L orthotopic rat glioma model, temozolomide alone exhibited minimal efficacy, whereas ABT-888, when combined with temozolomide, significantly slowed tumor progression. In the MX-1 breast xenograft model (BRCA1 deletion and BRCA2 mutation), ABT-888 potentiated cisplatin, carboplatin, and cyclophosphamide, causing regression of established tumors, whereas with comparable doses of cytotoxic agents alone, only modest tumor inhibition was exhibited. Finally, ABT-888 potentiated radiation (2 Gy/d × 10) in an HCT-116 colon carcinoma model. In each model, ABT-888 did not display single-agent activity. Conclusions: ABT-888 is a potent inhibitor of PARP, has good oral bioavailability, can cross the blood-brain barrier, and potentiates temozolomide, platinums, cyclophosphamide, and radiation in syngeneic and xenograft tumor models. This broad spectrum of chemopotentiation and radiopotentiation makes this compound an attractive candidate for clinical evaluation.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

A-803467, a potent and selective Nav1.8 sodium channel blocker, attenuates neuropathic and inflammatory pain in the rat.

Michael F. Jarvis; Prisca Honore; Char Chang Shieh; Mark L. Chapman; Shailen K. Joshi; Xu Feng Zhang; Michael E. Kort; William L. Carroll; Brian Edward Marron; Robert Nelson Atkinson; James P. Thomas; Dong Liu; Michael J. Krambis; Yi Liu; Steve McGaraughty; Katharine L. Chu; Rosemarie Roeloffs; Chengmin Zhong; Joseph P. Mikusa; Gricelda Hernandez; Donna M. Gauvin; Carrie L. Wade; Chang Zhu; Madhavi Pai; Marc Scanio; Lei Shi; Irene Drizin; Robert J. Gregg; Mark A. Matulenko; Ahmed A. Hakeem

Activation of tetrodotoxin-resistant sodium channels contributes to action potential electrogenesis in neurons. Antisense oligonucleotide studies directed against Nav1.8 have shown that this channel contributes to experimental inflammatory and neuropathic pain. We report here the discovery of A-803467, a sodium channel blocker that potently blocks tetrodotoxin-resistant currents (IC50 = 140 nM) and the generation of spontaneous and electrically evoked action potentials in vitro in rat dorsal root ganglion neurons. In recombinant cell lines, A-803467 potently blocked human Nav1.8 (IC50 = 8 nM) and was >100-fold selective vs. human Nav1.2, Nav1.3, Nav1.5, and Nav1.7 (IC50 values ≥1 μM). A-803467 (20 mg/kg, i.v.) blocked mechanically evoked firing of wide dynamic range neurons in the rat spinal dorsal horn. A-803467 also dose-dependently reduced mechanical allodynia in a variety of rat pain models including: spinal nerve ligation (ED50 = 47 mg/kg, i.p.), sciatic nerve injury (ED50 = 85 mg/kg, i.p.), capsaicin-induced secondary mechanical allodynia (ED50 ≈ 100 mg/kg, i.p.), and thermal hyperalgesia after intraplantar complete Freunds adjuvant injection (ED50 = 41 mg/kg, i.p.). A-803467 was inactive against formalin-induced nociception and acute thermal and postoperative pain. These data demonstrate that acute and selective pharmacological blockade of Nav1.8 sodium channels in vivo produces significant antinociception in animal models of neuropathic and inflammatory pain.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2006

A-740003 [N-(1-{[(Cyanoimino)(5-quinolinylamino) methyl]amino}-2,2-dimethylpropyl)-2-(3,4-dimethoxyphenyl)acetamide], a Novel and Selective P2X7 Receptor Antagonist, Dose-Dependently Reduces Neuropathic Pain in the Rat

Prisca Honore; Diana L. Donnelly-Roberts; Marian T. Namovic; Gin C. Hsieh; Chang Z. Zhu; Joe Mikusa; Gricelda Hernandez; Chengmin Zhong; Donna M. Gauvin; Prasant Chandran; Richard R. Harris; Arturo Perez Medrano; William A. Carroll; Kennan C. Marsh; James P. Sullivan; Connie R. Faltynek; Michael F. Jarvis

ATP-sensitive P2X7 receptors are localized on cells of immunological origin including glial cells in the central nervous system. Activation of P2X7 receptors leads to rapid changes in intracellular calcium concentrations, release of the proinflammatory cytokine interleukin-1β (IL-1β), and following prolonged agonist exposure, cytolytic plasma membrane pore formation. P2X7 knockout mice show reduced inflammation as well as decreased nociceptive sensitivity following peripheral nerve injury. A-740003 (N-(1-{[(cyanoimino)(5-quinolinylamino) methyl] amino}-2,2-dimethylpropyl)-2-(3,4-dimethoxyphenyl)acetamide) is a novel competitive antagonist of P2X7 receptors (IC50 values = 40 nM for human and 18 nM for rat) as measured by agonist-stimulated changes in intracellular calcium concentrations. A-740003 showed weak or no activity (IC50 > 10 μM) at other P2 receptors and an array of other neurotransmitter and peptide receptors, ion channels, reuptake sites, and enzymes. A-740003 potently blocked agonist-evoked IL-1β release (IC50 = 156 nM) and pore formation (IC50 = 92 nM) in differentiated human THP-1 cells. Systemic administration of A-740003 produced dose-dependent antinociception in a spinal nerve ligation model (ED50 = 19 mg/kg i.p.) in the rat. A-740003 also attenuated tactile allodynia in two other models of neuropathic pain, chronic constriction injury of the sciatic nerve and vincristine-induced neuropathy. In addition, A-740003 effectively reduced thermal hyperalgesia observed following intraplantar administration of carrageenan or complete Freunds adjuvant (ED50 = 38–54 mg/kg i.p.). A-740003 was ineffective in attenuating acute thermal nociception in normal rats and did not alter motor performance at analgesic doses. These data demonstrate that selective blockade of P2X7 receptors in vivo produces significant antinociception in animal models of neuropathic and inflammatory pain.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2004

Pharmacological Properties of ABT-239 [4-(2-{2-[(2R)-2-Methylpyrrolidinyl]ethyl}-benzofuran-5-yl)benzonitrile]: II. Neurophysiological Characterization and Broad Preclinical Efficacy in Cognition and Schizophrenia of a Potent and Selective Histamine H3 Receptor Antagonist

Gerard B. Fox; Timothy A. Esbenshade; Jia Bao Pan; Richard J. Radek; Kathleen M. Krueger; Betty B. Yao; Kaitlin E. Browman; Michael J. Buckley; Michael E. Ballard; Victoria A. Komater; Holly Miner; Min Zhang; Ramin Faghih; Lynne E. Rueter; R. Scott Bitner; Karla U. Drescher; Jill M. Wetter; Kennan C. Marsh; Martine Lemaire; Roger D. Porsolt; Youssef L. Bennani; James P. Sullivan; Marlon D. Cowart; Michael W. Decker; Arthur A. Hancock

Acute pharmacological blockade of central histamine H3 receptors (H3Rs) enhances arousal/attention in rodents. However, there is little information available for other behavioral domains or for repeated administration using selective compounds. ABT-239 [4-(2-{2-[(2R)-2-methylpyrrolidinyl]ethyl}-benzofuran-5-yl)benzonitrile] exemplifies such a selective, nonimidazole H3R antagonist with high affinity for rat (pKi = 8.9) and human (pKi = 9.5) H3Rs. Acute functional blockade of central H3 Rs was demonstrated by blocking the dipsogenia response to the selective H3R agonist (R)-α-methylhistamine in mice. In cognition studies, acquisition of a five-trial, inhibitory avoidance test in rat pups was improved with ABT-239 (0.1–1.0 mg/kg), a 10- to 150-fold gain in potency, with similar efficacy, over previous antagonists such as thioperamide, ciproxifan, A-304121 [(4-(3-(4-((2R)-2-aminopropanoyl)-1-piperazinyl)propoxy)phenyl)(cyclopropyl) methanone], A-317920 [N-((1R)-2-(4-(3-(4-(cyclopropylcarbonyl) phenoxy)propyl)-1-piperazinyl)-1-methyl-2-oxoethyl)-2-furamide], and A-349821 [(4′-(3-((R,R)2,5-dimethyl-pyrrolidin-1-yl)-propoxy)-biphenyl-4-yl)-morpholin-4-yl-methanone]. Efficacy in this model was maintained for 3 to 6 h and following repeated dosing with ABT-239. Social memory was also improved in adult (0.01–0.3 mg/kg) and aged (0.3–1.0 mg/kg) rats. In schizophrenia models, ABT-239 improved gating deficits in DBA/2 mice using prepulse inhibition of startle (1.0–3.0 mg/kg) and N40 (1.0–10.0 mg/kg). Furthermore, ABT-239 (1.0 mg/kg) attenuated methamphetamine-induced hyperactivity in mice. In freely moving rat microdialysis studies, ABT-239 enhanced acetylcholine release (0.1–3.0 mg/kg) in adult rat frontal cortex and hippocampus and enhanced dopamine release in frontal cortex (3.0 mg/kg), but not striatum. In summary, broad efficacy was observed with ABT-239 across animal models such that potential clinical efficacy may extend beyond disorders such as ADHD to include Alzheimers disease and schizophrenia.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2006

TRPV1 receptors in the CNS play a key role in broad-spectrum analgesia of TRPV1 antagonists.

M. Cui; Prisca Honore; C. Zhong; D. Gauvin; J. Mikusa; G. Hernandez; P. Chandran; A. Gomtsyan; B. Brown; E. K. Bayburt; Kennan C. Marsh; B. Bianchi; H. McDonald; W. Niforatos; Torben R. Neelands; Robert B. Moreland; Michael W. Decker; C.-H. Lee; James P. Sullivan; Connie R. Faltynek

Vanilloid receptor type 1 (TRPV1) is a ligand-gated nonselective cation channel that is considered to be an important integrator of various pain stimuli such as endogenous lipids, capsaicin, heat, and low pH. In addition to expression in primary afferents, TRPV1 is also expressed in the CNS. To test the hypothesis that the CNS plays a differential role in the effect of TRPV1 antagonists in various types of pain, the analgesic effects of two TRPV1 antagonists with similar in vitro potency but different CNS penetration were compared in vivo. Oral administration of either A-784168 (1-[3-(trifluoromethyl)pyridin-2-yl]-N-[4-(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)phenyl]-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine-4-carboxamide) (good CNS penetration) or A-795614 (N-1H-indazol-4-yl-N′-[(1R)-5-piperidin-1-yl-2,3-dihydro-1H-inden-1-yl]urea) (poor CNS penetration) blocked capsaicin-induced acute pain with the same potency. In complete Freunds adjuvant (CFA)-induced chronic inflammatory pain, oral administration of either compound blocked thermal hyperalgesia with similar potency. Furthermore, intraplantar or intrathecal administration of A-784168 blocked CFA-induced thermal hyperalgesia, suggesting that both peripheral and CNS TRPV1 receptors may play a role in inflammatory thermal hyperalgesia. The effects of the two TRPV1 antagonists were further assessed in models presumably mediated by central sensitization, including CFA- and capsaicin-induced mechanical allodynia and osteoarthritic pain. In these models, the potency of the two compounds was similar after intrathecal administration. However, when administered orally, A-784168, with good CNS penetration, was much more potent than A-795614. Together, these results demonstrate that TRPV1 receptors in the CNS play an important role in pain mediated by central sensitization. In addition, these results demonstrate that significant CNS penetration is necessary for a TRPV1 antagonist to produce broad-spectrum analgesia.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009

Discovery of the Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitor 2-[(R)-2-methylpyrrolidin-2-yl]-1H-benzimidazole-4-carboxamide (ABT-888) for the treatment of cancer.

Thomas D. Penning; Gui-Dong Zhu; Viraj B. Gandhi; Jianchun Gong; Xuesong Liu; Yan Shi; Vered Klinghofer; Eric F. Johnson; Cherrie K. Donawho; David J. Frost; Velitchka Bontcheva-Diaz; Jennifer J. Bouska; Donald J. Osterling; Amanda M. Olson; Kennan C. Marsh; Yan Luo; Vincent L. Giranda

We have developed a series of cyclic amine-containing benzimidazole carboxamide PARP inhibitors with a methyl-substituted quaternary center at the point of attachment to the benzimidazole ring system. These compounds exhibit excellent PARP enzyme potency as well as single-digit nanomolar cellular potency. These efforts led to the identification of 3a (2-[(R)-2-methylpyrrolidin-2-yl]-1H-benzimidazole-4-carboxamide, ABT-888), currently in human phase I clinical trials. Compound 3a displayed excellent potency against both the PARP-1 and PARP-2 enzymes with a K(i) of 5 nM and in a C41 whole cell assay with an EC(50) of 2 nM. In addition, 3a is aqueous soluble, orally bioavailable across multiple species, and demonstrated good in vivo efficacy in a B16F10 subcutaneous murine melanoma model in combination with temozolomide (TMZ) and in an MX-1 breast cancer xenograft model in combination with either carboplatin or cyclophosphamide.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2004

Pharmacological Properties of ABT-239: II. Neurophysiological Characterization and Broad Preclinical Efficacy in Cognition and Schizophrenia of a Potent and Selective Histamine H3 Receptor Antagonist

Gerard B. Fox; Timothy A. Esbenshade; Jia Bao Pan; Richard J. Radek; Kathleen M. Krueger; Betty B. Yao; Kaitlin E. Browman; Michael J. Buckley; Michael E. Ballard; Victoria A. Komater; Holly Miner; Min Zhang; Ramin Faghih; Lynne E. Rueter; Robert S. Bitner; Karla U. Drescher; Jill M. Wetter; Kennan C. Marsh; Martine Lemaire; Roger D. Porsolt; Youssef L. Bennani; James P. Sullivan; Marlon D. Cowart; Michael W. Decker; Arthur A. Hancock

Acute pharmacological blockade of central histamine H3 receptors (H3Rs) enhances arousal/attention in rodents. However, there is little information available for other behavioral domains or for repeated administration using selective compounds. ABT-239 [4-(2-{2-[(2R)-2-methylpyrrolidinyl]ethyl}-benzofuran-5-yl)benzonitrile] exemplifies such a selective, nonimidazole H3R antagonist with high affinity for rat (pKi = 8.9) and human (pKi = 9.5) H3Rs. Acute functional blockade of central H3 Rs was demonstrated by blocking the dipsogenia response to the selective H3R agonist (R)-α-methylhistamine in mice. In cognition studies, acquisition of a five-trial, inhibitory avoidance test in rat pups was improved with ABT-239 (0.1–1.0 mg/kg), a 10- to 150-fold gain in potency, with similar efficacy, over previous antagonists such as thioperamide, ciproxifan, A-304121 [(4-(3-(4-((2R)-2-aminopropanoyl)-1-piperazinyl)propoxy)phenyl)(cyclopropyl) methanone], A-317920 [N-((1R)-2-(4-(3-(4-(cyclopropylcarbonyl) phenoxy)propyl)-1-piperazinyl)-1-methyl-2-oxoethyl)-2-furamide], and A-349821 [(4′-(3-((R,R)2,5-dimethyl-pyrrolidin-1-yl)-propoxy)-biphenyl-4-yl)-morpholin-4-yl-methanone]. Efficacy in this model was maintained for 3 to 6 h and following repeated dosing with ABT-239. Social memory was also improved in adult (0.01–0.3 mg/kg) and aged (0.3–1.0 mg/kg) rats. In schizophrenia models, ABT-239 improved gating deficits in DBA/2 mice using prepulse inhibition of startle (1.0–3.0 mg/kg) and N40 (1.0–10.0 mg/kg). Furthermore, ABT-239 (1.0 mg/kg) attenuated methamphetamine-induced hyperactivity in mice. In freely moving rat microdialysis studies, ABT-239 enhanced acetylcholine release (0.1–3.0 mg/kg) in adult rat frontal cortex and hippocampus and enhanced dopamine release in frontal cortex (3.0 mg/kg), but not striatum. In summary, broad efficacy was observed with ABT-239 across animal models such that potential clinical efficacy may extend beyond disorders such as ADHD to include Alzheimers disease and schizophrenia.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2007

Broad-Spectrum Efficacy across Cognitive Domains by α7 Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor Agonism Correlates with Activation of ERK1/2 and CREB Phosphorylation Pathways

Robert S. Bitner; William H. Bunnelle; David J. Anderson; Clark A. Briggs; Jerry J. Buccafusco; Peter Curzon; Michael W. Decker; Jennifer M. Frost; Jens Halvard Grønlien; Earl J. Gubbins; Jinhe Li; John Malysz; Stella Markosyan; Kennan C. Marsh; Michael D. Meyer; Arthur L. Nikkel; Richard J. Radek; Holly M. Robb; Daniel B. Timmermann; James P. Sullivan; Murali Gopalakrishnan

The α7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) plays an important role in cognitive processes and may represent a drug target for treating cognitive deficits in neurodegenerative and psychiatric disorders. In the present study, we used a novel α7 nAChR-selective agonist, 2-methyl-5-(6-phenyl-pyridazin-3-yl)-octahydro-pyrrolo[3,4-c]pyrrole (A-582941) to interrogate cognitive efficacy, as well as examine potential cellular mechanisms of cognition. Exhibiting high affinity to native rat (K i = 10.8 nm) and human (K i = 16.7 nm) α7 nAChRs, A-582941 enhanced cognitive performance in behavioral assays including the monkey delayed matching-to-sample, rat social recognition, and mouse inhibitory avoidance models that capture domains of working memory, short-term recognition memory, and long-term memory consolidation, respectively. In addition, A-582941 normalized sensory gating deficits induced by the α7 nAChR antagonist methyllycaconitine in rats, and in DBA/2 mice that exhibit a natural sensory gating deficit. Examination of signaling pathways known to be involved in cognitive function revealed that α7 nAChR agonism increased extracellular-signal regulated kinase 1/2 (ERK1/2) phosphorylation in PC12 cells. Furthermore, increases in ERK1/2 and cAMP response element-binding protein (CREB) phosphorylation were observed in mouse cingulate cortex and/or hippocampus after acute A-582941 administration producing plasma concentrations in the range of α7 binding affinities and behavioral efficacious doses. The MEK inhibitor SL327 completely blocked α7 agonist-evoked ERK1/2 phosphorylation. Our results demonstrate that α7 nAChR agonism can lead to broad-spectrum efficacy in animal models at doses that enhance ERK1/2 and CREB phosphorylation/activation and may represent a mechanism that offers potential to improve cognitive deficits associated with neurodegenerative and psychiatric diseases, such as Alzheimers disease and schizophrenia.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

Validation of diacyl glycerolacyltransferase I as a novel target for the treatment of obesity and dyslipidemia using a potent and selective small molecule inhibitor.

Gang Zhao; Andrew J. Souers; Martin J. Voorbach; H. Doug Falls; Brian A. Droz; Sevan Brodjian; Yau Yi Lau; Rajesh R. Iyengar; Ju Gao; Andrew S. Judd; Seble Wagaw; Matthew M. Ravn; Kenneth M. Engstrom; John K. Lynch; Mathew M. Mulhern; Jennifer L. Freeman; Brian D. Dayton; Xiaojun Wang; Nelson Grihalde; Dennis G. Fry; David W. A. Beno; Kennan C. Marsh; Zhi Su; Gilbert Diaz; Christine A. Collins; Hing L. Sham; Regina M. Reilly; Michael E. Brune; Philip R. Kym

A highly potent and selective DGAT-1 inhibitor was identified and used in rodent models of obesity and postprandial chylomicron excursion to validate DGAT-1 inhibition as a novel approach for the treatment of metabolic diseases. Specifically, compound 4a conferred weight loss and a reduction in liver triglycerides when dosed chronically in DIO mice and depleted serum triglycerides following a lipid challenge in a dose-dependent manner, thus, reproducing major phenotypical characteristics of DGAT-1(-/-) mice.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2010

In Vivo Pharmacological Characterization of a Novel Selective α7 Neuronal Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor Agonist ABT-107: Preclinical Considerations in Alzheimer's Disease

R. Scott Bitner; William H. Bunnelle; Michael W. Decker; Karla Drescher; Kathy L. Kohlhaas; Stella Markosyan; Kennan C. Marsh; Arthur L. Nikkel; Kaitlin E. Browman; Rich Radek; David J. Anderson; Jerry J. Buccafusco; Murali Gopalakrishnan

We previously reported that α7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) agonism produces efficacy in preclinical cognition models correlating with activation of cognitive and neuroprotective signaling pathways associated with Alzheimers disease (AD) pathology. In the present studies, the selective and potent α7 nAChR agonist 5-(6-[(3R)-1-azabicyclo[2.2.2]oct-3-yloxy] pyridazin-3-yl)-1H-indole (ABT-107) was evaluated in behavioral assays representing distinct cognitive domains. Studies were also conducted to address potential issues that may be associated with the clinical development of an α7 nAChR agonist. Specifically, ABT-107 improved cognition in monkey delayed matching to sample, rat social recognition, and mouse two-trial inhibitory avoidance, and continued to improve cognitive performance at injection times when exposure levels continued to decline. Rats concurrently infused with ABT-107 and donepezil at steady-state levels consistent with clinical exposure showed improved short-term recognition memory. Compared with nicotine, ABT-107 did not produce behavioral sensitization in rats or exhibit psychomotor stimulant activity in mice. Repeated (3 days) daily dosing of ABT-107 increased extracellular cortical acetylcholine in rats, whereas acute administration increased cortical extracellular signal-regulated kinase and cAMP response element-binding protein phosphorylation in mice, neurochemical and biochemical events germane to cognitive function. ABT-107 increased cortical phosphorylation of the inhibitory residue (Ser9) of glycogen synthase kinase-3, a primary tau kinase associated with AD pathology. In addition, continuous infusion of ABT-107 in tau/amyloid precursor protein transgenic AD mice reduced spinal tau hyperphosphorylation. These findings show that targeting α7 nAChRs may have potential utility for symptomatic alleviation and slowing of disease progression in the treatment AD, and expand the understanding of the potential therapeutic viability associated with the α7 nAChR approach in the treatment of AD.

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Hing L. Sham

Thermo Fisher Scientific

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Dale J. Kempf

National Institutes of Health

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Gin C. Hsieh

University of Texas at Austin

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