Norman Huebert
Johnson & Johnson Pharmaceutical Research and Development
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Featured researches published by Norman Huebert.
Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences | 2009
Sean X. Peng; Beth A. Rockafellow; Tina M. Skedzielewski; Norman Huebert; William Hageman
Pharmacokinetic studies in mice traditionally require one animal per time point, resulting in dosing and euthanizing a large number of animals and producing suboptimal quality of pharmacokinetic data due to inter-animal variability and dosing error. These studies are time-consuming and labor-intensive. To improve the throughput and quality of pharmacokinetic evaluation in mice, we have developed a serial blood sampling methodology using the lateral saphenous vein puncture technique. Two marketed drugs, indinavir and rosuvastatin, were selected for this validation study because of their distinctly different physicochemical and pharmacokinetic properties. Each compound was dosed orally and intravenously in mice using both discrete and serial blood sampling methods. The pharmacokinetic results from serial bleeding are in excellent agreement with those from discrete sampling for both compounds. Compared to the discrete sampling, the serial sampling procedure is a more humane method, allowing for rapid and repeated sampling from the same site without the need for anesthesia. The application of this new method has led to a remarkable reduction in animal and compound usage, a significant increase in throughput and speed, and a drastic improvement in pharmacokinetic data quality. This approach is especially useful for the first-tier in vivo pharmacokinetic screening of discovery compounds.
Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry | 2008
Zhengyin Yan; Noureddine Maher; Rhoda Torres; Carlos Cotto; Becki Hastings; Malini Dasgupta; Rolanda Hyman; Norman Huebert; Gary W. Caldwell
In addition to matrix effects, common interferences observed in liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry (LC/MS/MS) analyses can be caused by the response of drug-related metabolites to the multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) channel of a given drug, as a result of in-source reactions or decomposition of either phase I or II metabolites. However, it has been largely ignored that, for some drugs, metabolism can lead to the formation of isobaric or isomeric metabolites that exhibit the same MRM transitions as parent drugs. The present study describes two examples demonstrating that interference caused by isobaric or isomeric metabolites is a practical issue in analyzing biological samples by LC/MS/MS. In the first case, two sequential metabolic reactions, demethylation followed by oxidation of a primary alcohol moiety to a carboxylic acid, produced an isobaric metabolite that exhibits a MRM transition identical to the parent drug. Because the drug compound was rapidly metabolized in rats and completely disappeared in plasma samples, the isobaric metabolite appeared as a single peak in the total ion current (TIC) trace and could easily be quantified as the drug since it was eluted at a retention time very close to that of the drug in a 12-min LC run. In the second example, metabolism via the ring-opening of a substituted isoxazole moiety led to the formation of an isomeric product that showed an almost identical collision-induced dissociation (CID) MS spectrum as the original drug. Because two components were co-eluted, the isomeric product could be mistakenly quantified and reported by data processing software as the parent drug if the TIC trace was not carefully inspected. Nowadays, all LC/MS data are processed by computer software in a highly automated fashion, and some analysts may spend much less time to visually examine raw TIC traces than they used to do. Two examples described in this article remind us that quality data require both adequate chromatographic separations and close examination of raw data in LC/MS/MS analyses of drugs in biological matrix.
Drug Metabolism and Disposition | 2005
Zhengyin Yan; H. Marlon Zhong; Noureddine Maher; Rhoda Torres; Gregory C. Leo; Gary W. Caldwell; Norman Huebert
It has previously been proposed that 4-methylphenol (p-cresol) is metabolically activated by oxidation of the methyl group to form a reactive quinone methide. In the present study a new metabolism pathway is elucidated in human liver microsomes. Oxidation of the aromatic ring leads to formation of 4-methyl-ortho-hydroquinone, which is further oxidized to a reactive intermediate, 4-methyl-ortho-benzoquinone. This bioactivation pathway is fully supported by the following observations: 1) one major and two minor glutathione (GSH) adducts were detected in microsomal incubations of p-cresol in the presence of glutathione; 2) a major metabolite of p-cresol was identified as 4-methyl-ortho-hydroquinone in microsomal incubations; 3) the same GSH adducts were detected in microsomal incubations of 4-methyl-ortho-hydroquinone; and 4) the same GSH adducts were chemically synthesized by oxidizing 4-methyl-ortho-hydroquinone followed by the addition of GSH, and the major conjugate was identified by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry and NMR as 3-(glutathione-S-yl)-5-methyl-ortho-hydroquinone. In addition, it was found that 4-hydroxybenzylalcohol, a major metabolite derived from oxidation of the methyl group in liver microsomes, was further converted to 4-hydroxybenzaldehyde. In vitro studies also revealed that bioactivation of p-cresol was mediated by multiple cytochromes P450, but CYP2D6, 2E1, and 1A2 are the most active enzymes for formation of quinone methide, 4-methyl-ortho-benzoquinone, and 4-hydroxybenzaldehyde, respectively. Implications of the newly identified reactive metabolite in p-cresol-induced toxicity remain to be investigated in the future.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008
Kevin D. Kreutter; Tianbao Lu; Lily Lee; Edward C. Giardino; Sharmila Patel; Hui Huang; Guozhang Xu; Mark Fitzgerald; Barbara J. Haertlein; Venkatraman Mohan; Carl Crysler; Stephen H. Eisennagel; Malini Dasgupta; Martin McMillan; John C. Spurlino; Norman Huebert; Bruce E. Maryanoff; Bruce E. Tomczuk; Bruce P. Damiano; Mark R. Player
2-Cyano-6-fluorophenylacetamide was explored as a novel P2 scaffold in the design of thrombin inhibitors. Optimization around this structural motif culminated in 14, which is a potent thrombin inhibitor (K(i)=1.2nM) that exhibits robust efficacy in canine anticoagulation and thrombosis models upon oral administration.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008
Jeremy M. Travins; Farah Ali; Hui Huang; Shelley K. Ballentine; Ehab Khalil; Heather Rae Hufnagel; Wenxi Pan; Joan Gushue; Kristi Leonard; Roger F. Bone; Richard M. Soll; Renee L. DesJarlais; Carl Crysler; Nisha Ninan; Jennifer Kirkpatrick; Maxwell D. Cummings; Norman Huebert; Christopher J. Molloy; Michael Gaul; Bruce E. Tomczuk; Nalin Subasinghe
Complement activation has been implicated in disease states such as hereditary angioedema, ischemia-reperfusion injury, acute respiratory distress syndrome, and acute transplant rejection. Even though the complement cascade provides several protein targets for potential therapeutic intervention only two complement inhibitors have been approved so far for clinical use including anti-C5 antibodies for the treatment of paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria and purified C1-esterase inhibitor replacement therapy for the control of hereditary angioedema flares. In the present study, optimization of potency and physicochemical properties of a series of thiophene amidine-based C1s inhibitors with potential utility as intravenous agents for the inhibition of the classical pathway of complement is described.
Biopharmaceutics & Drug Disposition | 2008
Yanmin Chen; Deping Cheng; Juan J. Marugan; Carl L. Manthey; Bruce E. Tomczuk; Norman Huebert
The pharmacokinetics of TDP223206 was studied following single intravenous and oral administrations in rats. A mixture of TDP223206 and 14C‐TDP223206 were administered to intact and bile duct‐cannulated rats. Following intravenous administration, plasma concentrations declined biphasically. The AUCinf increased linearly with dose but was not dose proportional. The PK parameters of TDP223206 indicated low clearance (254–386 ml/h/kg) and a moderate volume of distribution (968–1883 ml/kg). The bioavailability was 32.95% and 24.46% for 10 and 50 mg/kg oral doses, respectively. 14C‐TDP223206 was distributed widely into different tissues with small intestine, liver, kidneys and large intestine having large tissue to plasma ratios. 14C‐TDP223206 was the major circulating component in the plasma. A total of 91.2% of administered radioactivity of 14C‐TDP223206 was recovered in bile indicating that biliary excretion was the major pathway for drug elimination. 14C‐TDP223206‐acyl glucuronides were the major metabolites in bile. The oxo‐14C‐TDP223206 was the major metabolite in plasma and an important metabolite in bile. Two forms of diastereomeric acyl glucuronides of 14C‐TDP223206 were detected in bile with similar LC/MS intensities suggesting a similar biotransformation capacity. Only one form of these 14C‐TDP223206‐acyl glucuronides was detected in plasma suggesting that enterohepatic recirculation was related to the nature of the stereo‐isomers. Copyright
Biopharmaceutics & Drug Disposition | 2008
Yanmin Chen; Deping Cheng; Cesar Tio; Natashia Kagan; Stephen Eisennagel; Malini Dasgupta; Bruce E. Tomczuk; Roger F. Bone; Norman Huebert
The pharmacokinetics of TDP4815 was evaluated in rats, rabbits, dogs and monkeys. After intravenous administration, TDP4815 achieved CO of 3255 ng/ml in rats at 5 mg/kg, 9066 ng/ml in rabbits and 7858 ng/ml in monkeys at 6 mg/kg, and 4457 ng/ml in dogs at 3 mg/kg. The clearance (CL) was 3105, 1692, 835 and 640 ml/h/kg in rats, rabbits, monkeys and dogs, respectively. The volume of distribution (VZ) was more than 3861 ml/kg in all species, except 1915 ml/kg in monkeys. The oral bioavailability was rabbit >rat> monkey compared at 100 mg/kg, but it was much higher in dogs (> 64%) after oral administrations. The calculated intrinsic clearance data suggested that the clearance of dog and human was restricted by binding to the plasma protein, and the clearance of rat and monkey was dependent on both the free fraction of plasma protein binding and the liver blood flow rate. The unbound hepatic intrinsic clearance of monkey was close to its CL suggesting that the hepatic clearance was an important excretion in monkeys. The poor oral bioavailability in the monkey may be related to the extensive glucuronidation. The VZ·kg and CL·kg in test species showed good correlation with the animal body weights (R2 = 0.87 and 0.96). Copyright
Drug Metabolism and Disposition | 2005
Zhengyin Yan; Jian Li; Norman Huebert; Gary W. Caldwell; Yanming Du; Hua Zhong
Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry | 2005
Zhengyin Yan; Noureddine Maher; Rhoda Torres; Gary W. Caldwell; Norman Huebert
Analytical Chemistry | 2007
Zhengyin Yan; Noureddine Maher; Rhoda Torres; Norman Huebert