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Dive into the research topics where Robert T. Dunn is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert T. Dunn.


Toxicological Sciences | 2013

A Multifactorial Approach to Hepatobiliary Transporter Assessment Enables Improved Therapeutic Compound Development

Ryan E. Morgan; Carlo van Staden; Yuan Chen; Natarajan Kalyanaraman; Jackson Kalanzi; Robert T. Dunn; Cynthia A. Afshari; Hisham K. Hamadeh

The bile salt export pump (BSEP) is expressed at the canalicular domain of hepatocytes, where it serves as the primary route of elimination for monovalent bile acids (BAs) into the bile canaliculi. The most compelling evidence linking dysfunction in BA transport with liver injury in humans is found with carriers of mutations that render BSEP nonfunctional. Based on mounting evidence, there appears to be a strong association between drug-induced BSEP interference and liver injury in humans; however, causality has not been established. For this reason, drug-induced BSEP interference is best considered a susceptibility factor for liver injury as other host- or drug-related properties may contribute to the development of hepatotoxicity. To better understand the association between BSEP interference and liver injury in humans, over 600 marketed or withdrawn drugs were evaluated in BSEP expressing membrane vesicles. The example of a compound that failed during phase 1 human trials is also described, AMG 009. AMG 009 showed evidence of liver injury in humans that was not predicted by preclinical safety studies, and BSEP inhibition was implicated. For 109 of the drugs with some effect on in vitro BSEP function, clinical use, associations with hepatotoxicity, pharmacokinetic data, and other information were annotated. A steady state concentration (C(ss)) for each of these annotated drugs was estimated, and a ratio between this value and measured IC₅₀ potency values were calculated in an attempt to relate exposure to in vitro potencies. When factoring for exposure, 95% of the annotated compounds with a C(ss)/BSEP IC₅₀ ratio ≥ 0.1 were associated with some form of liver injury. We then investigated the relationship between clinical evidence of liver injury and effects to multidrug resistance-associated proteins (MRPs) believed to play a role in BA homeostasis. The effect of 600+ drugs on MRP2, MRP3, and MRP4 function was also evaluated in membrane vesicle assays. Drugs with a C(ss)/BSEP IC₅₀ ratio ≥ 0.1 and a C(ss)/MRP IC₅₀ ratio ≥ 0.1 had almost a 100% correlation with some evidence of liver injury in humans. These data suggest that integration of exposure data, and knowledge of an effect to not only BSEP but also one or more of the MRPs, is a useful tool for informing the potential for liver injury due to altered BA transport.


Toxicological Sciences | 2008

Interlaboratory Evaluation of Genomic Signatures for Predicting Carcinogenicity in the Rat

Mark R. Fielden; Alex Nie; Michael McMillian; Chandi S. Elangbam; Bruce A. Trela; Yi Yang; Robert T. Dunn; Yvonne Dragan; Ronny Fransson-Stehen; Matthew S. Bogdanffy; Stephen P. Adams; William R. Foster; Shen-Jue Chen; Phil Rossi; Peter Kasper; David Jacobson-Kram; Kay S. Tatsuoka; Patrick J. Wier; Jeremy Gollub; Donald N. Halbert; Alan Roter; Jamie K. Young; Joseph F. Sina; Jennifer Marlowe; Hans-Joerg Martus; Andrew J. Olaharski; Nigel Roome; Paul Nioi; Ingrid Pardo; Ron Snyder

The Critical Path Institute recently established the Predictive Safety Testing Consortium, a collaboration between several companies and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, aimed at evaluating and qualifying biomarkers for a variety of toxicological endpoints. The Carcinogenicity Working Group of the Predictive Safety Testing Consortium has concentrated on sharing data to test the predictivity of two published hepatic gene expression signatures, including the signature by Fielden et al. (2007, Toxicol. Sci. 99, 90-100) for predicting nongenotoxic hepatocarcinogens, and the signature by Nie et al. (2006, Mol. Carcinog. 45, 914-933) for predicting nongenotoxic carcinogens. Although not a rigorous prospective validation exercise, the consortium approach created an opportunity to perform a meta-analysis to evaluate microarray data from short-term rat studies on over 150 compounds. Despite significant differences in study designs and microarray platforms between laboratories, the signatures proved to be relatively robust and more accurate than expected by chance. The accuracy of the Fielden et al. signature was between 63 and 69%, whereas the accuracy of the Nie et al. signature was between 55 and 64%. As expected, the predictivity was reduced relative to internal validation estimates reported under identical test conditions. Although the signatures were not deemed suitable for use in regulatory decision making, they were deemed worthwhile in the early assessment of drugs to aid decision making in drug development. These results have prompted additional efforts to rederive and evaluate a QPCR-based signature using these samples. When combined with a standardized test procedure and prospective interlaboratory validation, the accuracy and potential utility in preclinical applications can be ascertained.


Toxicological Sciences | 2011

Development and evaluation of a genomic signature for the prediction and mechanistic assessment of nongenotoxic hepatocarcinogens in the rat.

Mark R. Fielden; Alex Adai; Robert T. Dunn; Andrew J. Olaharski; George H. Searfoss; Joe Sina; Eric Boitier; Paul Nioi; Scott S. Auerbach; David Jacobson-Kram; Nandini Raghavan; Yi Yang; Andrew Kincaid; Jon Sherlock; Shen-Jue Chen; Bruce D. Car

Evaluating the risk of chemical carcinogenesis has long been a challenge owing to the protracted nature of the pathology and the limited translatability of animal models. Although numerous short-term in vitro and in vivo assays have been developed, they have failed to reliably predict the carcinogenicity of nongenotoxic compounds. Extending upon previous microarray work (Fielden, M. R., Nie, A., McMillian, M., Elangbam, C. S., Trela, B. A., Yang, Y., Dunn, R. T., II, Dragan, Y., Fransson-Stehen, R., Bogdanffy, M., et al. (2008). Interlaboratory evaluation of genomic signatures for predicting carcinogenicity in the rat. Toxicol. Sci. 103, 28-34), we have developed and extensively evaluated a quantitative PCR-based signature to predict the potential for nongenotoxic compounds to induce liver tumors in the rat as a first step in the safety assessment of potential nongenotoxic carcinogens. The training set was derived from liver RNA from rats treated with 72 compounds and used to develop a 22-gene signature on the TaqMan array platform, providing an economical and standardized assay protocol. Independent testing on over 900 diverse samples (66 compounds) confirmed the interlaboratory precision of the assay and its ability to predict known nongenotoxic hepatocarcinogens (NGHCs). When tested under different experimental designs, strains, time points, dose setting criteria, and other preanalytical processes, the signature sensitivity and specificity was estimated to be 67% (95% confidence interval [CI] = 38-88%) and 59% (95% CI = 44-72%), respectively, with an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.65 (95% CI = 0.46-0.83%). Compounds were best classified using expression data from short-term repeat dose studies; however, the prognostic expression changes appeared to be preserved after longer term treatment. Exploratory evaluations also revealed that different modes of action for nongenotoxic and genotoxic compounds can be discriminated based on the expression of specific genes. These results support a potential early preclinical testing paradigm to catalyze broader understanding of putative NGHCs.


Environmental Health Perspectives | 2010

Current and future applications of toxicogenomics: results summary of a survey from the HESI genomics state of science subcommittee.

Syril D. Pettit; Shelley Ann des Etages; Louis Mylecraine; Ronald D. Snyder; Jennifer Fostel; Robert T. Dunn; Kenneth Haymes; Manuel Duval; James L. Stevens; Cynthia A. Afshari; Alison Vickers

Background In spite of the application of toxicogenomic (TGx) data to the field of toxicology for the past 10 years, the broad implementation and full impact of TGx for chemical and drug evaluation to improve decision making within organizations and by policy makers has not been achieved. Objectives The goal of the Health and Environmental Sciences Institute (HESI) Committee on the Application of Genomics to Mechanism-based Risk Assessment was to construct and summarize a multisector survey, addressing key issues and perspectives on the current and future practical uses and challenges of implementing TGx data to facilitate discussions for decision making within organizations and by policy makers. Methods An online survey to probe the current status and future challenges facing the field of TGx for drug and chemical evaluation in experimental and nonclinical models was taken by scientists and scientific decision/policy makers actively engaged in the field of TGx within industrial, academic, and regulatory sectors of the United States, Europe, and Japan. For this survey, TGx refers specifically to the analysis of gene expression responses to evaluate xenobiotic exposure in experimental and preclinical models. Results The survey results are summarized from questions covering broad areas including technology used, organizational capacity and resource allocation, experimental approaches, data storage and exchange, perceptions of benefits and hurdles, and future expectations. Conclusions The survey findings provide valuable information on the current state of the science of TGx applications and identify key areas in which TGx will have an impact as well as the key hurdles in applying TGx data to address issues. The findings serve as a public resource to facilitate discussions on the focus of future TGx efforts to ensure that a maximal benefit can be obtained from toxicogenomic studies.


Toxicologic Pathology | 2015

Retinal Toxicity Induced by a Novel β-secretase Inhibitor in the Sprague-Dawley Rat

Mark R. Fielden; Jonathan A. Werner; Jeff A. Jamison; Aldo Coppi; Dean Hickman; Robert T. Dunn; Esther Trueblood; Lei Zhou; Cynthia A. Afshari; Ruth Lightfoot-Dunn

β-Secretase 1 (BACE1) represents an attractive target for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease. In the course of development of a novel small molecule BACE1 inhibitor (AMG-8718), retinal thinning was observed in a 1-month toxicity study in the rat. To further understand the lesion, an investigational study was conducted whereby rats were treated daily with AMG-8718 for 1 month followed by a 2-month treatment-free phase. The earliest detectable change in the retina was an increase in autofluorescent granules in the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) on day 5; however, there were no treatment-related light microscopic changes observed in the neuroretina and no changes observed by fundus autofluorescence or routine ophthalmoscopic examination after 28 days of dosing. Following 2 months of recovery, there was significant retinal thinning attributed to loss of photoreceptor nuclei from the outer nuclear layer. Electroretinographic changes were observed as early as day 14, before any microscopic evidence of photoreceptor loss. BACE1 knockout rats were generated and found to have normal retinal morphology indicating that the retinal toxicity induced by AMG-8718 was likely off-target. These results suggest that AMG-8718 impairs phagolysosomal function in the rat RPE, which leads to photoreceptor dysfunction and ultimately loss of photoreceptors.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015

Development of 2-aminooxazoline 3-azaxanthenes as orally efficacious β-secretase inhibitors for the potential treatment of Alzheimer's disease.

Jian Jeffrey Chen; Qingyian Liu; Chester Chenguang Yuan; Vijay Keshav Gore; Patricia Lopez; Vu Van Ma; Albert Amegadzie; Wenyuan Qian; Ted Judd; Ana Elena Minatti; James Brown; Yuan Cheng; May Xue; Wenge Zhong; Thomas Dineen; Oleg Epstein; Jason Brooks Human; Charles Kreiman; Isaac E. Marx; Matthew Weiss; Stephen A. Hitchcock; Timothy Powers; Kui Chen; Paul H. Wen; Douglas A. Whittington; Alan C. Cheng; Michael D. Bartberger; Dean Hickman; Jonathan A. Werner; Hugo M. Vargas

The β-site amyloid precursor protein (APP) cleaving enzyme 1 (BACE1) is one of the most hotly pursued targets for the treatment of Alzheimers disease. We used a structure- and property-based drug design approach to identify 2-aminooxazoline 3-azaxanthenes as potent BACE1 inhibitors which significantly reduced CSF and brain Aβ levels in a rat pharmacodynamic model. Compared to the initial lead 2, compound 28 exhibited reduced potential for QTc prolongation in a non-human primate cardiovascular safety model.


Drug Metabolism and Disposition | 2016

Modeling Therapeutic Antibody–Small Molecule Drug-Drug Interactions Using a Three-Dimensional Perfusable Human Liver Coculture Platform

Thomas Joseph Long; Patrick A Cosgrove; Robert T. Dunn; Donna B. Stolz; Hisham K. Hamadeh; Cynthia A. Afshari; Helen J. McBride; Linda G. Griffith

Traditional in vitro human liver cell culture models lose key hepatic functions such as metabolic activity during short-term culture. Advanced three-dimensional (3D) liver coculture platforms offer the potential for extended hepatocyte functionality and allow for the study of more complex biologic interactions, which can improve and refine human drug safety evaluations. Here, we use a perfusion flow 3D microreactor platform for the coculture of cryopreserved primary human hepatocytes and Kupffer cells to study the regulation of cytochrome P450 3A4 isoform (CYP3A4) activity by chronic interleukin 6 (IL-6)–mediated inflammation over 2 weeks. Hepatocyte cultures remained stable over 2 weeks, with consistent albumin production and basal IL-6 levels. Direct IL-6 stimulation that mimics an inflammatory state induced a dose-dependent suppression of CYP3A4 activity, an increase in C-reactive protein (CRP) secretion, and a decrease in shed soluble interleukin-6 receptor (IL-6R) levels, indicating expected hepatic IL-6 bioactivity. Tocilizumab, an anti-IL-6R monoclonal antibody used to treat rheumatoid arthritis, has been demonstrated clinically to impact small molecule drug pharmacokinetics by modulating cytochrome P450 enzyme activities, an effect not observed in traditional hepatic cultures. We have now recapitulated the clinical observation in a 3D bioreactor system. Tocilizumab was shown to desuppress CYP3A4 activity while reducing the CRP concentration after 72 hours in the continued presence of IL-6. This change in CYP3A4 activity decreased the half-life and area under the curve up to the last measurable concentration (AUClast) of the small molecule CYP3A4 substrate simvastatin hydroxy acid, measured before and after tocilizumab treatment. We conclude that next-generation in vitro liver culture platforms are well suited for these types of long-term treatment studies and show promise for improved drug safety assessment.


PLOS ONE | 2010

A Novel Statistical Algorithm for Gene Expression Analysis Helps Differentiate Pregnane X Receptor-Dependent and Independent Mechanisms of Toxicity

M. Ann Mongan; Robert T. Dunn; Steven Vonderfecht; Nancy E. Everds; Guang Chen; Cheng Su; Marnie Higgins-Garn; Yuan Chen; Cynthia A. Afshari; Toni Williamson; Linda L. Carlock; Christopher R DiPalma; Suzanne Moss; Jeanine Bussiere; Charles W. Qualls; Yudong D. He; Hisham K. Hamadeh

Genome-wide gene expression profiling has become standard for assessing potential liabilities as well as for elucidating mechanisms of toxicity of drug candidates under development. Analysis of microarray data is often challenging due to the lack of a statistical model that is amenable to biological variation in a small number of samples. Here we present a novel non-parametric algorithm that requires minimal assumptions about the data distribution. Our method for determining differential expression consists of two steps: 1) We apply a nominal threshold on fold change and platform p-value to designate whether a gene is differentially expressed in each treated and control sample relative to the averaged control pool, and 2) We compared the number of samples satisfying criteria in step 1 between the treated and control groups to estimate the statistical significance based on a null distribution established by sample permutations. The method captures group effect without being too sensitive to anomalies as it allows tolerance for potential non-responders in the treatment group and outliers in the control group. Performance and results of this method were compared with the Significant Analysis of Microarrays (SAM) method. These two methods were applied to investigate hepatic transcriptional responses of wild-type (PXR+/+) and pregnane X receptor-knockout (PXR−/−) mice after 96 h exposure to CMP013, an inhibitor of β-secretase (β-site of amyloid precursor protein cleaving enzyme 1 or BACE1). Our results showed that CMP013 led to transcriptional changes in hallmark PXR-regulated genes and induced a cascade of gene expression changes that explained the hepatomegaly observed only in PXR+/+ animals. Comparison of concordant expression changes between PXR+/+ and PXR−/− mice also suggested a PXR-independent association between CMP013 and perturbations to cellular stress, lipid metabolism, and biliary transport.


Toxicological Sciences | 2015

Utilization of Human Nuclear Receptors as an Early Counter Screen for Off-Target Activity: A Case Study with a Compendium of 615 Known Drugs

Fan Fan; Rong Hu; Anke Munzli; Yuan Chen; Robert T. Dunn; Kerstin Weikl; Simone Strauch; Ralf Schwandner; Cynthia A. Afshari; Hisham K. Hamadeh; Paul Nioi

Off-target effects of drugs on nuclear hormone receptors (NHRs) may result in adverse effects in multiple organs/physiological processes. Reliable assessments of the NHR activities for drug candidates are therefore crucial for drug development. However, the highly permissive structures of NHRs for vastly different ligands make it challenging to predict interactions by examining the chemical structures of the ligands. Here, we report a detailed investigation on the agonistic and antagonistic activities of 615 known drugs or drug candidates against a panel of 6 NHRs: androgen, progesterone, estrogen α/β, and thyroid hormone α/β receptors. Our study revealed that 4.7 and 12.4% compounds have agonistic and antagonistic activities, respectively, against this panel of NHRs. Nonetheless, potent, unintended NHR hits are relatively rare among the known drugs, indicating that such interactions are perhaps not tolerated during drug development. However, we uncovered examples of compounds that unintentionally agonize or antagonize NHRs. In addition, a number of compounds showed multi-NHR activities, suggesting that the cross-talk between multiple NHRs co-operate to elicit in vivo effects. These data highlight the merits of counter screening drug candidate against NHRs during drug discovery/development.


Drug Metabolism and Disposition | 2018

Intravital Multiphoton Microscopy with Fluorescent Bile Salts in Rats as an In Vivo Biomarker for Hepatobiliary Transport Inhibition

Jennifer Ryan; Ryan E. Morgan; Yuan Chen; Laurie P. Volak; Robert T. Dunn; Kenneth W. Dunn

The bile salt export pump (BSEP) is expressed at the canalicular domain of hepatocytes, where it mediates the elimination of monovalent bile salts into the bile. Inhibition of BSEP is considered a susceptibility factor for drug-induced liver injury that often goes undetected during nonclinical testing. Although in vitro assays exist for screening BSEP inhibition, a reliable and specific method for confirming Bsep inhibition in vivo would be a valuable follow up to a BSEP screening strategy, helping to put a translatable context around in vitro inhibition data, incorporating processes such as metabolism, protein binding, and other exposure properties that are lacking in most in vitro BSEP models. Here, we describe studies in which methods of quantitative intravital microscopy were used to identify dose-dependent effects of two known BSEP/Bsep inhibitors, 2-[4-[4-(butylcarbamoyl)-2-[(2,4-dichlorophenyl)sulfonylamino]phenoxy]-3-methoxyphenyl]acetic acid (AMG-009) and bosentan, on hepatocellular transport of the fluorescent bile salts cholylglycyl amidofluorescein and cholyl-lysyl-fluorescein in rats. Results of these studies demonstrate that the intravital microscopy approach is capable of detecting Bsep inhibition at drug doses well below those found to increase serum bile acid levels, and also indicate that basolateral efflux transporters play a significant role in preventing cytosolic accumulation of bile acids under conditions of Bsep inhibition in rats. Studies of this kind can both improve our understanding of exposures needed to inhibit Bsep in vivo and provide unique insights into drug effects in ways that can improve our ability interpret animal studies for the prediction of human drug hepatotoxicity.

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David Jacobson-Kram

Food and Drug Administration

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