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Dive into the research topics where Kimberly O'keefe Cameron is active.

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Featured researches published by Kimberly O'keefe Cameron.


Endocrinology | 1998

Effects of CP-336,156, a New, Nonsteroidal Estrogen Agonist/Antagonist, on Bone, Serum Cholesterol, Uterus, and Body Composition in Rat Models.

Hua Zhu Ke; Vishwas M. Paralkar; William A. Grasser; D. Todd Crawford; Hong Qi; H.A. Simmons; C.M. Pirie; Kristin L. Chidsey-Frink; Thomas A. Owen; Steven L. Smock; Hong Ka Chen; Webster S. S. Jee; Kimberly O'keefe Cameron; Robert Louis Rosati; Thomas A. Brown; Paul DaSilva-Jardine; David Duane Thompson

We have discovered a new, nonsteroidal, potent estrogen agonist/antagonist, CP-336,156. CP-336,156 binds selectively and with high affinity to the human estrogen receptor-α with a half-inhibition concentration of 1.5 nm, which is similar to that seen with estradiol (4.8 nm). When given orally to immature (3-week-old) female Sprague-Dawley rats for 3 days at doses of 0.1, 1.0, 10, or 100 μg/kg·day, unlike 17α-ethynyl estradiol, CP-336,156 had no effect on uterine wet or dry weight. Similarly, no uterine hypertrophy was observed in aged (17-month-old) female rats treated (po) with CP-336,156 at 10 or 100 μg/kg·day for 28 days. We also found that CP-336,156 decreased total serum cholesterol and fat body mass and had no effect on lean body mass in these aged female rats. In 5-month-old ovariectomized (OVX) Sprague-Dawley female rats, CP-336,156 completely prevented OVX-induced increases in body weight gain, total serum cholesterol, and serum osteocalcin at doses between 10 and 1000 μg/kg·day after 4 weeks. At...


Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2003

A novel, non-prostanoid EP2 receptor-selective prostaglandin E2 agonist stimulates local bone formation and enhances fracture healing.

Mei Li; Hua Zhu Ke; Hong Qi; David R. Healy; Yan Li; D. Todd Crawford; Vishwas M. Paralkar; Thomas A. Owen; Kimberly O'keefe Cameron; Bruce Allen Lefker; Thomas A. Brown; David Duane Thompson

CP‐533,536, a newly discovered, non‐prostanoid EP2 receptor‐selective PGE2 agonist, stimulates local bone formation and enhances fracture healing in rat models.


Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2005

A nonprostanoid EP4 receptor selective prostaglandin E2 agonist restores bone mass and strength in aged, ovariectomized rats.

Hua Zhu Ke; D. Todd Crawford; Hong Qi; H.A. Simmons; Thomas A. Owen; Vishwas M. Paralkar; Mei Li; Bihong Lu; William A. Grasser; Kimberly O'keefe Cameron; Bruce Allen Lefker; Paul DaSilva-Jardine; Dennis O. Scott; Qing Zhang; Xiao Yan Tian; Webster S. S. Jee; Thomas A. Brown; David Duane Thompson

CP432 is a newly discovered, nonprostanoid EP4 receptor selective prostaglandin E2 agonist. CP432 stimulates trabecular and cortical bone formation and restores bone mass and bone strength in aged ovariectomized rats with established osteopenia.


Cell Metabolism | 2017

Activation of Skeletal Muscle AMPK Promotes Glucose Disposal and Glucose Lowering in Non-human Primates and Mice.

Emily Cokorinos; Jake Delmore; Allan R. Reyes; Bina Albuquerque; Rasmus Kjøbsted; Nicolas O. Jørgensen; Jean-Luc Tran; Aditi Jatkar; Katherine Cialdea; Ryan M. Esquejo; John K. Meissen; Matthew F. Calabrese; Jason Cordes; Robert Moccia; David A. Tess; Christopher T. Salatto; Timothy M. Coskran; Alan Opsahl; Declan Flynn; Matthew Blatnik; Wenlin Li; Erick Kindt; Marc Foretz; Benoit Viollet; Jessica Ward; Ravi G. Kurumbail; Amit S. Kalgutkar; Jørgen F. P. Wojtaszewski; Kimberly O'keefe Cameron; Russell A. Miller

The AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is a potential therapeutic target for metabolic diseases based on its reported actions in the liver and skeletal muscle. We evaluated two distinct direct activators of AMPK: a non-selective activator of all AMPK complexes, PF-739, and an activator selective for AMPK β1-containing complexes, PF-249. In cells and animals, both compounds were effective at activating AMPK in hepatocytes, but only PF-739 was capable of activating AMPK in skeletal muscle. In diabetic mice, PF-739, but not PF-249, caused a rapid lowering of plasma glucose levels that was diminished in the absence of skeletal muscle, but not liver, AMPK heterotrimers and was the result of an increase in systemic glucose disposal with no impact on hepatic glucose production. Studies of PF-739 in cynomolgus monkeys confirmed translation of the glucose lowering and established activation of AMPK in skeletal muscle as a potential therapeutic approach to treat diabetic patients.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016

Discovery and Preclinical Characterization of 6-Chloro-5-[4-(1-hydroxycyclobutyl)phenyl]-1H-indole-3-carboxylic Acid (PF-06409577), a Direct Activator of Adenosine Monophosphate-activated Protein Kinase (AMPK), for the Potential Treatment of Diabetic Nephropathy.

Kimberly O'keefe Cameron; Daniel W. Kung; Amit S. Kalgutkar; Ravi G. Kurumbail; Russell A. Miller; Christopher T. Salatto; Jessica Ward; Jane M. Withka; Samit Kumar Bhattacharya; Markus Boehm; Kris A. Borzilleri; Janice A. Brown; Matthew F. Calabrese; Nicole Caspers; Emily Cokorinos; Edward L. Conn; Matthew S. Dowling; David J. Edmonds; Heather Eng; Dilinie P. Fernando; Richard K. Frisbie; David Hepworth; James A. Landro; Yuxia Mao; Francis Rajamohan; Allan R. Reyes; Colin R. Rose; Tim Ryder; Andre Shavnya; Aaron Smith

Adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is a protein kinase involved in maintaining energy homeostasis within cells. On the basis of human genetic association data, AMPK activators were pursued for the treatment of diabetic nephropathy. Identification of an indazole amide high throughput screening (HTS) hit followed by truncation to its minimal pharmacophore provided an indazole acid lead compound. Optimization of the core and aryl appendage improved oral absorption and culminated in the identification of indole acid, PF-06409577 (7). Compound 7 was advanced to first-in-human trials for the treatment of diabetic nephropathy.


Current Topics in Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Medicinal Chemistry Design Principles for Liver Targeting Through OATP Transporters

Meihua Tu; Alan M. Mathiowetz; Jeffrey A. Pfefferkorn; Kimberly O'keefe Cameron; Robert L. Dow; John Litchfield; Li Di; Bo Feng; Spiros Liras

The tissue distribution of a drug can have significant impact on both its efficacy and safety. As a consequence, selective tissue targeting has become an attractive approach for optimizing the window between efficacy and safety for drug targets that are ubiquitously expressed and important in key physiological processes. Given the livers key role in metabolic regulation and the fact that it is the principal tissue affected by diseases such as hepatitis B and C viruses as well as hepatocellular carcinoma, designing drugs with hepatoselective distribution profiles is an important strategy in developing safe cardiovascular, metabolic, antiviral and oncology drug candidates. In this paper, we analyze a diverse set of compounds from four different projects within Pfizer that specifically pursued liver targeting strategies. A number of key in vitro and in vivo ADME endpoints were collected including in vivo tissue exposure, oral bioavailability, clearance in preclinical species and in vitro hepatic OATP uptake, in vitro rat liver microsomal stability, permeability, solubility, logD, and others. From this analysis, we determined a set of general structure-liver-selectivity guides for designing orally bioavailable, liver-targeted candidates using liver specific OATP transporters. The guidelines have been formulated using straightforward molecular descriptors and in vitro properties that medicinal chemists routinely optimize. Our analysis emphasizes the need to focus on a chemical space with balanced lipophilicity, high aqueous solubility and low passive permeability in order to achieve the desired hepatoselectivity while maintaining fraction absorbed.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2014

Discovery of PF-5190457, a Potent, Selective, and Orally Bioavailable Ghrelin Receptor Inverse Agonist Clinical Candidate

Samit Kumar Bhattacharya; Kim M. Andrews; Ramsay E. Beveridge; Kimberly O'keefe Cameron; Chiliu Chen; Matthew Dunn; Dilinie P. Fernando; Hua Gao; David Hepworth; V. Margaret Jackson; Vishal Khot; Jimmy Kong; Rachel Kosa; Kimberly Lapham; Paula M. Loria; Allyn T. Londregan; Kim F. McClure; Suvi T. M. Orr; Jigna Patel; Colin R. Rose; James Saenz; Ingrid A. Stock; Gregory Storer; Maria A. Vanvolkenburg; Derek Vrieze; Guoqiang Wang; Jun Xiao; Yingxin Zhang

The identification of potent, highly selective orally bioavailable ghrelin receptor inverse agonists from a spiro-azetidino-piperidine series is described. Examples from this series have promising in vivo pharmacokinetics and increase glucose-stimulated insulin secretion in human whole and dispersed islets. A physicochemistry-based strategy to increase lipophilic efficiency for ghrelin receptor potency and retain low clearance and satisfactory permeability while reducing off-target pharmacology led to the discovery of 16h. Compound 16h has a superior balance of ghrelin receptor pharmacology and off-target selectivity. On the basis of its promising pharmacological and safety profile, 16h was advanced to human clinical trials.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2016

Recent progress in the identification of adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase (AMPK) activators

Kimberly O'keefe Cameron; Ravi G. Kurumbail

Adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase (AMPK), a serine/threonine heterotrimeric protein kinase, is a critical regulator of cellular and whole body energy homeostasis. There are twelve known AMPK isoforms that are differentially expressed in tissues and species. Dysregulation of AMPK signaling is associated with a multitude of human pathologies. Hence isoform-selective activators of AMPK are actively being sought for the treatment of cardiovascular and metabolic diseases. The present review summarizes the status of direct AMPK activators from the patent and published literature.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

Identification of potent, selective, CNS-targeted inverse agonists of the ghrelin receptor

Kim F. McClure; Margaret Jackson; Kimberly O'keefe Cameron; Daniel W. Kung; David Austen Perry; Suvi T. M. Orr; Yingxin Zhang; Jeffrey T. Kohrt; Meihua Tu; Hua Gao; Dilinie P. Fernando; Ryan Jones; Noe Erasga; Guoqiang Wang; Jana Polivkova; Wenhua Jiao; Roger Swartz; Hirokazu Ueno; Samit Kumar Bhattacharya; Ingrid A. Stock; Sam Varma; Victoria Bagdasarian; Sylvie Perez; Dawn Kelly-Sullivan; Ruduan Wang; Jimmy Kong; Peter Cornelius; Laura Michael; Eunsun Lee; Ann M. Janssen

The optimization for selectivity and central receptor occupancy for a series of spirocyclic azetidine-piperidine inverse agonists of the ghrelin receptor is described. Decreased mAChR muscarinic M2 binding was achieved by use of a chiral indane in place of a substituted benzylic group. Compounds with desirable balance of human in vitro clearance and ex vivo central receptor occupancy were discovered by incorporation of heterocycles. Specifically, heteroaryl rings with nitrogen(s) vicinal to the indane linkage provided the most attractive overall properties.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Discovery of N-benzyl-2-[(4S)-4-(1H-indol-3-ylmethyl)-5-oxo-1-phenyl-4,5-dihydro-6H-[1,2,4]triazolo[4,3-a][1,5]benzodiazepin-6-yl]-N-isopropylacetamide, an orally active, gut-selective CCK1 receptor agonist for the potential treatment of obesity.

Richard L. Elliott; Kimberly O'keefe Cameron; Janice E. Chin; Jeremy A. Bartlett; Elena E. Beretta; Yue Chen; Paul Da Silva Jardine; Jeffrey S. Dubins; Melissa L. Gillaspy; Diane M. Hargrove; Amit S. Kalgutkar; Janet A. LaFlamme; Mary E. Lame; Kelly A. Martin; Tristan S. Maurer; Nancy A. Nardone; Robert M. Oliver; Dennis O. Scott; Dexue Sun; Andrew G. Swick; Catherine E. Trebino; Yingxin Zhang

We describe the design, synthesis, and structure-activity relationships of triazolobenzodiazepinone CCK1 receptor agonists. Analogs in this series demonstrate potent agonist activity as measured by in vitro and in vivo assays for CCK1 agonism. Our efforts resulted in the identification of compound 4a which significantly reduced food intake with minimal systemic exposure in rodents.

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