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Dive into the research topics where Robert J. Mullin is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert J. Mullin.


Cancer Research | 2006

Activity of the Dual Kinase Inhibitor Lapatinib (GW572016) against HER-2-Overexpressing and Trastuzumab-Treated Breast Cancer Cells

Gottfried E. Konecny; Mark D. Pegram; Natarajan Venkatesan; Richard S. Finn; Guorong Yang; Martina Rahmeh; Michael Untch; David W. Rusnak; Glenn M. Spehar; Robert J. Mullin; Barry R. Keith; Tona M. Gilmer; Mark S. Berger; Karl C. Podratz; Dennis J. Slamon

Lapatinib (GW572016) is a selective inhibitor of both epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and HER-2 tyrosine kinases. Here, we explore the therapeutic potential of lapatinib by testing its effect on tumor cell growth in a panel of 31 characterized human breast cancer cell lines, including trastuzumab-conditioned HER-2-positive cell lines. We further characterize its activity in combination with trastuzumab and analyze whether EGFR and HER-2 expression or changes induced in the activation of EGFR, HER-2, Raf, AKT, or extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) are markers of drug activity. We report that concentration-dependent antiproliferative effects of lapatinib were seen in all breast cancer cell lines tested but varied significantly between individual cell lines with up to 1,000-fold difference in the IC(50)s (range, 0.010-18.6 micromol/L). Response to lapatinib was significantly correlated with HER-2 expression and its ability to inhibit HER-2, Raf, AKT, and ERK phosphorylation. Long-term in vivo lapatinib studies were conducted with human breast cancer xenografts in athymic mice. Treatment over 77 days resulted in a sustained and significant reduction in xenograft volume compared with untreated controls. For the combination of lapatinib plus trastuzumab, synergistic drug interactions were observed in four different HER-2-overexpressing cell lines. Moreover, lapatinib retained significant in vitro activity against cell lines selected for long-term outgrowth (>9 months) in trastuzumab-containing (100 microg/mL) culture medium. These observations provide a clear biological rationale to test lapatinib as a single agent or in combination with trastuzumab in HER-2-overexpressing breast cancer and in patients with clinical resistance to trastuzumab.


Oncogene | 2002

Anti-tumor activity of GW572016: a dual tyrosine kinase inhibitor blocks EGF activation of EGFR/erbB2 and downstream Erk1/2 and AKT pathways.

Wenle Xia; Robert J. Mullin; Barry R. Keith; Leihua Liu; Hong Ma; David W. Rusnak; Gary Owens; Krystal J. Alligood; Neil L. Spector

Dual EGFR/erbB2 inhibition is an attractive therapeutic strategy for epithelial tumors, as ligand-induced erbB2/EGFR heterodimerization triggers potent proliferative and survival signals. Here we show that a small molecule, GW572016, potently inhibits both EGFR and erbB2 tyrosine kinases leading to growth arrest and/or apoptosis in EGFR and erbB2-dependent tumor cell lines. GW572016 markedly reduced tyrosine phosphorylation of EGFR and erbB2, and inhibited activation of Erk1/2 and AKT, downstream effectors of proliferation and cell survival, respectively. Complete inhibition of activated AKT in erbB2 overexpressing cells correlated with a 23-fold increase in apoptosis compared with vehicle controls. EGF, often elevated in cancer patients, did not reverse the inhibitory effects of GW572016. These observations were reproduced in vivo, where GW572016 treatment inhibited activation of EGFR, erbB2, Erk1/2 and AKT in human tumor xenografts. Erk1/2 and AKT represent potential biomarkers to assess the clinical activity of GW572016. Inhibition of activated AKT in EGFR or erbB2-dependent tumors by GW572016 may lead to tumor regressions when used as a monotherapy, or may enhance the anti-tumor activity of chemotherapeutics, since constitutive activation of AKT has been linked to chemo-resistance.


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2007

Pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic correlation from mouse to human with pazopanib, a multikinase angiogenesis inhibitor with potent antitumor and antiangiogenic activity

Rakesh Kumar; Victoria B. Knick; Sharon K. Rudolph; Jennifer H. Johnson; Renae M. Crosby; Ming-Chih Crouthamel; Teresa M. Hopper; Charles G. Miller; Laura E. Harrington; James Onori; Robert J. Mullin; Tona M. Gilmer; Anne T. Truesdale; Andrea H. Epperly; Amogh Boloor; Jeffrey A. Stafford; Deirdre K. Luttrell; Mui Cheung

With the development of targeted therapeutics, especially for small-molecule inhibitors, it is important to understand whether the observed in vivo efficacy correlates with the modulation of desired/intended target in vivo. We have developed a small-molecule inhibitor of all three vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) receptors (VEGFR), platelet-derived growth factor receptor, and c-Kit tyrosine kinases, pazopanib (GW786034), which selectively inhibits VEGF-induced endothelial cell proliferation. It has good oral exposure and inhibits angiogenesis and tumor growth in mice. Because bolus administration of the compound results in large differences in Cmax and Ctrough, we investigated the effect of continuous infusion of a VEGFR inhibitor on tumor growth and angiogenesis. GW771806, which has similar enzyme and cellular profiles to GW786034, was used for these studies due to higher solubility requirements for infusion studies. Comparing the pharmacokinetics by two different routes of administration (bolus p.o. dosing and continuous infusion), we showed that the antitumor and antiangiogenic activity of VEGFR inhibitors is dependent on steady-state concentration of the compound above a threshold. The steady-state concentration required for these effects is consistent with the concentration required for the inhibition of VEGF-induced VEGFR2 phosphorylation in mouse lungs. Furthermore, the steady-state concentration of pazopanib determined from preclinical activity showed a strong correlation with the pharmacodynamic effects and antitumor activity in the phase I clinical trial. [Mol Cancer Ther 2007;6(7):2012–21]


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

6-Ethynylthieno[3,2-d]- and 6-ethynylthieno[2,3-d]pyrimidin-4-anilines as tunable covalent modifiers of ErbB kinases

Edgar R. Wood; Lisa M. Shewchuk; Byron Ellis; Perry S. Brignola; Ronald L. Brashear; Thomas R. Caferro; Scott Howard Dickerson; Hamilton D. Dickson; Kelly Horne Donaldson; Michael David Gaul; Robert J. Griffin; Anne M. Hassell; Barry R. Keith; Robert J. Mullin; Kimberly G. Petrov; Michael J. Reno; David W. Rusnak; Sarva M. Tadepalli; John C. Ulrich; Craig D. Wagner; Dana Vanderwall; Alex G. Waterson; Jon D. Williams; Wendy L. White; David E. Uehling

Analysis of the x-ray crystal structure of mono-substituted acetylenic thienopyrimidine 6 complexed with the ErbB family enzyme ErbB-4 revealed a covalent bond between the terminal carbon of the acetylene moiety and the sulfhydryl group of Cys-803 at the solvent interface. The identification of this covalent adduct suggested that acetylenic thienopyrimidine 6 and related analogs might also be capable of forming an analogous covalent adduct with EGFR, which has a conserved cysteine (797) near the ATP binding pocket. To test this hypothesis, we treated a truncated, catalytically competent form of EGFR (678–1020) with a structurally related propargylic amine (8). An investigation of the resulting complex by mass spectrometry revealed the formation of a covalent complex of thienopyrimidine 8 with Cys-797 of EGFR. This finding enabled us to readily assess the irreversibility of various inhibitors and also facilitated a structure–activity relationship understanding of the covalent modifying potential and biological activity of a series of acetylenic thienopyrimidine compounds with potent antitumor activity. Several ErbB family enzyme and cell potent 6-ethynyl thienopyrimidine kinase inhibitors were found to form covalent adducts with EGFR.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997

TOWARD ANTIBODY-DIRECTED ENZYME PRODRUG THERAPY WITH THE T268G MUTANT OF HUMAN CARBOXYPEPTIDASE A1 AND NOVEL IN VIVO STABLE PRODRUGS OF METHOTREXATE

Gary K. Smith; Sheila D. Banks; Todd A. Blumenkopf; Michael Cory; Joan E. Humphreys; Ronald M. Laethem; John F. Miller; Cary P. Moxham; Robert J. Mullin; Paul H. Ray; Leslie Walton; Lawrence A. Wolfe

Antibody-directed enzyme prodrug therapy (ADEPT) has the potential of greatly enhancing antitumor selectivity of cancer therapy by synthesizing chemotherapeutic agents selectively at tumor sites. This therapy is based upon targeting a prodrug-activating enzyme to a tumor by attaching the enzyme to a tumor-selective antibody and dosing the enzyme-antibody conjugate systemically. After the enzyme-antibody conjugate is localized to the tumor, the prodrug is then also dosed systemically, and the previously targeted enzyme converts it to the active drug selectively at the tumor. Unfortunately, most enzymes capable of this specific, tumor site generation of drugs are foreign to the human body and as such are expected to raise an immune response when injected, which will limit their repeated administration. We reasoned that with the power of crystallography, molecular modeling and site-directed mutagenesis, this problem could be addressed through the development of a human enzyme that is capable of catalyzing a reaction that is otherwise not carried out in the human body. This would then allow use of prodrugs that are otherwise stablein vivo but that are substrates for a tumor-targeted mutant human enzyme. We report here the first test of this concept using the human enzyme carboxypeptidase A1 (hCPA1) and prodrugs of methotrexate (MTX). Based upon a computer model of the human enzyme built from the well known crystal structure of bovine carboxypeptidase A, we have designed and synthesized novel bulky phenylalanine- and tyrosine-based prodrugs of MTX that are metabolically stable in vivo and are not substrates for wild type human carboxypeptidases A. Two of these analogs are MTX-α-3-cyclobutylphenylalanine and MTX-α-3-cyclopentyltyrosine. Also based upon the computer model, we have designed and produced a mutant of human carboxypeptidase A1, changed at position 268 from the wild type threonine to a glycine (hCPA1-T268G). This novel enzyme is capable of using the in vivo stable prodrugs, which are not substrates for the wild type hCPA1, as efficiently as the wild type hCPA1 uses its best substrates (i.e. MTX-α-phenylalanine). Thus, thek cat/K m value for the wild type hCPA1 with MTX-α-phenylalanine is 0.44 μm −1 s−1, andk cat/K m values for hCPA1-T268G with MTX-α-3-cyclobutylphenylalanine and MTX-α-3-cyclopentyltyrosine are 1.8 and 0.16 μm −1 s−1, respectively. The cytotoxic efficiency of hCPA1–268G was tested in an in vitro ADEPT model. For this experiment, hCPA1-T268G was chemically conjugated to ING-1, an antibody that binds to the tumor antigen Ep-Cam, or to Campath-1H, an antibody that binds to the T and B cell antigen CDw52. These conjugates were then incubated with HT-29 human colon adenocarcinoma cells (which express Ep-Cam but not the Campath 1H antigen) followed by incubation of the cells with thein vivo stable prodrugs. The results showed that the targeted ING-1:hCPA1-T268G conjugate produced excellent activation of the MTX prodrugs to kill HT-29 cells as efficiently as MTX itself. By contrast, the enzyme-Campath 1H conjugate was without effect. These data strongly support the feasibility of ADEPT using a mutated human enzyme with a single amino acid change.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Thienopyrimidine-based dual EGFR/ErbB-2 inhibitors.

Tara Renae Rheault; Thomas R. Caferro; Scott Howard Dickerson; Kelly Horne Donaldson; Michael David Gaul; Aaron S. Goetz; Robert J. Mullin; Octerloney B. McDonald; Kimberly G. Petrov; David W. Rusnak; Lisa M. Shewchuk; Glenn M. Spehar; Anne T. Truesdale; Dana E. Vanderwall; Edgar R. Wood; David E. Uehling

Two new series of potent and selective dual EGFR/ErbB-2 kinase inhibitors derived from novel thienopyrimidine cores have been identified. Isomeric thienopyrimidine cores were evaluated as isosteres for a 4-anilinoquinazoline core and several analogs containing the thieno[3,2-d]pyrimidine core showed anti-proliferative activity with IC(50) values less than 1 microM against human tumor cells in vitro.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2003

Discovery and biological evaluation of potent dual ErbB-2/EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors: 6-thiazolylquinazolines.

Micheal D. Gaul; Yu Guo; Karen Affleck; G. Stuart Cockerill; Tona M. Gilmer; Robert J. Griffin; Stephen Barry Guntrip; Barry R. Keith; Wilson B. Knight; Robert J. Mullin; Doris M. Murray; David W. Rusnak; Kathryn Jane Smith; Sarva M. Tadepalli; Edgar R. Wood; Karen Lackey

We have identified a novel class of 6-thiazolylquinazolines as potent and selective inhibitors of both ErbB-2 and EGFR tyrosine kinase activity, with IC(50) values in the nanomolar range. These compounds inhibited the growth of both EGFR (HN5) and ErbB-2 (BT474) over-expressing human tumor cell lines in vitro. Using xenograft models of the same cell lines, we found that the compounds given orally inhibited in vivo tumor growth significantly compared with control animals.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1990

Activity of an NAD-dependent 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate dehydrogenase in normal tissue, neoplastic cells, and oncogene-transformed cells.

Gary K. Smith; Sheila D. Banks; Thomas J. Monaco; Ricardo Rigual; David S. Duch; Robert J. Mullin; Brian E. Huber

As an extension of the previously reported observation concerning the existence of NAD-dependent 5,10-methylenetrahydrofolate dehydrogenase in transformed cells a variety of tissues and cell lines have been assayed for this activity. This activity was found in all assayed transformed cells. Results with rat liver derived epithelial (RLE) cells transformed with a series of oncogenes (v-raf, v-raf/v-myc (J2), v-myc (J5), and v-Ha-ras (pRNR16)) indicated that expression of activity correlates with the extent of transformation and was independent of the oncogene used for transformation. Compared to previously reported values for normal tissue, surprisingly high levels of the NAD-dependent 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate dehydrogenase were found in the rat adrenal cortex. This activity was not seen in mouse or bovine adrenal. Enzymatic activity was also detected in mouse bone marrow and was strain dependent. The levels of activity in mouse bone marrow were lower than previously reported. The NAD-dependent 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate dehydrogenase activity in rat adrenal and RLE cells may represent tools for studying the regulation of expression of this activity.


Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology | 1988

Distribution and Metabolism of Calcium Leucovorin in Normal and Tumor Tissue

Robert J. Mullin; Barry R. Keith; David S. Duch

Thymidylate synthase catalyzes the formation of thymidylate from deoxyuridine monophosphate in a reaction which employs the folate cofactor CH2-H4PteGlu both as methyl donor and reductant. The TS inhibitor FUra has been widely used clinically for the treatment of solid tumors, particularly colorectal carcinomas. Inhibition of TS by FUra occurs following its metabolism to FdUMP and formation of a ternary complex involving TS, FdUMP and CH2-H4PteGlu (1–3). An increased interest in the use of FUra stems from the observations in tissue culture (4, 5) and in extracts of human colon adenocarcinoma xenographs (6) that the antitumor effects of FUra can be potentiated by the administration of exogenous folates in the form of calcium leucovorin. The results of these studies indicated that the response of many tumors to FUra is limited by the intracellular concentration of CH2-H4PteGlu and that the metabolism of 5-CHO-H4PteGlu to CH2-H4PteGlu following cellular uptake expands this cofactor pool. With increased intracellular levels of CH2-H4PteGlu, the half-life of the ternary complex is increased, resulting in increased cytoxicity. In support of this model, enlargement of the CH2-H4PteGlu pool following administration of 5-CHO-H4PteGlu has been demonstrated in tissue culture (7).


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Synthesis and stereochemical effects of pyrrolidinyl-acetylenic thieno[3,2-d]pyrimidines as EGFR and ErbB-2 inhibitors.

Kirk L. Stevens; Krystal J. Alligood; Jennifer G. Badiang Alberti; Thomas R. Caferro; Stanley D. Chamberlain; Scott Howard Dickerson; Hamilton D. Dickson; Holly Kathleen Emerson; Robert J. Griffin; Robert D. Hubbard; Barry R. Keith; Robert J. Mullin; Kimberly G. Petrov; Roseanne M. Gerding; Michael J. Reno; Tara Renae Rheault; David W. Rusnak; Douglas Mccord Sammond; Stephon C. Smith; David E. Uehling; Alex G. Waterson; Edgar R. Wood

A novel class of pyrrolidinyl-acetyleneic thieno[3,2-d]pyrimidines has been identified which potently inhibit the EGFR and ErbB-2 receptor tyrosine kinases. Synthetic modifications of the pyrrolidine carbamate moiety result in a range of effects on enzyme and cellular potency. In addition, the impact of the absolute stereochemical configuration on cellular potency and oral mouse pharmacokinetics is described.

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