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Dive into the research topics where Raymond S. Hurst is active.

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Featured researches published by Raymond S. Hurst.


Neuropharmacology | 2007

Pharmacological profile of the α4β2 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor partial agonist varenicline, an effective smoking cessation aid

Hans Rollema; Leslie K. Chambers; Jotham Wadsworth Coe; J. Glowa; Raymond S. Hurst; Lorraine A. Lebel; Yi Lu; Robert S. Mansbach; R.J. Mather; Charles C. Rovetti; Steven Bradley Sands; Eric Schaeffer; David W. Schulz; F.D. Tingley; K.E. Williams

The preclinical pharmacology of the α4β2 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) partial agonist varenicline, a novel smoking cessation agent is described. Varenicline binds with subnanomolar affinity only to α4β2 nAChRs and in vitro functional patch clamp studies in HEK cells expressing nAChRs show that varenicline is a partial agonist with 45% of nicotines maximal efficacy at α4β2 nAChRs. In neurochemical models varenicline has significantly lower (40–60%) efficacy than nicotine in stimulating [3H]-dopamine release from rat brain slices in vitro and in increasing dopamine release from rat nucleus accumbens in vivo, while it is more potent than nicotine. In addition, when combined with nicotine, varenicline effectively attenuates the nicotine-induced dopamine release to the level of the effect of varenicline alone, consistent with partial agonism. Finally, varenicline reduces nicotine self-administration in rats and supports lower self-administration break points than nicotine. These data suggest that varenicline can reproduce to some extent the subjective effects of smoking by partially activating α4β2 nAChRs, while preventing full activation of these receptors by nicotine. Based on these findings, varenicline was advanced into clinical development and recently shown to be an effective and safe aid for smoking cessation treatment.


British Journal of Pharmacology | 2010

Pre-clinical properties of the α4β2 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor partial agonists varenicline, cytisine and dianicline translate to clinical efficacy for nicotine dependence

Hans Rollema; Alka Shrikhande; K.M. Ward; F. D. Tingley; Jotham Wadsworth Coe; B. T. O'Neill; E. Tseng; Emily Wang; R. J. Mather; Raymond S. Hurst; K. E. Williams; M. de Vries; Thomas Cremers; S. Bertrand; D. Bertrand

Background and purpose:  Smoking cessation trials with three high‐affinity partial agonists of α4β2 neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) have demonstrated differences in their clinical efficacy. This work examines the origin of the differences by taking into account brain exposure and pharmacological effects at human α4β2 nAChRs.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008

Discovery of N-[(3R,5R)-1-azabicyclo[3.2.1]oct-3-yl]furo[2,3-c]pyridine-5-carboxamide as an agonist of the α7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor: In vitro and in vivo activity

Brad A. Acker; E. Jon Jacobsen; Bruce N. Rogers; Donn G. Wishka; Steven Charles Reitz; David W. Piotrowski; Jason K. Myers; Mark L. Wolfe; Vincent E. Groppi; Bruce A. Thornburgh; Paula M. Tinholt; Rodney R. Walters; Barbara A. Olson; Laura Fitzgerald; Brian A. Staton; Thomas J. Raub; Michael Krause; Kai S. Li; William E. Hoffmann; Mihály Hajós; Raymond S. Hurst; Daniel P. Walker

A novel alpha7 nAChR agonist, N-[(3R,5R)-1-azabicyclo[3.2.1]oct-3-yl]furo[2,3-c]pyridine-5-carboxamide (3a, PHA-709829), has been identified for the potential treatment of cognitive deficits in schizophrenia. The compound shows potent and selective alpha7 in vitro activity, excellent brain penetration, good rat oral bioavailability and robust in vivo efficacy in a rat auditory sensory gating model.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2013

Positive Allosteric Modulation of AMPA Receptors from Efficacy to Toxicity: The Interspecies Exposure-Response Continuum of the Novel Potentiator PF-4778574

Christopher L. Shaffer; Raymond S. Hurst; Renato J. Scialis; Sarah Osgood; Dianne K. Bryce; William E. Hoffmann; John T. Lazzaro; Ashley N. Hanks; Susan M. Lotarski; Mark L. Weber; Jianhua Liu; Frank S. Menniti; Christopher J. Schmidt; Mihály Hajós

α-Amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid receptor (AMPAR) positive allosteric modulation (i.e., “potentiation”) has been proposed to overcome cognitive impairments in schizophrenia, but AMPAR overstimulation can be excitotoxic. Thus, it is critical to define carefully a potentiator’s mechanism-based therapeutic index (TI) and to determine confidently its translatability from rodents to higher-order species. Accordingly, the novel AMPAR potentiator N-{(3R,4S)-3-[4-(5-cyano-2-thienyl)phenyl]tetrahydro-2H-pyran-4-yl}propane-2-sulfonamide (PF-4778574) was characterized in a series of in vitro assays and single-dose animal studies evaluating AMPAR-mediated activities related to cognition and safety to afford an unbound brain compound concentration (Cb,u)–normalized interspecies exposure-response relationship. Because it is unknown which AMPAR subtype(s) may be selectively potentiated for an optimal TI, PF-4778574 binding affinity and functional potency were determined in rodent tissues expected to express a native mixture of AMPAR subunits and their associated proteins to afford composite pharmacological values. Functional activity was also quantified in recombinant cell lines stably expressing human GluA2 flip or flop homotetramers. Procognitive effects of PF-4778574 were evaluated in both rat electrophysiological and nonhuman primate (nhp) behavioral models of pharmacologically induced N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor hypofunction. Safety studies assessed cerebellum-based AMPAR activation (mouse) and motor coordination disruptions (mouse, dog, and nhp), as well as convulsion (mouse, rat, and dog). The resulting empirically derived exposure-response continuum for PF-4778574 defines a single-dose-based TI of 8- to 16-fold for self-limiting tremor, a readily monitorable clinical adverse event. Importantly, the Cb,u mediating each physiological effect were highly consistent across species, with efficacy and convulsion occurring at just fractions of the in vitro–derived pharmacological values.


Nicotine & Tobacco Research | 2014

Functional Interactions of Varenicline and Nicotine With nAChR Subtypes Implicated in Cardiovascular Control

Hans Rollema; Cristina Russ; Theodore C. Lee; Raymond S. Hurst; Daniel Bertrand

INTRODUCTION It has been suggested that varenicline-induced activation of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) could play a role in the cardiovascular (CV) safety of varenicline. However, since preclinical studies showed that therapeutic varenicline concentrations have no effect in models of CV function, this study examined in vitro profiles of varenicline and nicotine at nAChR subtypes possibly involved in CV control. METHODS Concentration-dependent functional effects of varenicline and nicotine at human α3β4, α3α5β4, α7, and α4β2 nAChRs expressed in oocytes were determined by electrophysiology. The proportion of nAChRs predicted to be activated and inhibited by concentrations of varenicline (1mg b.i.d.) and of nicotine in smokers was derived from activation-inhibition curves for each nAChR subtype. RESULTS Human varenicline and nicotine concentrations can desensitize and inhibit nAChRs but cause only low-level activation of α3β4, α4β2 (<2%), α7 (<0.05%), and α3α5β4 (<0.01%) nAChRs, which is consistent with literature data. Nicotine concentrations in smokers are predicted to inhibit larger fractions of α3β4 (48%) and α3α5β4 (10%) nAChRs than therapeutic varenicline concentrations (11% and 0.6%, respectively) and to inhibit comparable fractions of α4β2 nAChRs (42%-56%) and α7 nAChRs (16%) as varenicline. CONCLUSIONS Nicotine and varenicline concentrations in patients and smokers are predicted to cause minimal activation of ganglionic α3β4* nAChRs, while their functional profiles at α3β4, α3α5β4, α7, and α4β2 nAChRs cannot explain that substituting nicotine from tobacco with varenicline would cause CV adverse events in smokers who try to quit. Other pharmacological properties that could mediate varenicline-induced CV effects have not been identified.


Neuropharmacology | 2013

Therapeutic doses of antidepressants are projected not to inhibit human α4β2 nicotinic acetylcholine receptors.

Mark L. Weber; Corry M. Hofland; Christopher L. Shaffer; Gunnar Flik; Thomas Cremers; Raymond S. Hurst; Hans Rollema

Inhibition of central α4β2 nAChRs by antidepressants, proposed to contribute to their clinical efficacy, was assessed for monoamine reuptake inhibitors (amitriptyline, nortriptyline, fluoxetine, sertraline, paroxetine, citalopram) by comparing projected human unbound brain drug concentrations (Cu,b) at therapeutic doses with concentrations that inhibit human α4β2 nAChRs in vitro. Inhibitory concentrations (IC50) were determined by patch clamp and ranged from 0.8-3.2 μM, except for nortriptyline (IC50 = 100 nM). Cu,b values were calculated from human unbound plasma drug concentrations (Cu,p) and rat-derived brain-to-plasma and extracellular fluid-to-plasma ratios for the unbound drug, which are near unity, due to much higher brain tissue binding than plasma protein binding of these drugs. Accordingly in humans, antidepressant Cu,b are projected to essentially equal Cu,p, with average values from 3-87 nM, which are 30-to-250-fold below their IC50 concentrations. Based on our model, monoaminergic antidepressants minimally inhibit central nAChRs and it is unlikely that α4β2 nAChR antagonism contributes to their antidepressant activity. Nortriptyline is an exception with a Cu,b that is 2-fold below its IC50, which is comparable to the nAChR antagonist (±)-mecamylamine, for which Cu,b is 4-fold below its IC50; both drugs will inhibit a substantial fraction of α4β2 nAChRs. The Cu,b of the α4β2 nAChR partial agonist varenicline, which has antidepressant-like activity in a murine model, is higher than its IC50 and varenicline is projected to cause ~70% inhibition of α4β2 nAChRs. Taken together these data may help explain the negative outcome of recent antidepressant augmentation trials with mecamylamine and the partial agonist CP-601927.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

A novel series of [3.2.1] azabicyclic biaryl ethers as α3β4 and α6/4β4 nicotinic receptor agonists

John A. Lowe; Shari L. DeNinno; Jotham Wadsworth Coe; Lei Zhang; Scot Mente; Raymond S. Hurst; Robert J. Mather; Karen M. Ward; Alka Shrikhande; Hans Rollema; David E. Johnson; Weldon Horner; Roxanne Gorczyca; F. David Tingley; Rouba Kozak; Mark J. Majchrzak; Theresa Tritto; Jen Sadlier; Chris L. Shaffer; Brenda R. Ellerbrock; Sarah Osgood; Mary Macdougall; Laura McDowell

We report the synthesis of a series of [3.2.1]azabicyclic biaryl ethers as selective agonists of alpha3- and alpha6-containing nicotinic receptors. In particular, compound 17a from this series is a potent alpha3beta4 and alpha6/4beta4 receptor agonist in terms of both binding and functional activity. Compound 17a also shows potent in vivo activity in CNS-mediated animal models that are sensitive to antipsychotic drugs. Compound 17a may thus be a useful tool for studying the role of alpha3beta4 and alpha6/4beta4 nicotinic receptors in CNS pharmacology.


Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2013

Nicotinic acetylcholine receptors: from basic science to therapeutics.

Raymond S. Hurst; Hans Rollema; Daniel Bertrand


Trends in Pharmacological Sciences | 2007

Rationale, pharmacology and clinical efficacy of partial agonists of α4β2 nACh receptors for smoking cessation

Hans Rollema; Jotham Wadsworth Coe; Leslie K. Chambers; Raymond S. Hurst; Stephen M. Stahl; Kathryn E. Williams


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2006

Design, synthesis, structure-activity relationship, and in vivo activity of azabicyclic aryl amides as α7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor agonists

Daniel P. Walker; Donn G. Wishka; David W. Piotrowski; Shaojuan Jia; Steven Charles Reitz; Karen M. Yates; Jason K. Myers; Tatiana N. Vetman; Brandon J. Margolis; E. Jon Jacobsen; Brad A. Acker; Vincent E. Groppi; Mark L. Wolfe; Bruce A. Thornburgh; Paula M. Tinholt; Luz A. Cortes-Burgos; Rodney R. Walters; Matthew R. Hester; Eric P. Seest; Lester A. Dolak; Fusen Han; Barbara A. Olson; Laura Fitzgerald; Brian A. Staton; Thomas J. Raub; Mihály Hajós; William E. Hoffmann; Kai S. Li; Nicole R. Higdon; Theron M. Wall

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