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Dive into the research topics where Mike Quijano is active.

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Featured researches published by Mike Quijano.


Toxicological Sciences | 2008

Identification and Characterization of Toxicity of Contaminants in Pet Food Leading to an Outbreak of Renal Toxicity in Cats and Dogs

Roy Lee Martin Dobson; Safa Motlagh; Mike Quijano; R. Thomas Cambron; Timothy R. Baker; Aletha M. Pullen; Brian T. Regg; Adrienne S. Bigalow-Kern; Thomas Vennard; Andrew S. Fix; Renate Reimschuessel; Gary J. Overmann; Yuching Shan; George P. Daston

This paper describes research relating to the major recall of pet food that occurred in Spring 2007 in North America. Clinical observations of acute renal failure in cats and dogs were associated with consumption of wet pet food produced by a contract manufacturer producing for a large number of companies. The affected lots of food had been formulated with wheat gluten originating from China. Pet food and gluten were analyzed for contaminants using several configurations of high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and mass spectrometry (MS), which revealed a number of simple triazine compounds, principally melamine and cyanuric acid, with lower concentrations of ammeline, ammelide, ureidomelamine, and N-methylmelamine. Melamine and cyanuric acid, have been tested and do not produce acute renal toxicity. Some of the triazines have poor solubility, as does the compound melamine cyanurate. Pathological evaluation of cats and dogs that had died from the acute renal failure indicated the presence of crystals in kidney tubules. We hypothesized that these crystals were composed of the poorly soluble triazines, a melamine-cyanuric acid complex, or a combination. Sprague dawley rats were given up to 100 mg/kg ammeline or ammelide alone, a mixture of melamine and cyanuric acid (400/400 mg/kg/day), or a mixture of all four compounds (400 mg/kg/day melamine, 40 mg/kg/day of the others). Neither ammeline nor ammelide alone produced any renal effects, but the mixtures produced significant renal damage and crystals in nephrons. HPLC-MS/MS confirmed the presence of melamine and cyanuric acid in the kidney. Infrared microspectroscopy on individual crystals from rat or cat (donated material from a veterinary clinic) kidneys confirmed that they were melamine-cyanuric acid cocrystals. Crystals from contaminated gluten produced comparable spectra. These results establish the causal link between the contaminated gluten and the adverse effects and provide a mechanistic explanation for how two apparently innocuous compounds could have adverse effects in combination, that is, by forming an insoluble precipitate in renal tubules leading to progressive tubular blockage and degeneration.


Toxicological Sciences | 2011

The incorporation of lysine into the peroxidase peptide reactivity assay for skin sensitization assessments.

John A. Troutman; Leslie M. Foertsch; Petra Kern; Hong Jian Dai; Mike Quijano; Roy Lee Martin Dobson; J. Lalko; Jean-Pierre Lepoittevin; G. Frank Gerberick

To establish further a practical quantitative in chemico reactivity assay for screening contact allergens, lysine peptide was incorporated into a liquid chromatography and tandem mass spectrometry-based assay for reactivity assessments of hapten and pre-/pro-hapten chemical sensitizers. Loss of peptide was determined following 24 h coincubation with test chemical using a concentration-response study design. A total of 70 chemicals were tested in discrete reactions with cysteine or lysine peptide, in the presence and absence of horseradish peroxidase-hydrogen peroxide oxidation system. An empirically derived prediction model for discriminating sensitizers from nonsensitizers resulted in an accuracy of 83% for 26 haptens, 19 pre-/pro-haptens, and 25 nonsensitizers. Four sensitizers were shown to selectively react with lysine including two strong/extreme and two weak sensitizers. In addition, seven sensitizers were identified as having higher reactivity toward lysine compared with cysteine. The majority of sensitizing chemicals (27/45) were reactive toward both cysteine and lysine peptides. An estimate of the relative reactivity potency was determined based on the concentration of test chemical that depletes peptide at or above a threshold positive value. Here, we report the use of EC15 as one example to illustrate the use of the model for screening the skin sensitization potential of novel chemicals. Results from this initial assessment highlight the utility of lysine for assessing a chemicals potential to elicit sensitization reactions or induce hypersensitivity. This approach has the potential to qualitatively and quantitatively evaluate an important mechanism in contact allergy for hazard and quantitative risk assessments without animal testing.


Journal of Chromatography B: Biomedical Sciences and Applications | 1998

Rapid and selective method for norepinephrine in rat urine using reversed-phase ion-pair high-performance liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry

Thomas A. Neubecker; Mary A Coombs; Mike Quijano; Timothy Peter O'neill; Charles A. Cruze; Roy Lee Martin Dobson

A rugged, high-throughput HPLC-MS-MS-based method, suitable for quantitation of norepinephrine (NE) in urine, has been developed. A rapid, batch-mode procedure utilizes alumina to isolate NE and its deuterated internal standard from urine. After release of NE, using dilute formic acid, samples are analyzed by isocratic reversed-phase ion-pair HPLC, with electrospray ionization (ESI) and MS-MS detection. The ion-pair reagent, heptafluorobutyric acid, is compatible with the ESI interface and permits use of mobile phases with relatively high methanol content, enhancing ESI sensitivity. Furthermore, no significant drop in sensitivity is observed throughout more than 15 h of instrument operation. The selectivity of this approach permitted simplification of the extraction procedure and reduced run times (under 4 min), making single batch-run sizes of more than 200 samples practical. The lower limit of quantitation is 5 ng per 0.5 ml sample, with analytical recoveries of 97-100% and overall method precision of better than 4% relative standard deviation verified up to 500 ng ml(-1). This method was initially applied to study the diurnal rhythm in sympathetic nervous system activity of spontaneously hypertensive rats.


Journal of Chromatography B: Biomedical Sciences and Applications | 1997

Highly sensitive high-performance liquid chromatographic-tandem mass spectrometric method for the analysis of dextromethorphan in human plasma

Thomas H. Eichhold; Mike Quijano; William Lee Seibel; Charles A. Cruze; Roy Lee Martin Dobson; Kenneth R. Wehmeyer

A stable-isotope-dilution HPLC-tandem mass spectrometry-based method was developed for the determination of dextromethorphan in human plasma. Plasma samples were prepared for analysis by solid-phase extraction on octadecylsilane extraction cartridges. Dextromethorphan and the deuterium-labeled dextromethorphan internal standard were chromatographed on a short reversed-phase column and detected by a selected-reaction-monitoring scheme. Linear standard curves were obtained over three orders of magnitude and the limit of quantitation for dextromethorphan was 50 pg/ml, using a 1-ml plasma sample. The combination of HPLC and electrospray tandem mass spectrometry resulted in a rapid, selective and sensitive method for the analysis of dextromethorphan in plasma. The method was applied for the evaluation of the pharmacokinetic profile of dextromethorphan in human volunteers following peroral administration.


Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2017

The Pharmacological Profile of a Novel Highly Potent Bisphosphonate, OX14 (1-Fluoro-2-(Imidazo-[1,2-α]Pyridin-3-yl)-Ethyl-Bisphosphonate)

Lawson; F H Ebetino; A. Mazur; Andrew D. Chantry; Julia Paton-Hough; H.R. Evans; Darren Lath; M.K. Tsoumpra; M.W. Lundy; Roy Lee Martin Dobson; Mike Quijano; Aaron Kwaasi; J E Dunford; Xuchen Duan; J T Triffitt; G Jeans; R.G.G. Russell

Bisphosphonates are widely used in the treatment of clinical disorders characterized by increased bone resorption, including osteoporosis, Pagets disease, and the skeletal complications of malignancy. The antiresorptive potency of the nitrogen‐containing bisphosphonates on bone in vivo is now recognized to depend upon two key properties, namely mineral binding affinity and inhibitory activity on farnesyl pyrophosphate synthase (FPPS), and these properties vary independently of each other in individual bisphosphonates. The better understanding of structure activity relationships among the bisphosphonates has enabled us to design a series of novel bisphosphonates with a range of mineral binding properties and antiresorptive potencies. Among these is a highly potent bisphosphonate, 1‐fluoro‐2‐(imidazo‐[1,2 alpha]pyridin‐3‐yl)‐ethyl‐bisphosphonate, also known as OX14, which is a strong inhibitor of FPPS, but has lower binding affinity for bone mineral than most of the commonly studied bisphosphonates. The aim of this work was to characterize OX14 pharmacologically in relation to several of the bisphosphonates currently used clinically. When OX14 was compared to zoledronate (ZOL), risedronate (RIS), and minodronate (MIN), it was as potent at inhibiting FPPS in vitro but had significantly lower binding affinity to hydroxyapatite (HAP) columns than ALN, ZOL, RIS, and MIN. When injected i.v. into growing Sprague Dawley rats, OX14 was excreted into the urine to a greater extent than the other bisphosphonates, indicating reduced short‐term skeletal uptake and retention. In studies in both Sprague Dawley rats and C57BL/6J mice, OX14 inhibited bone resorption, with an antiresorptive potency equivalent to or greater than the comparator bisphosphonates. In the JJN3‐NSG murine model of myeloma‐induced bone disease, OX14 significantly prevented the formation of osteolytic lesions (p < 0.05). In summary, OX14 is a new, highly potent bisphosphonate with lower bone binding affinity than other clinically relevant bisphosphonates. This renders OX14 an interesting potential candidate for further development for its potential skeletal and nonskeletal benefits.


Toxicological Sciences | 2009

Investigation of Peptide Reactivity of Pro-hapten Skin Sensitizers Using a Peroxidase-Peroxide Oxidation System

G. Frank Gerberick; John A. Troutman; Leslie M. Foertsch; Jeffrey D. Vassallo; Mike Quijano; Roy Lee Martin Dobson; Carsten Goebel; Jean-Pierre Lepoittevin


Bone | 2008

A mirror image pair of bisphosphonate analogs further demonstrates the mode of binding of the bisphosphonates in farnesyl pyrophosphate synthase

Frank H. Ebetino; J E Dunford; Mark Walden Lundy; Michele Pozzi; Zhidao Xia; Roy Lee Martin Dobson; Mike Quijano; Roze Christian; Boris A. Kashemirov; Charles E. McKenna; Graham Russell; Bobby Lee Barnett


Bone | 2008

Evaluation of the relative mineral-binding affinities of clinically-relevant bisphosphonates by using hydroxyapatite-column chromatography and adsorption isotherms combined with mass spectrometric analysis

Zhidao Xia; Xuchen Duan; R M Locklin; Mike Quijano; Roy Lee Martin Dobson; J T Triffitt; Frank H. Ebetino; Graham Russell


Bone | 2010

Determination of the relative bone mineral-binding affinities of bisphosphonates by using hydroxyapatite-column chromatography combined with mass spectrometric analysis

Xuchen Duan; Zhidao Xia; Hao Zhang; Mike Quijano; Roy Lee Martin Dobson; Bobby Lee Barnett; J T Triffitt; J E Dunford; Frank H. Ebetino; R. Graham G. Russell


Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2014

Skeletal Retention and Urinary Excretion of Nitrogen-Containing Bisphosphonates Including Fluorescently-labeled Bisphosphonates in Rats.

Mark Walden Lundy; Shuting Sun; Xuchen Duan; Charles E. McKenna; G Jeans; Roy Lee Martin Dobson; Mike Quijano; J T Triffitt; R.G.G. Russell; F H Ebetino

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Charles E. McKenna

University of Southern California

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F H Ebetino

University of Rochester

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