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Dive into the research topics where Patrick A. Marcotte is active.

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Featured researches published by Patrick A. Marcotte.


Steroids | 1981

Inactivation of aromatase in vitro by 4-hydroxy-4-androstene-3,17-dione and 4-acetoxy-4-androstene-3,17-dione and sustained effects in vivo

Angela Brodie; Wesley M. Garrett; James R. Hendrickson; Chon-Hwa Tsai-Morris; Patrick A. Marcotte; Cecil H. Robinson

4-Hydroxy-4-androstene-3,17-dione (4-OHA) and 4-acetoxy-4-androstene-3,17-dione (4-AcA), in addition to being competitive inhibitors of aromatase, cause time-dependent, irreversible, loss of enzyme activity in both human placental and rat ovarian microsomes. In vivo, treatment of rats with 4-OHA also causes loss of ovarian aromatase activity. To test whether this loss of activity could have in vivo significance, rats with hormone-dependent, mammary tumors were treated with 4-OHA on alternate weeks. Tumor regression continued to occur during the weeks without treatment. These findings suggest that inactivation of aromatase is important in the mechanism of action of the compounds in vivo.


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2006

Preclinical activity of ABT-869, a multitargeted receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor

Daniel H. Albert; Paul Tapang; Terrance J. Magoc; Lori J. Pease; David R. Reuter; Ru-Qi Wei; Junling Li; Jun Guo; Peter F. Bousquet; Nayereh S. Ghoreishi-Haack; Baole Wang; Gail T. Bukofzer; Yi-Chun Wang; Jason Stavropoulos; Kresna Hartandi; Amanda Niquette; Nirupama B. Soni; Eric F. Johnson; J. Owen McCall; Jennifer J. Bouska; Yanping Luo; Cherrie K. Donawho; Yujia Dai; Patrick A. Marcotte; Keith B. Glaser; Michael R. Michaelides; Steven K. Davidsen

ABT-869 is a structurally novel, receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) inhibitor that is a potent inhibitor of members of the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) receptor families (e.g., KDR IC50 = 4 nmol/L) but has much less activity (IC50s > 1 μmol/L) against unrelated RTKs, soluble tyrosine kinases, or serine/threonine kinases. The inhibition profile of ABT-869 is evident in cellular assays of RTK phosphorylation (IC50 = 2, 4, and 7 nmol/L for PDGFR-β, KDR, and CSF-1R, respectively) and VEGF-stimulated proliferation (IC50 = 0.2 nmol/L for human endothelial cells). ABT-869 is not a general antiproliferative agent because, in most cancer cells, >1,000-fold higher concentrations of ABT-869 are required for inhibition of proliferation. However, ABT-869 exhibits potent antiproliferative and apoptotic effects on cancer cells whose proliferation is dependent on mutant kinases, such as FLT3. In vivo ABT-869 is effective orally in the mechanism-based murine models of VEGF-induced uterine edema (ED50 = 0.5 mg/kg) and corneal angiogenesis (>50% inhibition, 15 mg/kg). In tumor growth studies, ABT-869 exhibits efficacy in human fibrosarcoma and breast, colon, and small cell lung carcinoma xenograft models (ED50 = 1.5–5 mg/kg, twice daily) and is also effective (>50% inhibition) in orthotopic breast and glioma models. Reduction in tumor size and tumor regression was observed in epidermoid carcinoma and leukemia xenograft models, respectively. In combination, ABT-869 produced at least additive effects when given with cytotoxic therapies. Based on pharmacokinetic analysis from tumor growth studies, efficacy correlated more strongly with time over a threshold value (cellular KDR IC50 corrected for plasma protein binding = 0.08 μg/mL, ≥7 hours) than with plasma area under the curve or Cmax. These results support clinical assessment of ABT-869 as a therapeutic agent for cancer. [Mol Cancer Ther 2006;5(4):995–1006]


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2002

Trifluoromethyl ketones as inhibitors of histone deacetylase.

Robin R. Frey; Carol K. Wada; Robert B. Garland; Michael L. Curtin; Michael R. Michaelides; Junling Li; Lori J. Pease; Keith B. Glaser; Patrick A. Marcotte; Jennifer J. Bouska; Shannon S. Murphy; Steven K. Davidsen

Trifluoromethyl ketones were found to be inhibitors of histone deacetylases (HDACs). Optimization of this series led to the identification of submicromolar inhibitors such as 20 that demonstrated antiproliferative effects against the HT1080 and MDA 435 cell lines.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2002

Succinimide hydroxamic acids as potent inhibitors of histone deacetylase (HDAC).

Michael L. Curtin; Robert B. Garland; H. Robin Heyman; Robin R. Frey; Michael R. Michaelides; Junling Li; Lori J. Pease; Keith B. Glaser; Patrick A. Marcotte; Steven K. Davidsen

A series of succinimide hydroxamic acids was prepared and evaluated in vitro for HDAC inhibition and tumor cell antiproliferation. While the original macrocyclic analogue 6 was quite potent in both assays, several appropriately substituted non-macrocyclic succinimides, such as 23, were equipotent.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009

Synthesis and evaluation of a new generation of orally efficacious benzimidazole-based poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 (PARP-1) inhibitors as anticancer agents.

Yunsong Tong; Jennifer J. Bouska; Paul A. Ellis; Eric F. Johnson; Joel D. Leverson; Xuesong Liu; Patrick A. Marcotte; Amanda M. Olson; Donald J. Osterling; Magdalena Przytulinska; Luis E. Rodriguez; Yan Shi; Nirupama B. Soni; Jason Stavropoulos; Sheela A. Thomas; Cherrie K. Donawho; David J. Frost; Yan Luo; Vincent L. Giranda; Thomas D. Penning

Small molecule inhibitors of PARP-1 have been pursued by various organizations as potential therapeutic agents either capable of sensitizing cytotoxic treatments or acting as stand-alone agents to combat cancer. As one of the strategies to expand our portfolio of PARP-1 inhibitors, we pursued unsaturated heterocycles to replace the saturated cyclic amine derivatives appended to the benzimidazole core. Not only did a variety of these new generation compounds maintain high enzymatic potency, many of them also displayed robust cellular activity. For example, the enzymatic IC(50) and cellular EC(50) values were as low as 1 nM or below. Compounds 24 (EC(50) = 3.7 nM) and 44 (EC(50) = 7.8 nM), featuring an oxadiazole and a pyridine moiety, respectively, demonstrated balanced potency and PK profiles. In addition, these two molecules exhibited potent oral in vivo efficacy in potentiating the cytotoxic agent temozolomide in a B16F10 murine melanoma model.


Steroids | 1982

Synthesis and evaluation of 10β-substituted 4-estrene-3,17-diones as inhibitors of human placental microsomal aromatase

Patrick A. Marcotte; Cecil H. Robinson

Abstract This paper describes the synthesis of a series of new 10β-substituted 4-estrene-3,17-dione analogs ( 1–8 ). These compounds, together with a number of known analogs ( 9–14 ), have been evaluated as reversible or irreversible inhibitors of human placental microsomal aromatase. The best reversible inhibitor is the 10β-vinyl compound ( 9 ). The only compounds causing irreversible inhibition of aromatase are the 10β-propargyl compound ( 1 ) and the 10β-difluoromethyl compound ( 12 ).


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2003

α-Keto amides as inhibitors of histone deacetylase

Carol K. Wada; Robin R. Frey; Zhiqin Ji; Michael L. Curtin; Robert B. Garland; James H. Holms; Junling Li; Lori J. Pease; Jun Guo; Keith B. Glaser; Patrick A. Marcotte; Paul L. Richardson; Shannon S. Murphy; Jennifer J. Bouska; Paul Tapang; Terrance J. Magoc; Daniel H. Albert; Steven K. Davidsen; Michael R. Michaelides

α-Keto ester and amides were found to be potent inhibitors of histone deacetylase. Nanomolar inhibitors against the isolated enzyme and sub-micromolar inhibitors of cellular proliferation were obtained. The α-keto amide 30 also exhibited significant anti-tumor effects in an in vivo tumor model.


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2006

Inhibition of phosphorylation of the colony-stimulating factor-1 receptor (c-Fms) tyrosine kinase in transfected cells by ABT-869 and other tyrosine kinase inhibitors

Jun Guo; Patrick A. Marcotte; J. Owen McCall; Yujia Dai; Lori J. Pease; Michael R. Michaelides; Steven K. Davidsen; Keith B. Glaser

The properties of several multitargeted receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors have been studied for their inhibition of colony-stimulating factor-1 receptor (CSF-1R) signaling. A structurally novel, multitargeted tyrosine kinase inhibitor (ABT-869), imatinib (STI571), and four compounds currently in clinical development (AG013736, BAY 43-9006, CHIR258, and SU11248) were tested for inhibition of CSF-1R signaling in both the enzymatic and cellular assays. ABT-869 showed potent CSF-1R inhibition in both the enzyme and cell-based assays (IC50s < 20 nmol/L). In contrast to a previous report, we have found that imatinib has activity against human CSF-1R in both assays at submicromolar concentrations. In enzyme assays, we have found that the inhibition of CSF-1R by both ABT-869 and imatinib are competitive with ATP, with Ki values of 3 and 120 nmol/L, respectively. SU11248 is a potent inhibitor of CSF-1R in the enzyme assay (IC50 = 7 nmol/L) and inhibits receptor phosphorylation in the cellular assay (IC50 = 61 nmol/L). AG013736 was also a potent inhibitor of CSF-1R in both assays (enzyme, IC50 = 16 nmol/L; cellular, IC50 = 21 nmol/L), whereas BAY 43-9006 is less potent in the enzyme assay (IC50 = 107 nmol/L) than in the cellular system (IC50 = 20 nmol/L). In contrast, we found that CHIR258 had less activity in the cellular assay (IC50 = 535 nmol/L) relative to its enzymatic potency (IC50 = 26 nmol/L). These results show the use of a cell-based assay to confirm the inhibitory activity of lead compounds and drug candidates, such as ABT-869, against the CSF-1R protein in situ. [Mol Cancer Ther 2006;5(4):1007–13]


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2001

Discovery of selective hydroxamic acid inhibitors of tumor necrosis factor-α converting enzyme

James H. Holms; Katherine Mast; Patrick A. Marcotte; Ildiko N. Elmore; Junling Li; Lori J. Pease; Keith B. Glaser; Douglas W. Morgan; Michael R. Michaelides; Steven K. Davidsen

Abstract Modification of the P1′ substituent of macrocyclic matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) inhibitors provided compounds that are selective for inhibition of tumor necrosis factor-α converting enzyme (TACE) over MMP-1 and MMP-2. Several analogues potently inhibited the release of TNF-α in a THP-1 cellular assay. Compounds containing a trimethoxyphenyl group in the P1′ substituent demonstrated TACE selectivity across several series of hydroxamate-based inhibitors.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2001

Biaryl Ether Retrohydroxamates as Potent, Long-lived, Orally Bioavailable MMP Inhibitors

Michael R. Michaelides; Joseph F. Dellaria; Jane Gong; James H. Holms; Jennifer J. Bouska; Jamie R. Stacey; Carol K. Wada; H. Robin Heyman; Michael L. Curtin; Yan Guo; Carole L. Goodfellow; Ildiko B. Elmore; Daniel H. Albert; Terrance J. Magoc; Patrick A. Marcotte; Douglas W. Morgan; Steven K. Davidsen

A novel series of biaryl ether reverse hydroxamate MMP inhibitors has been developed. These compounds are potent MMP-2 inhibitors with limited activity against MMP-1. Select members of this series exhibit excellent pharmacokinetic properties with long elimination half-lives (7 h) and high oral bioavailability (100%).

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Steven K. Davidsen

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Keith B. Glaser

National University of Singapore

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Daniel H. Albert

National University of Singapore

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Junling Li

University of California

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Paul Tapang

University of California

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Cherrie K. Donawho

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Eric F. Johnson

Scripps Research Institute

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