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Publication
Featured researches published by Michael Graupe.
PLOS Pathogens | 2014
Datsen George Wei; Vicki Chiang; Elizabeth Fyne; Mini Balakrishnan; Tiffany Barnes; Michael Graupe; Joseph Hesselgesser; Alivelu Irrinki; Jeffrey P. Murry; George Stepan; Kirsten M. Stray; Angela Tsai; Helen Yu; Jonathan Spindler; Mary Kearney; Celsa A. Spina; Deborah McMahon; Jacob Lalezari; Derek D. Sloan; John W. Mellors; Romas Geleziunas; Tomas Cihlar
Persistent latent reservoir of replication-competent proviruses in memory CD4 T cells is a major obstacle to curing HIV infection. Pharmacological activation of HIV expression in latently infected cells is being explored as one of the strategies to deplete the latent HIV reservoir. In this study, we characterized the ability of romidepsin (RMD), a histone deacetylase inhibitor approved for the treatment of T-cell lymphomas, to activate the expression of latent HIV. In an in vitro T-cell model of HIV latency, RMD was the most potent inducer of HIV (EC50u200a=u200a4.5 nM) compared with vorinostat (VOR; EC50u200a=u200a3,950 nM) and other histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors in clinical development including panobinostat (PNB; EC50u200a=u200a10 nM). The HIV induction potencies of RMD, VOR, and PNB paralleled their inhibitory activities against multiple human HDAC isoenzymes. In both resting and memory CD4 T cells isolated from HIV-infected patients on suppressive combination antiretroviral therapy (cART), a 4-hour exposure to 40 nM RMD induced a mean 6-fold increase in intracellular HIV RNA levels, whereas a 24-hour treatment with 1 µM VOR resulted in 2- to 3-fold increases. RMD-induced intracellular HIV RNA expression persisted for 48 hours and correlated with sustained inhibition of cell-associated HDAC activity. By comparison, the induction of HIV RNA by VOR and PNB was transient and diminished after 24 hours. RMD also increased levels of extracellular HIV RNA and virions from both memory and resting CD4 T-cell cultures. The activation of HIV expression was observed at RMD concentrations below the drug plasma levels achieved by doses used in patients treated for T-cell lymphomas. In conclusion, RMD induces HIV expression ex vivo at concentrations that can be achieved clinically, indicating that the drug may reactivate latent HIV in patients on suppressive cART.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013
Paul A. Roethle; Ryan Mcfadden; Hong Yang; Paul Hrvatin; Hon C. Hui; Michael Graupe; Brian M. Gallagher; Jessica Jade Chao; Joseph Hesselgesser; Paul Duatschek; Jim Zheng; Daniel B. Tumas; Jason K. Perry; Randall L. Halcomb
Pteridinone-based Toll-like receptor 7 (TLR7) agonists were identified as potent and selective alternatives to the previously reported adenine-based agonists, leading to the discovery of GS-9620. Analogues were optimized for the immunomodulatory activity and selectivity versus other TLRs, based on differential induction of key cytokines including interferon α (IFN-α) and tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α). In addition, physicochemical properties were adjusted to achieve desirable in vivo pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties. GS-9620 is currently in clinical evaluation for the treatment of chronic hepatitis B (HBV) infection.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016
Jeff Zablocki; Elfatih Elzein; Xiaofen Li; Dmitry Koltun; Eric Parkhill; Tetsuya J. Kobayashi; Ruben Martinez; Britton Kenneth Corkey; Haibo Jiang; Thao Perry; Rao Kalla; Gregory T. Notte; Oliver L. Saunders; Michael Graupe; Yafan Lu; Chandru Venkataramani; Juan Guerrero; Jason K. Perry; Mark Osier; Robert G. Strickley; Gongxin Liu; Wei-Qun Wang; Lufei Hu; Xiao-Jun Li; Nesrine El-Bizri; Ryoko Hirakawa; Kris M. Kahlig; Cheng Xie; Cindy Hong Li; Arvinder Dhalla
Late sodium current (late INa) is enhanced during ischemia by reactive oxygen species (ROS) modifying the Nav 1.5 channel, resulting in incomplete inactivation. Compound 4 (GS-6615, eleclazine) a novel, potent, and selective inhibitor of late INa, is currently in clinical development for treatment of long QT-3 syndrome (LQT-3), hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), and ventricular tachycardia-ventricular fibrillation (VT-VF). We will describe structure-activity relationship (SAR) leading to the discovery of 4 that is vastly improved from the first generation late INa inhibitor 1 (ranolazine). Compound 4 was 42 times more potent than 1 in reducing ischemic burden in vivo (S-T segment elevation, 15 min left anteriorior descending, LAD, occlusion in rabbits) with EC50 values of 190 and 8000 nM, respectively. Compound 4 represents a new class of potent late INa inhibitors that will be useful in delineating the role of inhibitors of this current in the treatment of patients.
Retrovirology | 2012
Romas Geleziunas; George Stepan; George Wei; Helen Yu; Michael Graupe; Nikos Pagratis; Tiffany Barnes; Tomas Cihlar; Joe Hesselgesser
Reservoirs of HIV that persist during ART represent barriers to eradication of this virus. One well documented reservoir of latent HIV is found in memory CD4+ T-cells. Identifying means to safely eliminate latently infected memory CD4+ T-cells is an important goal that may contribute to a cure for HIV. One approach toward this end is to activate latent proviruses with the premise that viral particles emanating from these cells will cause a cytopathic effect leading to the demise of the host cell. We have optimized and automated a primary cell-based HIV latency assay that can be used for high throughput screening of small molecule libraries in search of HIV activators. Using this assay, we have identified novel histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors fromGilead’s compound collection that activate latent HIV. Analysis of these inhibitors revealed that the magnitude of HIV expression correlated with the breadth of cellular HDAC inhibition. In addition, we have identified a variety of other compounds that activate latent HIV such as kinase inhibitors which may point to novel mechanisms that govern HIV latency. This screening assay has the potential to identify novel molecular targets for drug discovery and new chemical classes that could be optimized to create new drugs to eliminate reservoirs of latent HIV.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2018
John T. Liles; Britton Kenneth Corkey; Gregory Notte; Grant R. Budas; Eric B. Lansdon; Ford Hinojosa-Kirschenbaum; Shawn S. Badal; Michael Lee; Brian E. Schultz; Sarah Wise; Swetha Pendem; Michael Graupe; Laurie Castonguay; Keith A. Koch; Melanie H. Wong; Giuseppe A. Papalia; Dorothy French; Theodore Sullivan; Erik G. Huntzicker; David J. Nikolic-Paterson; Tareq Altuhaifi; Haichun Yang; Agnes B. Fogo; David G. Breckenridge
Oxidative stress is an underlying component of acute and chronic kidney disease. Apoptosis signal–regulating kinase 1 (ASK1) is a widely expressed redox-sensitive serine threonine kinase that activates p38 and c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) mitogen-activated protein kinase kinases, and induces apoptotic, inflammatory, and fibrotic signaling in settings of oxidative stress. We describe the discovery and characterization of a potent and selective small-molecule inhibitor of ASK1, GS-444217, and demonstrate the therapeutic potential of ASK1 inhibition to reduce kidney injury and fibrosis. Activation of the ASK1 pathway in glomerular and tubular compartments was confirmed in renal biopsies from patients with diabetic kidney disease (DKD) and was decreased by GS-444217 in several rodent models of kidney injury and fibrosis that collectively represented the hallmarks of DKD pathology. Treatment with GS-444217 reduced progressive inflammation and fibrosis in the kidney and halted glomerular filtration rate decline. Combination of GS-444217 with enalapril, an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor, led to a greater reduction in proteinuria and regression of glomerulosclerosis. These results identify ASK1 as an important target for renal disease and support the clinical development of an ASK1 inhibitor for the treatment of DKD.
Archive | 2008
Michael Graupe; Randall L. Halcomb
Archive | 2017
Helen Yu; Tomas Cihlar; George Stepan; Derek D. Sloan; Jeffrey P. Murry; Yunfeng Eric Hu; Michael Graupe
PLOS Pathogens | 2014
Datsen George Wei; Vicki Chiang; Elizabeth Fyne; Mini Balakrishnan; Tiffany Barnes; Michael Graupe; Joseph Hesselgesser; Alivelu Irrinki; Jeffrey P. Murry; George Stepan; Kirsten M. Stray; Angela Tsai; Helen Yu; Jonathan Spindler; Mary Kearney; Celsa A. Spina; Deborah McMahon; Jacob Lalezari; Derek D. Sloan; John W. Mellors; Romas Geleziunas; Tomas Cihlar
Archive | 2011
Britton Kenneth Corkey; Michael Graupe; Keith A. Koch; Melvin Lawrence S; Gregory Notte
Archive | 2010
Hongtao Liu; Desai Manoj C; Halcomb Randall L; Ryan Mcfadden; Link John O; Hongyan Guo; Darryl Kato; Terry Kellar; Kirschberg Thorsten A; Michael L. Mitchell; Parish Jay P; Sheng Xiaoning C; Neil Squires; Jianyu Sun; James Taylor; Lianhong Xu; Elizabeth M. Bacon; Eda Canales; Aesop Cho; Kim Choung U; Clarke Michael O'neil Hanrahan; Chou Chien-Hung; Cottell Jeromy J; Michael Graupe; Haolun Jin; Krygowski Evan S; Lazerwith Scott E; Qi Liu; Richard L. Mackman; Mish Michael R