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Dive into the research topics where Mary Ann Pelleymounter is active.

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Featured researches published by Mary Ann Pelleymounter.


Obesity | 2012

Weight Loss Induced by Chronic Dapagliflozin Treatment Is Attenuated by Compensatory Hyperphagia in Diet‐Induced Obese (DIO) Rats

James Devenny; Helen Godonis; Susan J. Harvey; Mary Jane Cullen; Mary Ann Pelleymounter

Dapagliflozin is a potent and selective sodium glucose cotransporter‐2 (SGLT2) inhibitor which promotes urinary glucose excretion and induces weight loss. Since metabolic compensation can offset a negative energy balance, we explored the potential for a compensatory physiological response to the weight loss induced by dapagliflozin. Dapagliflozin was administered (0.5–5 mpk; p.o.) to diet‐induced obese (DIO) rats with or without ad libitum access to food for 38 days. Along with inducing urinary glucose excretion, chronic administration of dapagliflozin dose‐dependently increased food and water intake relative to vehicle‐treated controls. Despite this, it reduced body weight by 4% (relative to controls) at the highest dose. The degree of weight loss was increased by an additional 9% if hyperphagia was prevented by restricting food intake to that of vehicle controls. Neither oxygen consumption (vO2) or the respiratory exchange ratio (RER) were altered by dapagliflozin treatment alone. Animals treated with dapagliflozin and pair‐fed to vehicle controls (5 mpk PF‐V) showed a reduction in RER and an elevation in nonfasting β‐hydroxybutyrate (BHBA) relative to ad libitum‐fed 5 mpk counterparts. Fasting BHBA was elevated in the 1 mpk, 5 mpk, and 5 mpk PF‐V groups. Serum glucose was reduced in the fasted, but not the unfasted state. Insulin was reduced in the non‐fasted state. These data suggest that in rodents, the persistent urinary glucose excretion induced by dapagliflozin was accompanied by compensatory hyperphagia, which attenuated the weight loss induced by SGLT2 inhibition. Therefore, it is possible that dapagliflozin‐induced weight loss could be enhanced with dietary intervention.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Potent biphenyl- and 3-phenyl pyridine-based inhibitors of acetyl-CoA carboxylase.

Tasir S. Haque; Ningning Liang; Rajasree Golla; Ramakrishna Seethala; Zhengping Ma; William R. Ewing; Christopher B. Cooper; Mary Ann Pelleymounter; Michael A. Poss; Dong Cheng

We report the synthesis and enzymatic evaluation of potent inhibitors of acetyl-CoA carboxylases (ACCs) containing biphenyl or 3-phenyl pyridine cores. These compounds inhibit both ACC1 and ACC2, or are moderately selective for either enzyme, depending on side chain substitution. Typical activities of the most potent compounds in this class are in the low double-digit to single-digit nanomolar range in in vitro assays using human ACC1 and ACC2 enzymes.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Tricyclic dihydroquinazolinones as novel 5-HT2C selective and orally efficacious anti-obesity agents.

Saleem Ahmad; Khehyong Ngu; Keith J. Miller; Ginger Wu; Chen-Pin Hung; Sarah E. Malmstrom; Ge Zhang; Eva O’Tanyi; William J. Keim; Mary Jane Cullen; Kenneth W. Rohrbach; Michael Thomas; Thao Ung; Qinling Qu; Jinping Gan; Rangaraj Narayanan; Mary Ann Pelleymounter; Jeffrey A. Robl

Agonists of the 5-HT(2C) receptor have been shown to suppress appetite and reduce body weight in animal models as well as in humans. However, agonism of the related 5-HT(2B) receptor has been associated with valvular heart disease. Synthesis and biological evaluation of a series of novel and highly selective dihydroquinazolinone-derived 5-HT(2C) agonists with no detectable agonism of the 5-HT(2B) receptor is described. Among these, compounds (+)-2a and (+)-3c were identified as potent and highly selective agonists which exhibited weight loss in a rat model upon oral dosing.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Reductions in log P improved protein binding and clearance predictions enabling the prospective design of cannabinoid receptor (CB1) antagonists with desired pharmacokinetic properties.

Bruce A. Ellsworth; Philip M. Sher; Ximao Wu; Gang Wu; Richard B. Sulsky; Zhengxiang Gu; Natesan Murugesan; Yeheng Zhu; Guixue Yu; Doree Sitkoff; Kenneth E. Carlson; Liya Kang; Yifan Yang; Ning Lee; Rose A. Baska; William J. Keim; Mary Jane Cullen; Anthony V. Azzara; Eva Zuvich; Michael Thomas; Kenneth W. Rohrbach; James Devenny; Helen Godonis; Susan J. Harvey; Brian J. Murphy; Gerry Everlof; Paul Stetsko; Olafur S. Gudmundsson; Susan Johnghar; Asoka Ranasinghe

Several strategies have been employed to reduce the long in vivo half-life of our lead CB1 antagonist, triazolopyridazinone 3, to differentiate the pharmacokinetic profile versus the lead clinical compounds. An in vitro and in vivo clearance data set revealed a lack of correlation; however, when compounds with <5% free fraction were excluded, a more predictable correlation was observed. Compounds with log P between 3 and 4 were likely to have significant free fraction, so we designed compounds in this range to give more predictable clearance values. This strategy produced compounds with desirable in vivo half-lives, ultimately leading to the discovery of compound 46. The progression of compound 46 was halted due to the contemporaneous marketing and clinical withdrawal of other centrally acting CB1 antagonists; however, the design strategy successfully delivered a potent CB1 antagonist with the desired pharmacokinetic properties and a clean off-target profile.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

Synthesis and SAR of 2,3,3a,4-tetrahydro-1H-pyrrolo[3,4-c]isoquinolin-5(9bH)-ones as 5-HT2C receptor agonists.

John M. Fevig; Jianxin Feng; Karen A. Rossi; Keith J. Miller; Ginger Wu; Chen-Pin Hung; Thao Ung; Sarah E. Malmstrom; Ge Zhang; William J. Keim; Mary Jane Cullen; Kenneth W. Rohrbach; Qinling Qu; Jinping Gan; Mary Ann Pelleymounter; Jeffrey A. Robl

A series of 2,3,3a,4-tetrahydro-1H-pyrrolo[3,4-c]isoquinolin-5(9bH)-ones is described, several examples of which exhibit potent 5-HT(2C) agonism with excellent selectivity over the closely related 5-HT(2A) and 5-HT(2B) receptors. Compounds such as 38 and 44 were shown to be effective in reducing food intake in an acute rat feeding model.


European Journal of Pharmacology | 2011

Cannabinoid CB1 receptor ligand binding and function examined through mutagenesis studies of F200 and S383

Doree Sitkoff; Ning Lee; Bruce A. Ellsworth; Qi Huang; Liya Kang; RoseAnn Baska; Yanting Huang; Chongqing Sun; Annapurna Pendri; Mary F. Malley; Raymond P. Scaringe; Jack Z. Gougoutas; Patricia H. Reggio; William R. Ewing; Mary Ann Pelleymounter; Kenneth E. Carlson

The cannabinoid CB(1) G protein-coupled receptor has been shown to be a regulator of food consumption and has been studied extensively as a drug target for the treatment of obesity. To advance understanding of the receptors three-dimensional structure, we performed mutagenesis studies at human cannabinoid CB(1) receptor residues F200 and S383 and measured changes in activity and binding affinity of compounds from two recently discovered active chemotypes, arylsulfonamide agonists and tetrahydroquinoline-based inverse agonists, as well as literature compounds. Our results add support to previous findings that both agonists and inverse agonists show varied patterns of binding at the two mutated residue sites, suggesting multiple subsites for binding to the cannabinoid CB(1) receptor for both functional types of ligands. We additionally find that an F200L mutation in the receptor largely restores binding affinity to ligands and significantly decreases constitutive activity when compared to F200A, resulting in a receptor phenotype that is closer to the wild-type receptor. The results downplay the importance of aromatic stacking interactions at F200 and suggest that a bulky hydrophobic contact is largely sufficient to provide significant receptor function and binding affinity to cannabinoid CB(1) receptor ligands.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015

Non-basic azolotriazinone MCHR1 antagonists for the treatment of obesity: An empirical brain-exposures-driven candidate selection for in vivo efficacy studies.

Pratik Devasthale; Wei Wang; James Mignone; Kishore Renduchintala; Sridhar Radhakrishnan; Jayanthi Dhanapal; Jagannath Selvaraj; Rajesh Kuppusamy; Mary Ann Pelleymounter; Daniel Longhi; Ning Huang; Neil Flynn; Anthony V. Azzara; Kenneth W. Rohrbach; James Devenny; Michael Thomas; Susan Glick; Helen Godonis; Susan J. Harvey; Mary Jane Cullen; Hongwei Zhang; Christian Caporuscio; Paul Stetsko; Mary F. Grubb; Christine Huang; Lisa Zhang; Chris Freeden; Brian J. Murphy; Jeffrey A. Robl; William N. Washburn

Non-basic azolotriazinones were explored using an empirical free brain exposures-driven approach to identify potent MCHR1 antagonists for evaluation in in vivo efficacy studies. An optimized lead from this series, 1j (rMCHR1 Ki=1.8 nM), demonstrated a 6.9% reduction in weight gain relative to vehicle in a rat model at 30 mg/kg after 4 days of once-daily oral treatment as a glycine prodrug. Despite a promising efficacy profile, an assessment of the biliary toxicity risk of this compound rendered this compound non-progressible.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Characterization of a novel and selective CB1 antagonist as a radioligand for receptor occupancy studies

Yifan Yang; Keith J. Miller; Yeheng Zhu; Yang Hong; Yuan Tian; Natesan Murugesan; Zhengxiang Gu; Eva O’Tanyi; William J. Keim; Kenneth W. Rohrbach; Susan Johnghar; Kamelia Behnia; Mary Ann Pelleymounter; Kenneth E. Carlson; William R. Ewing

Obesity remains a significant public health issue leading to Type II diabetes and cardiovascular disease. CB1 antagonists have been shown to suppress appetite and reduce body weight in animal models as well as in humans. Evaluation of pre-clinical CB1 antagonists to establish relationships between in vitro affinity and in vivo efficacy parameters are enhanced by ex vivo receptor occupancy data. Synthesis and biological evaluation of a novel and highly selective radiolabeled CB1 antagonist is described. The radioligand was used to conduct ex vivo receptor occupancy studies.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015

Dihydropyrrolopyrazol-6-one MCHR1 antagonists for the treatment of obesity: Insights on in vivo efficacy from a novel FLIPR assay setup

Pratik Devasthale; Wei Wang; Andres S. Hernandez; Fang Moore; Kishore Renduchintala; Radhakrishnan Sridhar; Mary Ann Pelleymounter; Daniel Longhi; Ning Huang; Neil Flynn; Anthony V. Azzara; Kenneth W. Rohrbach; James Devenny; Michael Thomas; Susan Glick; Helen Godonis; Susan J. Harvey; Mary Jane Cullen; Hongwei Zhang; Christian Caporuscio; Paul Stetsko; Mary F. Grubb; Christine Huang; Lisa Zhang; Chris Freeden; Yi-Xin Li; Brian J. Murphy; Jeffrey A. Robl; William N. Washburn

Our investigation of the structure-activity and structure-liability relationships for dihydropyrrolopyrazol-6-one MCHR1 antagonists revealed that off-rate characteristics, inferred from potencies in a FLIPR assay following a 2 h incubation, can impact in vivo efficacy. The in vitro and exposure profiles of dihydropyrrolopyrazol-6-ones 1b and 1e were comparable to that of the thienopyrimidinone counterparts 41 and 43 except for a much faster MCHR1 apparent off-rate. The greatly diminished dihydropyrrolopyrazol-6-one anti-obesity response may be the consequence of this rapid off-rate.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

Synthesis and SAR of potent and selective tetrahydropyrazinoisoquinolinone 5-HT 2C receptor agonists

Guohua Zhao; Chet Kwon; Sharon N. Bisaha; Philip D. Stein; Karen A. Rossi; Xueying Cao; Thao Ung; Ginger Wu; Chen-Pin Hung; Sarah E. Malmstrom; Ge Zhang; Qinling Qu; Jinping Gan; William J. Keim; Mary Jane Cullen; Kenneth W. Rohrbach; James Devenny; Mary Ann Pelleymounter; Keith J. Miller; Jeffrey A. Robl

The 5-HT2C receptor has been implicated as a critical regulator of appetite. Small molecule activation of the 5-HT2C receptor has been shown to affect food intake and regulate body weight gain in rodent models and more recently in human clinical trials. Therefore, 5-HT2C is a well validated target for anti-obesity therapy. The synthesis and structure-activity relationships of a series of novel tetrahydropyrazinoisoquinolinone 5-HT2C receptor agonists are presented. Several members of this series were identified as potent 5-HT2C receptor agonists with high functional selectivity against the 5-HT2A and 5-HT2B receptors and reduced food intake in an acute rat feeding model upon oral dosing.

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