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Dive into the research topics where Shainnel O. Eans is active.

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Featured researches published by Shainnel O. Eans.


Behavioral Neuroscience | 2009

Social investigation in a memory task relates to natural variation in septal expression of oxytocin receptor and vasopressin receptor 1a in prairie voles (Microtus ochrogaster).

Alexander G. Ophir; Da-Jiang Zheng; Shainnel O. Eans; Steven M. Phelps

Arginine vasopressin (AVP) and oxytocin (OT) influence social behavior and cognitive processes and may explain some of the variance associated with individual differences in behavior. Although great focus has been placed on the roles of these peptides in learning and memory, less attention has been given to the receptors to which they bind. The authors exposed male prairie voles (Microtus ochrogaster) to novel females in a multitrial social recognition test to investigate whether individual differences in vasopressin receptor (V1aR) or oxytocin receptor (OTR) related to social recognition. The authors also explored differences in OTR and V1aR throughout the brain to determine whether patterns of receptor coexpression emerged in functionally related structures. Male investigation of females was highly variable, and those that investigated females the most did not habituate to repeated female presentation. Moreover, high investigators expressed significantly more V1aR and less OTR in the lateral septum. Coexpression patterns of these receptors emphasize the role of OT and AVP in neural circuits involved in social behavior, reward, learning, and memory. Understanding individual differences in the laboratory may provide insight into evolved natural behavior.


Journal of Natural Products | 2013

The Macrocyclic Peptide Natural Product CJ-15,208 Is Orally Active and Prevents Reinstatement of Extinguished Cocaine-Seeking Behavior

Jane V. Aldrich; Sanjeewa N. Senadheera; Nicolette C. Ross; Michelle L. Ganno; Shainnel O. Eans; Jay P. McLaughlin

The macrocyclic tetrapeptide natural product CJ-15,208 (cyclo[Phe-d-Pro-Phe-Trp]) exhibited both dose-dependent antinociception and kappa opioid receptor (KOR) antagonist activity after oral administration. CJ-15,208 antagonized a centrally administered KOR selective agonist, providing strong evidence it crosses the blood-brain barrier to reach KOR in the CNS. Orally administered CJ-15,208 also prevented both cocaine- and stress-induced reinstatement of extinguished cocaine-seeking behavior in the conditioned place preference assay in a time- and dose-dependent manner. Thus, CJ-15,208 is a promising lead compound with a unique activity profile for potential development, particularly as a therapeutic to prevent relapse to drug-seeking behavior in abstinent subjects.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Nonpeptide small molecule agonist and antagonist original leads for neuropeptide FF1 and FF2 receptors.

V. Blair Journigan; Christophe Mesangeau; Neha Vyas; Shainnel O. Eans; Stephen J. Cutler; Jay P. McLaughlin; Catherine Mollereau; Christopher R. McCurdy

Neuropeptide FF1 and FF2 receptors (NPFF1-R and NPFF2-R), and their endogenous ligand NPFF, are one of only several systems responsible for mediating opioid-induced hyperalgesia, tolerance, and dependence. Currently, no small molecules displaying good affinity or selectivity for either subtype have been reported, to decipher the role of NPFF2-R as it relates to opioid-mediated analgesia, for further exploration of NPFF1-R, or for medication development for either subtype. We report the first nonpeptide small molecule scaffold for NPFF1,2-R, the guanidino-piperidines, and SAR studies resulting in the discovery of a NPFF1 agonist (7b, Ki = 487 ± 117 nM), a NPFF1 antagonist (46, Ki = 81 ± 17 nM), and a NPFF2 partial antagonist (53a, Ki = 30 ± 5 nM), which serve as leads for the development of pharmacological probes and potential therapeutic agents. Testing of 46 alone was without effect in the mouse 48 °C warm-water tail-withdrawal test, but pretreatment with 46 prevented NPFF-induced hyperalgesia.


British Journal of Pharmacology | 2017

Selective κ receptor partial agonist HS666 produces potent antinociception without inducing aversion after i.c.v. administration in mice

Mariana Spetea; Shainnel O. Eans; Michelle L. Ganno; Aquilino Lantero; Michael Mairegger; Lawrence Toll; Helmut Schmidhammer; Jay P. McLaughlin

The κ receptor has a central role in modulating neurotransmission in central and peripheral neuronal circuits that subserve pain and other behavioural responses. Although κ receptor agonists do not produce euphoria or lead to respiratory suppression, they induce dysphoria and sedation. We hypothesized that brain‐penetrant κ receptor ligands possessing biased agonism towards G protein signalling over β‐arrestin2 recruitment would produce robust antinociception with fewer associated liabilities.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015

Parallel Synthesis of Hexahydrodiimidazodiazepines Heterocyclic Peptidomimetics and Their in Vitro and in Vivo Activities at μ (MOR), δ (DOR), and κ (KOR) Opioid Receptors.

Shainnel O. Eans; Michelle L. Ganno; Elisa Mizrachi; Richard A. Houghten; Colette T. Dooley; Jay P. McLaughlin; Adel Nefzi

In the development of analgesics with mixed-opioid agonist activity, peripherally selective activity is expected to decrease side effects, minimizing respiratory depression and reinforcing properties generating significantly safer analgesic therapeutics. We synthesized diazaheterocyclics from reduced tripeptides. In vitro screening with radioligand competition binding assays demonstrated variable affinity for μ (MOR), δ (DOR), and κ (KOR) opioid receptors across the series, with the diimidazodiazepine 14 (2065-14) displaying good affinity for DOR and KOR. Central (icv), intraperitoneal (ip), or oral (po) administration of 14 produced dose-dependent, opioid-receptor mediated antinociception in the mouse, as determined from a 55 °C warm-water tail-withdrawal assay. Only trace amounts of compound 14 was found in brain up to 90 min later, suggesting poor BBB penetration and possible peripherally restricted activity. Central administration of 14 did not produce locomotor effects, acute antinociceptive tolerance, or conditioned-place preference or aversion. The data suggest these diazaheterocyclic mixed activity opioid receptor agonists may hold potential as new analgesics with fewer liabilities of use.


ACS Combinatorial Science | 2013

Discovery of novel antinociceptive α-conotoxin analogues from the direct in vivo screening of a synthetic mixture-based combinatorial library.

Christopher J. Armishaw; Jayati Banerjee; Michelle L. Ganno; Kate J. Reilley; Shainnel O. Eans; Elisa Mizrachi; Reena Gyanda; Michelle R. Hoot; Richard A. Houghten; Jay P. McLaughlin

Marine cone snail venoms consist of large, naturally occurring combinatorial libraries of disulfide-constrained peptide neurotoxins known as conotoxins, which have profound potential in the development of analgesics. In this study, we report a synthetic combinatorial strategy that probes the hypervariable regions of conotoxin frameworks to discover novel analgesic agents by utilizing high diversity mixture-based positional-scanning synthetic combinatorial libraries (PS-SCLs). We hypothesized that the direct in vivo testing of these mixture-based combinatorial library samples during the discovery phase would facilitate the identification of novel individual compounds with desirable antinociceptive profiles while simultaneously eliminating many compounds with poor activity or liabilities of locomotion and respiration. A PS-SCL was designed based on the α-conotoxin RgIA-ΔR n-loop region and consisted of 10,648 compounds systematically arranged into 66 mixture samples. Mixtures were directly screened in vivo using the mouse 55 °C warm-water tail-withdrawal assay, which allowed deconvolution of amino acid residues at each position that confer antinociceptive activity. A second generation library of 36 individual α-conotoxin analogues was synthesized using systematic combinations of amino acids identified from PS-SCL deconvolution and further screened for antinociceptive activity. Six individual analogues exhibited comparable antinociceptive activity to that of the recognized analgesic α-conotoxin RgIA-ΔR, and were selected for further examination of antinociceptive, respiratory, and locomotor effects. Three lead compounds were identified that produced dose-dependent antinociception without significant respiratory depression or decreased locomotor activity. Our results represent a unique approach for rapidly developing novel lead α-conotoxin analogues as low-liability analgesics with promising therapeutic potential.


Biological Psychiatry: Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuroimaging | 2017

Conditional Human Immunodeficiency Virus Transactivator of Transcription Protein Expression Induces Depression-like Effects and Oxidative Stress

Jay P. McLaughlin; Jason J. Paris; Dionyssios Mintzopoulos; Kristen Hymel; Jae Kim; Thomas J. Cirino; Timothy E. Gillis; Shainnel O. Eans; Gordana Dragan Vitaliano; Jessica M. Medina; Richard C. Krapf; Heather M. Stacy; Marc J. Kaufman

BACKGROUND The prevalence of major depression in those with HIV/AIDS is substantially higher than in the general population. Mechanisms underlying this comorbidity are poorly understood. HIV-transactivator of transcription (Tat) protein, produced and excreted by HIV, could be involved. We determined whether conditional Tat protein expression in mice is sufficient to induce depression-like behaviors and oxidative stress. Further, as oxidative stress is associated with depression, we determined whether decreasing or increasing oxidative stress by administering methylsulfonylmethane (MSM) or diethylmaleate (DEM), respectively, altered depression-like behavior. METHODS GT-tg bigenic mice received intraperitoneal saline or doxycycline (Dox, 25-100 mg/kg/day) to induce Tat expression. G-tg mice, which do not express Tat protein, also received Dox. Depression-like behavior was assessed with the tail suspension test (TST) and the two-bottle saccharin/water consumption task. Reactive oxygen/nitrogen species (ROS/RNS) were assessed ex vivo. Medial frontal cortex (MFC) oxidative stress and temperature were measured in vivo with 9.4-Tesla proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS). RESULTS Tat expression increased TST immobility time in an exposure-dependent manner and reduced saccharin consumption. MSM decreased immobility time while DEM increased it in saline-treated GT-tg mice. Tat and MSM behavioral effects persisted for 28 days. Tat and DEM increased while MSM decreased ROS/RNS levels. Tat expression increased MFC glutathione levels and temperature. CONCLUSIONS Tat expression induced rapid and enduring depression-like behaviors and oxidative stress. Increasing/decreasing oxidative stress increased/decreased, respectively, depression-like behavior. Thus, Tat produced by HIV may contribute to the high depression prevalence among those with HIV. Further, mitigation of oxidative stress could reduce depression severity.


Journal of Medical Entomology | 2009

Isolation and Spatial Expression Analysis of a Partial Esterase Gene of Culex nigripalpus (Diptera: Culicidae)

Shainnel O. Eans; Robert L. Frommer; Chelsea T. Smartt

ABSTRACT Mosquitoes play an important role as vectors for a variety of pathogens. Insecticide use for control means results in selection of tolerant/resistant mosquitoes. An esterase cDNA was isolated from Culex nigripalpus Theobald (Diptera: Culicidae), and its spatial expression was characterized. GenBank tblastx and VectorBase searches with the translation product of the longest cDNA fragment (397 bp, CN Temsha est-1) of the Cx. nigripalpus esterase revealed similarity (95%) to the estalpha2 esterase gene product of Culex pipiens quinquefasciatus Say, suggesting it is a member of the esterase family. Transcripts encoding Cx. nigripalpus esterase were detected in midgut tissue, thoraces, and abdomens of female Cx. nigripalpus, findings that may support possible roles in feeding, digestion, or reproduction. Gene expression studies to determine the role of Cx. nigripalpus esterase in the mosquito are being conducted.


PLOS ONE | 2018

A stable isotope dilution tandem mass spectrometry method of major kavalactones and its applications

Yi Wang; Shainnel O. Eans; Heather M. Stacy; Sreekanth C. Narayanapillai; Abhisheak Sharma; Naomi Fujioka; Linda Haddad; Jay P. McLaughlin; Bonnie A. Avery; Chengguo Xing

Kava is regaining its popularity with detailed characterizations warranted. We developed an ultraperformance liquid chromatography high-resolution tandem mass spectrometry (UPLC-MS/MS) method for major kavalactones (kavain, dihydrokavain, methysticin, dihydromethysticin and desmethoxyyangonin) with excellent selectivity and specificity. The method has been validated for different matrices following the Food and Drug Administration guidance of analytical procedures and methods validation. The scope of this method has been demonstrated by quantifying these kavalactones in two kava products, characterizing their tissue distribution and pharmacokinetics in mice, and detecting their presence in human urines and plasmas upon kava intake. As expected, the abundances of these kavalactones differed significantly in kava products. All of them exhibited a large volume of distribution with extensive tissue affinity and adequate mean residence time (MRT) in mice. This method also successfully quantified these kavalactones in human body fluids upon kava consumption at the recommended human dose. This UPLC-MS/MS method therefore can be used to characterize kava products and its pharmacokinetics in animals and in humans.


Current HIV Research | 2014

HIV-1 Tat Protein Exposure Potentiates Ethanol Reward and Reinstates Extinguished Ethanol-Conditioned Place Preference

Jay P. McLaughlin; Michelle L. Ganno; Shainnel O. Eans; Elisa Mizrachi; Jason J. Paris

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Jay P. McLaughlin

Torrey Pines Institute for Molecular Studies

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Michelle L. Ganno

Torrey Pines Institute for Molecular Studies

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Elisa Mizrachi

Torrey Pines Institute for Molecular Studies

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Richard A. Houghten

Torrey Pines Institute for Molecular Studies

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Adel Nefzi

Torrey Pines Institute for Molecular Studies

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Colette T. Dooley

Torrey Pines Institute for Molecular Studies

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Jason J. Paris

Torrey Pines Institute for Molecular Studies

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