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Dive into the research topics where Lorena A. Kallal is active.

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Featured researches published by Lorena A. Kallal.


Science Translational Medicine | 2012

An Orally Active TRPV4 Channel Blocker Prevents and Resolves Pulmonary Edema Induced by Heart Failure

Kevin S. Thorneloe; Mui Cheung; Weike Bao; Hasan Alsaid; Stephen C. Lenhard; Ming-Yuan Jian; Melissa H. Costell; Kristeen Maniscalco-Hauk; John A. Krawiec; Alan R. Olzinski; Earl Gordon; Irina M. Lozinskaya; Lou Elefante; Pu Qin; Daniel S. Matasic; Chris James; James Tunstead; Brian T. Donovan; Lorena A. Kallal; Anna Waszkiewicz; Kalindi Vaidya; Elizabeth A. Davenport; J. Larkin; Mark Burgert; Linda N. Casillas; Robert W. Marquis; Guosen Ye; Hilary Schenck Eidam; Krista B. Goodman; John R. Toomey

Transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 (TRPV4) channels are expressed in human heart failure lungs, which can be blocked to prevent and resolve heart failure–induced pulmonary edema. Ion Channel Blockade Prevents Pulmonary Edema Heart failure affects not only the heart and vessels but also the lungs. As blood pressure builds up in the lung’s vessels, fluid leaks into the lungs. Treatment options are limited for these patients, mostly because the mechanism underlying pulmonary edema is unclear. Here, Thorneloe and colleagues implicate the activation of the transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 (TRPV4) ion channel in the onset of edema during heart failure and show that a small-molecule drug can prevent such leakage. Activation of the ion channel TRPV4 results in pulmonary edema in animal lungs. The authors first confirmed that TRPV4 was expressed in normal human lungs and then demonstrated that it was increased in lung tissue from patients with a history of congestive heart failure. Using a small-molecule screen, Thorneloe et al. discovered GSK2193874. In human cells in vitro and mouse lungs ex vivo, the small molecule effectively blocked TRPV4 channels to maintain endothelial (vessel) layer integrity. A related study by Huh et al. (this issue) shows that the drug indeed prevents vascular leakage of human cell cultures in vitro. The GSK2193874 analog GSK2263095 displayed similar activity in canine lungs ex vivo. In vivo in rat models of heart failure, the authors found that the drug was effective in both preventing and reversing pulmonary edema. The molecule only protected against lung permeability at high (pathological) pulmonary venous pressure. Thorneloe and colleagues showed that GSK2193874 blocked TRPV4 activity across species, including in human cells, without adversely affecting heart rate or arterial pressure. This suggests that TRPV4 blockers might be used therapeutically to treat patients with heart failure–induced pulmonary edema. Pulmonary edema resulting from high pulmonary venous pressure (PVP) is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in heart failure (HF) patients, but current treatment options demonstrate substantial limitations. Recent evidence from rodent lungs suggests that PVP-induced edema is driven by activation of pulmonary capillary endothelial transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 (TRPV4) channels. To examine the therapeutic potential of this mechanism, we evaluated TRPV4 expression in human congestive HF lungs and developed small-molecule TRPV4 channel blockers for testing in animal models of HF. TRPV4 immunolabeling of human lung sections demonstrated expression of TRPV4 in the pulmonary vasculature that was enhanced in sections from HF patients compared to controls. GSK2193874 was identified as a selective, orally active TRPV4 blocker that inhibits Ca2+ influx through recombinant TRPV4 channels and native endothelial TRPV4 currents. In isolated rodent and canine lungs, TRPV4 blockade prevented the increased vascular permeability and resultant pulmonary edema associated with elevated PVP. Furthermore, in both acute and chronic HF models, GSK2193874 pretreatment inhibited the formation of pulmonary edema and enhanced arterial oxygenation. Finally, GSK2193874 treatment resolved pulmonary edema already established by myocardial infarction in mice. These findings identify a crucial role for TRPV4 in the formation of HF-induced pulmonary edema and suggest that TRPV4 blockade is a potential therapeutic strategy for HF patients.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2009

Evidence for Allosteric Interactions of Antagonist Binding to the Smoothened Receptor

Cynthia M. Rominger; Weilin Tiger Bee; Robert A. Copeland; Elizabeth A. Davenport; Aidan G. Gilmartin; Richard R. Gontarek; Keith R. Hornberger; Lorena A. Kallal; Zhihong Lai; Kenneth W. M. Lawrie; Quinn Lu; Lynette J. McMillan; Maggie Truong; Peter J. Tummino; B. Turunen; M. Will; William J. Zuercher; David H. Rominger

The Smoothened receptor (Smo) mediates hedgehog (Hh) signaling critical for development, cell growth, and migration, as well as stem cell maintenance. Aberrant Hh signaling pathway activation has been implicated in a variety of cancers, and small-molecule antagonists of Smo have entered human clinical trials for the treatment of cancer. Here, we report the biochemical characterization of allosteric interactions of agonists and antagonists for Smo. Binding of two radioligands, [3H]3-chloro-N-[trans-4-(methylamino)cyclohexyl]-N-{[3-(4-pyridinyl)-phenyl]methyl}-1-benzothiophene-2-carboxamide (SAG-1.3) (agonist) and [3H]cyclopamine (antagonist), was characterized using human Smo expressed in human embryonic kidney 293F membranes. We observed full displacement of [3H]cyclopamine by all Smo agonist and antagonist ligands examined. N-[(1E)-(3,5-Dimethyl-1-phenyl-1H-pyrazol-4-yl)methylidene]-4-(phenylmethyl)-1-piperazinamine (SANT-1), an antagonist, did not fully inhibit the binding of [3H]SAG-1.3. In a functional cell-based β-lactamase reporter gene assay, SANT-1 and N-[3-(1H-benzimidazol-2-yl)-4-chlorophenyl]-3,4,5-tris(ethyloxy)-benzamide (SANT-2) fully inhibited 3-chloro-4,7-difluoro-N-[trans-4-(methylamino)cyclohexyl]-N-{[3-(4-pyridinyl)phenyl]methyl}-1-benzothiophene-2-carboxamide (SAG-1.5)-induced Hh pathway activation. Detailed “Schild-type” radioligand binding analysis with [3H]SAG-1.3 revealed that two structurally distinct Smoothened receptor antagonists, SANT-1 and SANT-2, bound in a manner consistent with that of allosteric modulation. Our mechanism of action characterization of radioligand binding to Smo combined with functional data provides a better understanding of small-molecule interactions with Smo and their influence on the Hh pathway.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Benzofuran-substituted urea derivatives as novel P2Y1 receptor antagonists

Reema K. Thalji; Nambi Aiyar; Elizabeth A. Davenport; Joseph A. Erhardt; Lorena A. Kallal; Dwight M. Morrow; Shobha Senadhi; Cynthia L. Burns-Kurtis; Joseph P. Marino

Benzofuran-substituted urea analogs have been identified as novel P2Y(1) receptor antagonists. Structure-activity relationship studies around the urea and the benzofuran moieties resulted in compounds having improved potency. Several analogs were shown to inhibit ADP-mediated platelet activation.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008

Tetrahydro-4-quinolinamines identified as novel P2Y1 receptor antagonists

Ángel I. Morales-Ramos; John S. Mecom; Terry Kiesow; Todd L. Graybill; Gregory D. Brown; Nambi Aiyar; Elizabeth A. Davenport; Lorena A. Kallal; Beth A. Knapp-Reed; Peng Li; Allyn T. Londregan; Dwight M. Morrow; Shobha Senadhi; Reema K. Thalji; Steve Zhao; Cynthia L. Burns-Kurtis; Joseph P. Marino

High-throughput screening of the GSK compound collection against the P2Y(1) receptor identified a novel series of tetrahydro-4-quinolinamine antagonists. Optimal substitution around the piperidine group was pivotal for ensuring activity. An exemplar analog from this series was shown to inhibit platelet aggregation.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Identification of Benzimidazole Diamides as Selective Inhibitors of the Nucleotide-Binding Oligomerization Domain 2 (NOD2) Signaling Pathway

David J. Rickard; Clark A. Sehon; Viera Kasparcova; Lorena A. Kallal; Xin Zeng; Monica N. Montoute; Tushar Chordia; Derek D. Poore; Hu Li; Zining Wu; Patrick M. Eidam; Pamela A. Haile; Jong Yu; John G. Emery; Robert W. Marquis; Peter J. Gough; John Bertin

NOD2 is an intracellular pattern recognition receptor that assembles with receptor-interacting protein (RIP)-2 kinase in response to the presence of bacterial muramyl dipeptide (MDP) in the host cell cytoplasm, thereby inducing signals leading to the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines. The dysregulation of NOD2 signaling has been associated with various inflammatory disorders suggesting that small-molecule inhibitors of this signaling complex may have therapeutic utility. To identify inhibitors of the NOD2 signaling pathway, we utilized a cell-based screening approach and identified a benzimidazole diamide compound designated GSK669 that selectively inhibited an MDP-stimulated, NOD2-mediated IL-8 response without directly inhibiting RIP2 kinase activity. Moreover, GSK669 failed to inhibit cytokine production in response to the activation of Toll-like receptor (TLR)-2, tumor necrosis factor receptor (TNFR)-1 and closely related NOD1, all of which share common downstream components with the NOD2 signaling pathway. While the inhibitors blocked MDP-induced NOD2 responses, they failed to block signaling induced by NOD2 over-expression or single stranded RNA, suggesting specificity for the MDP-induced signaling complex and activator-dependent differences in NOD2 signaling. Investigation of structure-activity relationship allowed the identification of more potent analogs that maintained NOD2 selectivity. The largest boost in activity was achieved by N-methylation of the C2-ethyl amide group. These findings demonstrate that the NOD2 signaling pathway is amenable to modulation by small molecules that do not target RIP2 kinase activity. The compounds we identified should prove useful tools to investigate the importance of NOD2 in various inflammatory processes and may have potential clinical utility.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

Discovery of novel and long acting muscarinic acetylcholine receptor antagonists.

Jian Jin; Yonghui Wang; Dongchuan Shi; Feng Wang; Roderick S. Davis; Qi Jin; Wei Fu; James J. Foley; Edward F. Webb; Chris J. Dehaas; Manuela Berlanga; Miriam Burman; Henry M. Sarau; Dwight M. Morrow; Parvathi Rao; Lorena A. Kallal; Michael L. Moore; Ralph A. Rivero; Michael R. Palovich; Michael Salmon; Kristen E. Belmonte; Jakob Busch-Petersen

High throughput screening and subsequent optimization led to the discovery of novel quaternary ammonium salts as highly potent muscarinic acetylcholine receptor antagonists with excellent selectivity. Compounds 8a, 13a, and 13b showed excellent inhibitory activity and long duration of action in bronchoconstriction in vivo models in two species via intranasal or intratracheal administration. The novel inhaled muscarinic receptor antagonists are potentially useful therapeutic agents for the treatment of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and other bronchoconstriction disorders.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2010

Development of a High-Throughput Cell-Based Assay for Superoxide Production in HL-60 Cells

Patricia M. Seitz; Rona Cooper; Gregory J. Gatto; Fernando Ramón; Thomas D. Sweitzer; Douglas G. Johns; Elizabeth A. Davenport; Robert S. Ames; Lorena A. Kallal

Superoxide affects many normal and pathogenic cellular processes, and the detection of superoxide produced by cells is therefore of interest for potential therapeutic applications. To develop a high-throughput cell-based assay for the detection of extracellular superoxide production that could be run in a 384-well or 1536-well format, 2 luminescent reagents, Lucigenin and Diogenes, and one fluorescent reagent, Oxyburst Green BSA, were tested. HL-60 cells, which had been differentiated to a neutrophil-like phenotype with DMSO and frozen in large batches, were used in assays. All 3 superoxide detection reagents performed well statistically in terms of IC50 reproducibility and met a desired Z′ value requirement of >0.4. When tested against a 1408-compound test set at 5 or 10 µM compound concentration, a higher hit rate was obtained with the 2 luminescent reagents compared with that obtained with the fluorescent Oxyburst Green BSA reagent. The Oxyburst Green BSA assay was ultimately chosen for compound profiling and high-throughput screening activities. This 1536 superoxide detection assay using cryopreserved differentiated HL-60 cells represents a shifting paradigm toward the utilization of more therapeutically relevant cells in early drug development activities.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Identification of selective small molecule inhibitors of the nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain 1 (NOD1) signaling pathway.

David J. Rickard; Clark A. Sehon; Viera Kasparcova; Lorena A. Kallal; Pamela A. Haile; Xin Zeng; Monica N. Montoute; Derek D. Poore; Hu Li; Zining Wu; Patrick M. Eidam; John G. Emery; Robert W. Marquis; Peter J. Gough; John Bertin

NOD1 is an intracellular pattern recognition receptor that recognizes diaminopimelic acid (DAP), a peptidoglycan component in gram negative bacteria. Upon ligand binding, NOD1 assembles with receptor-interacting protein (RIP)-2 kinase and initiates a signaling cascade leading to the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines. Increased NOD1 signaling has been associated with a variety of inflammatory disorders suggesting that small-molecule inhibitors of this signaling complex may have therapeutic utility. We utilized a cell-based screening approach with extensive selectivity profiling to search for small molecule inhibitors of the NOD1 signaling pathway. Via this process we identified three distinct chemical series, xanthines (SB711), quinazolininones (GSK223) and aminobenzothiazoles (GSK966) that selectively inhibited iE-DAP-stimulated IL-8 release via the NOD1 signaling pathway. All three of the newly identified compound series failed to block IL-8 secretion in cells following stimulation with ligands for TNF receptor, TLR2 or NOD2 and, in addition, none of the compound series directly inhibited RIP2 kinase activity. Our initial exploration of the structure-activity relationship and physicochemical properties of the three series directed our focus to the quinazolininone biarylsulfonamides (GSK223). Further investigation allowed for the identification of significantly more potent analogs with the largest boost in activity achieved by fluoro to chloro replacement on the central aryl ring. These results indicate that the NOD1 signaling pathway, similarly to activation of NOD2, is amenable to modulation by small molecules that do not target RIP2 kinase. These compounds should prove useful tools to investigate the importance of NOD1 activation in various inflammatory processes and have potential clinical utility in diseases driven by hyperactive NOD1 signaling.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2013

Development of Phenotypic Screening Assays for γ-Globin Induction Using Primary Human Bone Marrow Day 7 Erythroid Progenitor Cells

Hu Li; Wensheng Xie; Elizabeth R. Gore; Monica N. Montoute; Weilin Tiger Bee; Francesca Zappacosta; Xin Zeng; Zining Wu; Lorena A. Kallal; Robert S. Ames; Andrew J. Pope; Andrew Benowitz; Connie L. Erickson-Miller

Sickle cell anemia (SCA) is a genetic disorder of the β-globin gene. SCA results in chronic ischemia with pain and tissue injury. The extent of SCA symptoms can be ameliorated by treatment with drugs, which result in increasing the levels of γ-globin in patient red blood cells. Hydroxyurea (HU) is a Food and Drug Administration–approved drug for SCA, but it has dose-limiting toxicity, and patients exhibit highly variable treatment responses. To identify compounds that may lead to the development of better and safer medicines, we have established a method using primary human bone marrow day 7 erythroid progenitor cells (EPCs) to screen for compounds that induce γ-globin production. First, human marrow CD34+ cells were cultured and expanded for 7 days and characterized for the expression of erythroid differentiation markers (CD71, CD36, and CD235a). Second, fresh or cryopreserved EPCs were treated with compounds for 3 days in 384-well plates followed by γ-globin quantification by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), which was validated using HU and decitabine. From the 7408 compounds screened, we identified at least one new compound with confirmed γ-globin–inducing activity. Hits are undergoing analysis in secondary assays. In this article, we describe the method of generating fit-for-purpose EPCs; the development, optimization, and validation of the ELISA and secondary assays for γ-globin detection; and screening results.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

M3 muscarinic acetylcholine receptor antagonists: SAR and optimization of bi-aryl amines

Brian Budzik; Yonghui Wang; Dongchuan Shi; Feng Wang; Haibo Xie; Zehong Wan; Chongye Zhu; James J. Foley; Parvathi Nuthulaganti; Lorena A. Kallal; Henry M. Sarau; Dwight M. Morrow; Michael L. Moore; Ralph A. Rivero; Michael R. Palovich; Michael Salmon; Kristen E. Belmonte; Dramane I. Laine; Jian Jin

Exploration of multiple regions of a bi-aryl amine template led to the identification of highly potent M(3) muscarinic acetylcholine receptor antagonists such as 14 (pA(2)=11.0) possessing good sub-type selectivity for M(3) over M(2). The structure-activity relationships (SAR) and optimization of the bi-aryl amine series are described.

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