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Dive into the research topics where Robert L. Shepard is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert L. Shepard.


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2005

The multidrug resistance protein 5 (ABCC5) confers resistance to 5-fluorouracil and transports its monophosphorylated metabolites

Susan E. Pratt; Robert L. Shepard; Ramani Kandasamy; Paul A. Johnston; William L. Perry; Anne H. Dantzig

5′-Fluorouracil (5-FU), used in the treatment of colon and breast cancers, is converted intracellularly to 5′-fluoro-2′-deoxyuridine (5-FUdR) by thymidine phosphorylase and is subsequently phosphorylated by thymidine kinase to 5′-fluoro-2′-dUMP (5-FdUMP). This active metabolite, along with the reduced folate cofactor, 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate, forms a stable inhibitory complex with thymidylate synthase that blocks cellular growth. The present study shows that the ATP-dependent multidrug resistance protein-5 (MRP5, ABCC5) confers resistance to 5-FU by transporting the monophosphate metabolites. MRP5- and vector-transfected human embryonic kidney (HEK) cells were employed in these studies. In 3-day cytotoxicity assays, MRP5-transfected cells were ∼9-fold resistant to 5-FU and 6-thioguanine. Studies with inside-out membrane vesicles prepared from transfected cells showed that MRP5 mediates ATP-dependent transport of 5 μmol/L [3H]5-FdUMP, [3H]5-FUMP, [3H]dUMP, and not [3H]5-FUdR, or [3H]5-FU. The ATP-dependent transport of 5-FdUMP showed saturation with increasing concentrations and had a Km of 1.1 mmol/L and Vmax of 439 pmol/min/mg protein. Uptake of 250 μmol/L 5-FdUMP was inhibited by dUMP, cyclic nucleotide, cyclic guanosine 3′,5′-monophosphate, amphiphilic anions such as probenecid, MK571, the phosphodiesterase inhibitors, trequinsin, zaprinast, and sildenafil, and by the chloride channel blockers, 5-nitro-2-(3-phenylpropylamino)-benzoic acid and glybenclamide. Furthermore, the 5-FU drug sensitivity of HEK-MRP5 cells was partially modulated to that of the HEK-vector by the presence of 40 μmol/L 5-nitro-2-(3-phenylpropylamino)-benzoic acid but not by 2 mmol/L probenecid. Thus, MRP5 transports the monophosphorylated metabolite of this nucleoside and when MRP5 is overexpressed in colorectal and breast tumors, it may contribute to 5-FU drug resistance.


International Journal of Cancer | 2003

Modulation of P-glycoprotein but not MRP1- or BCRP-mediated drug resistance by LY335979

Robert L. Shepard; Jin Cao; James J. Starling; Anne H. Dantzig

Our study examines the ability of LY335979 (Zosuquidar trihydrochloride) to modulate 3 distinct ABC transporters that are mechanisms of drug resistance: P‐glycoprotein (Pgp, ABCB1), multidrug resistance associated protein (MRP1, ABCC2) and breast cancer resistance protein (BCRP, ABCG2). Pgp‐mediated resistance can be modulated by coadministration with the highly potent, selective inhibitor, LY335979. Modulation of resistance by mitoxantrone and vinorelbine, 2 drugs used to treat certain solid tumors, was examined in a 3‐day cytotoxicity assay using a panel of HL60 leukemia cell lines or MCF‐7 breast cancer transfectants. LY335979, at 0.5 μM, substantially reversed mitoxantrone resistance and fully reversed vinorelbine resistance of Pgp‐expressing HL60/Vinc cells. However, LY335979 did not modulate drug resistance in the MRP1‐expressing HL60/ADR or drug‐sensitive parental HL60 cells. To ascertain if LY335979 modulates BCRP‐mediated drug resistance, the sensitivity of 26‐fold mitoxantrone resistant, BCRP‐transfected MCF‐7 cells was evaluated. Addition of 5 μM LY335979, a concentration ∼100‐fold higher than the affinity of Pgp, had little to no effect on the BCRP transfectant. [125I]Iodomycin photolabeled Pgp in CEM/VLB100 membranes and was inhibited by 5 μM LY335979 and GF120918. No photolabeling of MRP or BCRP occurred in H69AR or MCF‐7/BCRP membranes, respectively. These results further demonstrate that LY335979 is highly specific for Pgp and does not modulate MRP1‐ or BCRP‐mediated resistance and can be used in combination with mitoxantrone and vinorelbine in tumor cells.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

Pharmacological Inhibition of Nicotinamide Phosphoribosyltransferase (NAMPT), an Enzyme Essential for NAD+ Biosynthesis, in Human Cancer Cells METABOLIC BASIS AND POTENTIAL CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS

Bo Tan; Debra A. Young; Zhao Hai Lu; Tao Wang; Timothy I. Meier; Robert L. Shepard; Kenneth D. Roth; Yan Zhai; Karen L. Huss; Ming-Shang Kuo; James Ronald Gillig; Saravanan Parthasarathy; Timothy Paul Burkholder; Michele C. Smith; Sandaruwan Geeganage; Genshi Zhao

Background: NAMPT catalyzes the rate-limiting reaction in converting nicotinamide to NAD+ in cancers. Results: NAMPT inhibition attenuates glycolysis at the glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase step, resulting in perturbing metabolic pathways related to glycolysis. Conclusion: The metabolic basis of NAMPT inhibition is the attenuation of glycolysis by reducing NAD+ available to glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase. Significance: This study sheds new light on how NAMPT regulates cancer metabolism. Nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase (NAMPT) catalyzes the first rate-limiting step in converting nicotinamide to NAD+, essential for cellular metabolism, energy production, and DNA repair. NAMPT has been extensively studied because of its critical role in these cellular processes and the prospect of developing therapeutics against the target, yet how it regulates cellular metabolism is not fully understood. In this study we utilized liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry to examine the effects of FK866, a small molecule inhibitor of NAMPT currently in clinical trials, on glycolysis, the pentose phosphate pathway, the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle, and serine biosynthesis in cancer cells and tumor xenografts. We show for the first time that NAMPT inhibition leads to the attenuation of glycolysis at the glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase step due to the reduced availability of NAD+ for the enzyme. The attenuation of glycolysis results in the accumulation of glycolytic intermediates before and at the glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase step, promoting carbon overflow into the pentose phosphate pathway as evidenced by the increased intermediate levels. The attenuation of glycolysis also causes decreased glycolytic intermediates after the glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase step, thereby reducing carbon flow into serine biosynthesis and the TCA cycle. Labeling studies establish that the carbon overflow into the pentose phosphate pathway is mainly through its non-oxidative branch. Together, these studies establish the blockade of glycolysis at the glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase step as the central metabolic basis of NAMPT inhibition responsible for ATP depletion, metabolic perturbation, and subsequent tumor growth inhibition. These studies also suggest that altered metabolite levels in tumors can be used as robust pharmacodynamic markers for evaluating NAMPT inhibitors in the clinic.


American Journal of Pathology | 2003

Human SPF45, a splicing factor, has limited expression in normal tissues, is overexpressed in many tumors, and can confer a multidrug-resistant phenotype to cells.

Janardhan Sampath; Pandy R. Long; Robert L. Shepard; Xiaoling Xia; Viswanath Devanarayan; George E. Sandusky; William L. Perry; Anne H. Dantzig; Mark Williamson; Mark Rolfe; Robert E. Moore

Our effort to identify novel drug-resistant genes in cyclophosphamide-resistant EMT6 mouse mammary tumors led us to the identification of SPF45. Simultaneously, other groups identified SPF45 as a component of the spliceosome that is involved in alternative splicing. We isolated the human homologue and examined the normal human tissue expression, tumor expression, and the phenotype caused by overexpression of human SPF45. Our analyses revealed that SPF45 is expressed in many, but not all, normal tissues tested with predominant expression in normal ductal epithelial cells of the breast, liver, pancreas, and prostate. Our analyses using tissue microarrays and sausages of tumors indicated that SPF45 is highly expressed in numerous carcinomas including bladder, breast, colon, lung, ovarian, pancreatic, and prostate. Interestingly, this study revealed that overexpression of SPF45 in HeLa, a cervical carcinoma cell line, resulted in drug resistance to doxorubicin and vincristine, two chemotherapeutic drugs commonly used in cancer. To our knowledge, this is the first study showing tumor overexpression of an alternate splicing factor resulting in drug resistance.


Biochemical Pharmacology | 1998

Effect of modulators on the ATPase activity and vanadate nucleotide trapping of human P-glycoprotein.

Robert L. Shepard; Mark Alan Winter; Suzanne C. Hsaio; Homer L. Pearce; William T. Beck; Anne H. Dantzig

P-Glycoprotein (Pgp) is responsible for the energy-dependent efflux of many natural product oncolytics. Overexpression of Pgp may result in multidrug resistance (MDR). Modulators can block Pgp efflux and sensitize multidrug resistant cells to these oncolytics. To study the interaction of modulators with Pgp, Pgp-ATPase activity was examined, using plasma membranes isolated from the multidrug-resistant cell line CEM/VLB100. A survey of modulators indicated that verapamil, trifluoperazine, and nicardipine stimulated ATPase activity by 1.3- to 1.8-fold, whereas two others, trimethoxybenzoylyohimbine (TMBY) and vindoline, had no effect. Further evaluation showed that TMBY completely blocked the stimulation by verapamil of ATPase activity by competitive inhibition, with a Ki of 2.1 microM. When the effects of these two modulators on the formation of the enzyme-nucleotide complex important in the catalytic cycle were examined, verapamil increased the amount of vanadate-trapped 8-azido-[alpha-32P]ATP bound to Pgp by two-fold, whereas TMBY had no effect. Moreover, TMBY blocked the verapamil stimulation of vanadate-8-azido-[alpha-32P]ATP. Together, these data indicate that verapamil and TMBY bind to Pgp at a common site or overlapping sites, but only verapamil results in enhanced Pgp-ATP hydrolysis and formation of the vanadate-nucleotide-enzyme complex.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2013

Human Carboxylesterase-2 Hydrolyzes the Prodrug of Gemcitabine (LY2334737) and Confers Prodrug Sensitivity to Cancer Cells

Susan E. Pratt; Sara Durland-Busbice; Robert L. Shepard; Kathleen M. Heinz-Taheny; Philip W. Iversen; Anne H. Dantzig

Purpose: The oral prodrug of gemcitabine LY2334737 is cleaved systemically to gemcitabine; the mechanism responsible for hydrolysis is unknown. LY2334737 cytotoxicity was tested in the NCI-60 panel; mining of microarray expression data identified carboxylesterase (CES) as a top hydrolase candidate. Studies examined whether CES is responsible for hydrolysis and whether cellular CES expression confers prodrug sensitivity. Experimental Design: Human recombinant CES isozymes were assayed for LY2334737 hydrolysis. Stable CES-overexpressing HCT-116 transfectants and a SK-OV-3 knockdown were prepared. Cell lines were tested for drug sensitivity and CES expression by quantitative real time-PCR (qRT-PCR), Western blotting, and immunohistochemical staining. Bystander cytotoxicity studies were conducted with GFP-tagged PC-3 cells as the reporter cell line. Therapeutic response of the HCT-116 transfectants was evaluated in xenografts. Results: Of 3 human CES isozymes tested, only CES2 hydrolyzed LY2334737. Five cell lines that express CES2 responded to LY2334737 treatment. LY2334737 was less cytotoxic to a SK-OV-3 CES2 knockdown than parental cells. The drug response of CES2-transfected HCT-116 cells correlated with CES2 expression level. Bystander studies showed statistically greater PC-3–GFP growth inhibition by LY2334737 when cells were cocultured with CES2 and not mock transfectants. Oral treatment of xenograft models with 3.2 mg/kg LY2334737 once a day for 21 days showed greater tumor growth inhibition of CES2 transfectant than the mock transfectant (P ≤ 0.001). Conclusions: CES2 is responsible for the slow hydrolysis of LY2334737. Because intact prodrug circulates at high plasma levels after oral LY2334737 administration, improved response rates may be observed by tailoring LY2334737 treatment to patients with CES2 tumor expression. Clin Cancer Res; 19(5); 1159–68. ©2012 AACR.


Cancer Research | 2005

Human Splicing Factor SPF45 (RBM17) Confers Broad Multidrug Resistance to Anticancer Drugs When Overexpressed— a Phenotype Partially Reversed By Selective Estrogen Receptor Modulators

William L. Perry; Robert L. Shepard; Janardhan Sampath; Benjamin C. Yaden; William W. Chin; Philip W. Iversen; Shengfang Jin; Andrea Lesoon; Kathryn A. O'Brien; Victoria L. Peek; Mark Rolfe; Andrew W. Shyjan; Michelle Tighe; Mark Williamson; Venkatesh Krishnan; Robert E. Moore; Anne H. Dantzig

The splicing factor SPF45 (RBM17) is frequently overexpressed in many solid tumors, and stable expression in HeLa cells confers resistance to doxorubicin and vincristine. In this study, we characterized stable transfectants of A2780 ovarian carcinoma cells. In a 3-day cytotoxicity assay, human SPF45 overexpression conferred 3- to 21-fold resistance to carboplatin, vinorelbine, doxorubicin, etoposide, mitoxantrone, and vincristine. In addition, resistance to gemcitabine and pemetrexed was observed at the highest drug concentrations tested. Knockdown of SPF45 in parental A2780 cells using a hammerhead ribozyme sensitized A2780 cells to etoposide by approximately 5-fold relative to a catalytically inactive ribozyme control and untransfected cells, suggesting a role for SPF45 in intrinsic resistance to some drugs. A2780-SPF45 cells accumulated similar levels of doxorubicin as vector-transfected and parental A2780 cells, indicating that drug resistance is not due to differences in drug accumulation. Efforts to identify small molecules that could block SPF45-mediated drug resistance revealed that the selective estrogen receptor (ER) modulators tamoxifen and LY117018 (a raloxifene analogue) partially reversed SPF45-mediated drug resistance to mitoxantrone in A2780-SPF45 cells from 21-fold to 8- and 5-fold, respectively, but did not significantly affect the mitoxantrone sensitivity of vector control cells. Quantitative PCR showed that ERbeta but not ERalpha was expressed in A2780 transfectants. Coimmunoprecipitation experiments suggest that SPF45 and ERbeta physically interact in vivo. Thus, SPF45-mediated drug resistance in A2780 cells may result in part from effects of SPF45 on the transcription or alternate splicing of ERbeta-regulated genes.


In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology – Animal | 1999

Evaluation of an in vitro coculture model for the blood-brain barrier: comparison of human umbilical vein endothelial cells (ECV304) and rat glioma cells (C6) from two commercial sources.

Jamie L. Scism; Dennis A. Laska; Jeffrey W. Horn; Jerry L. Gimple; Susan E. Pratt; Robert L. Shepard; Anne H. Dantzig; Steven A. Wrighton

SummaryCocultures of human umbilical vein endothelial cells (ECV304) and rat glioma cells (C6) from two commercial sources, American Type Culture Collection and European Collection of Animal Cell Cultures, were evaluated as an in vitro model for the blood-brain barrier. Monolayers of endothelial cells grown in the presence or absence of glial cells were examined for transendothelial electrical resistance, sucrose permeability, morphology, multidrug resistance-associated protein expression, and P-glycoprotein expression and function. Coculture of glial cells with endothelial cells increased electrical resistance and decreased sucrose permeability across European endothelial cell monolayers, but had no effect on American endothelial cells. Coculture of European glial cells with endothelial cells caused cell flattening and decreased cell stacking with both European and American endothelial cells. No P-glycoprotein or multidrug resistance-associated protein was immunodetected in endothelial cells grown in glial cell-conditioned medium. Functional P-glycoprotein was demonstrated in American endothelial cells selected in vinblastine-containing medium over eight passages, but these cells did not form a tight endothelium. In conclusion, while European glial cells confer blood-brain barrier-like morphology and barrier integrity to European endothelial cells in coculture, the European endothelial-glial cell coculture model does not express P-glycoprotein, normally found at the blood-brain barrier. Further, the response of endothelial cells to glial factors was dependent on cell source, implying heterogeneity among cell populations. On the basis of these observations, the umbilical vein endothelial cell-glial cell coculture model does not appear to be a viable model for predicting blood-brain barrier penetration of drug molecules.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 1999

Reversal of resistance in multidrug resistance protein (MRP1)-overexpressing cells by LY329146.

Bryan H. Norman; Anne H. Dantzig; Julian Stanley Kroin; Kevin L. Law; Linda B. Tabas; Robert L. Shepard; Alan David Palkowitz; Kenneth Lee Hauser; Mark Alan Winter; James P. Sluka; James J. Starling

The benzothiophene LY329146 reverses the drug resistance phenotype in multidrug resistance protein (MRP1)-overexpressing cells when dosed in combination with MRP1-associated oncolytics doxorubicin and vincristine. Additionally, LY329146 inhibited MRP1-mediated uptake of the MRP1 substrate LTC4 into membrane vesicles prepared from MRP1-overexpressing cells.


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2013

Efficacy of Low-Dose Oral Metronomic Dosing of the Prodrug of Gemcitabine, LY2334737, in Human Tumor Xenografts

Susan E. Pratt; Sara Durland-Busbice; Robert L. Shepard; Gregory P. Donoho; James J. Starling; Enaksha R. Wickremsinhe; Everett J. Perkins; Anne H. Dantzig

LY2334737, an oral prodrug of gemcitabine, is cleaved in vivo, releasing gemcitabine and valproic acid. Oral dosing of mice results in absorption of intact prodrug with slow systemic hydrolysis yielding higher plasma levels of LY2334737 than gemcitabine and prolonged gemcitabine exposure. Antitumor activity was evaluated in human colon and lung tumor xenograft models. The dose response for efficacy was examined using 3 metronomic schedules, once-a-day dosing for 14 doses, every other day for 7 doses, and once a day for 7 doses, 7 days rest, followed by an additional 7 days of once-a-day dosing. These schedules gave significant antitumor activity and were well tolerated. Oral gavage of 6 mg/kg LY2334737 daily for 21 days gave equivalent activity to i.v. 240 mg/kg gemcitabine. HCl administered once a week for 3 weeks to mice bearing a patient mesothelioma tumor PXF 1118 or a non–small cell lung cancer tumor LXFE 937. The LXFE 397 tumor possessed elevated expression of the equilibrative nucleoside transporter-1 (ENT1) important for gemcitabine uptake but not prodrug uptake and responded significantly better to treatment with LY2334737 than gemcitabine (P ≤ 0.001). In 3 colon xenografts, antitumor activity of LY2334737 plus a maximally tolerated dose of capecitabine, an oral prodrug of 5-fluorouracil, was significantly greater than either monotherapy. During treatment, the expression of carboxylesterase 2 (CES2) and concentrative nucleoside transporter-3 was induced in HCT-116 tumors; both are needed for the activity of the prodrugs. Thus, metronomic oral low-dose LY2334737 is efficacious, well tolerated, and easily combined with capecitabine for improved efficacy. Elevated CES2 or ENT1 expression may enhance LY2334737 tumor response. Mol Cancer Ther; 12(4); 481–90. ©2013 AACR.

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Bo Tan

Eli Lilly and Company

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