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Dive into the research topics where Stephen Poor is active.

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Featured researches published by Stephen Poor.


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2014

Reliability of the mouse model of choroidal neovascularization induced by laser photocoagulation.

Stephen Poor; Yubin Qiu; Elizabeth Fassbender; Siyuan Shen; Amber Woolfenden; Andrea Delpero; Yong Kim; Natasha Buchanan; Thomas C. Gebuhr; Shawn Hanks; Erik Meredith; Bruce D Jaffee; Thaddeus P. Dryja

PURPOSE We attempted to reproduce published studies that evaluated whether the following factors influence choroidal neovascularization (CNV) induced by laser photocoagulation in murine retinas: small interfering RNA (siRNA), cobra venom factor, complement factors C3 and C5, and complement receptor C5aR. In addition, we explored whether laser-induced CNV in mice was influenced by the vendor of origin of the animals. METHODS Reagents or genotypes reported by others to influence CNV in this model were assessed using our standard procedures. Retrospective analyses of control or placebo mice in many experiments were done to evaluate whether the CNV area induced by laser photocoagulation varied according to vendor. RESULTS Administration of the following agents did not have a substantial impact on the CNV induced by laser burns in mice: siRNA, low-molecular-weight inhibitor of the C5a receptor (PMX53), or cobra venom factor. Jackson Laboratory (JAX) mice lacking either C3 or C5 had increased neovascularization compared to non-littermate JAX wild-type controls. Taconic mice lacking C3 had reduced CNV compared to non-littermate Taconic wild-type control mice. A retrospective analysis of vehicle-treated wild-type C57BL/6 mice used as controls across 132 experiments conducted from 2007 to 2010 revealed that mice purchased from JAX or from Charles River produced less neovascularization than mice from Taconic. CONCLUSIONS We present our recommended methods for conducting experiments with the mouse laser-induced CNV model to enhance reproducibility and minimize investigator bias.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015

Discovery of Oral VEGFR-2 Inhibitors with Prolonged Ocular Retention That Are Efficacious in Models of Wet Age-Related Macular Degeneration

Erik Meredith; Nello Mainolfi; Stephen Poor; Yubin Qiu; Karl Miranda; James C. Powers; Donglei Liu; Fupeng Ma; Catherine Solovay; Chang Rao; Leland Johnson; Nan Ji; Gerald Artman; Leo Hardegger; Shawn Hanks; Siyuan Shen; Amber Woolfenden; Elizabeth Fassbender; Jeremy M. Sivak; Yiqin Zhang; Debby Long; Rosemarie Cepeda; Fang Liu; Vinayak Hosagrahara; Wendy Lee; Peter Tarsa; Karen S. Anderson; Jason Matthew Elliott; Bruce Jaffee

The benefit of intravitreal anti-VEGF therapy in treating wet age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is well established. Identification of VEGFR-2 inhibitors with optimal ADME properties for an ocular indication provides opportunities for dosing routes beyond intravitreal injection. We employed a high-throughput in vivo screening strategy with rodent models of choroidal neovascularization and iterative compound design to identify VEGFR-2 inhibitors with potential to benefit wet AMD patients. These compounds demonstrate preferential ocular tissue distribution and efficacy after oral administration while minimizing systemic exposure.


Nature Communications | 2017

Long-acting protein drugs for the treatment of ocular diseases

Joy Ghosh; Andrew Anh Nguyen; Chad E Bigelow; Stephen Poor; Yubin Qiu; Nalini V Rangaswamy; Richard Ornberg; Brittany Jackson; Howard Mak; Tucker Ezell; Vania Kenanova; Elisa de la Cruz; Ana Carrion; Bijan Etemad-Gilbertson; Roxana Garcia Caro; Kan Zhu; Vinney George; Jirong Bai; Radhika Sharma-Nahar; Siyuan Shen; Yiqin Wang; Kulandayan K. Subramanian; Elizabeth Fassbender; Michael Maker; Shawn Hanks; Joanna Vrouvlianis; Barrett Leehy; Debby Long; Melissa Prentiss; Viral Kansara

Protein drugs that neutralize vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), such as aflibercept or ranibizumab, rescue vision in patients with retinal vascular diseases. Nonetheless, optimal visual outcomes require intraocular injections as frequently as every month. Here we report a method to extend the intravitreal half-life of protein drugs as an alternative to either encapsulation or chemical modifications with polymers. We combine a 97-amino-acid peptide of human origin that binds hyaluronan, a major macromolecular component of the eyes vitreous, with therapeutic antibodies and proteins. When administered to rabbit and monkey eyes, the half-life of the modified proteins is increased ∼3–4-fold relative to unmodified proteins. We further show that prototype long-acting anti-VEGF drugs (LAVAs) that include this peptide attenuate VEGF-induced retinal changes in animal models of neovascular retinal disease ∼3–4-fold longer than unmodified drugs. This approach has the potential to reduce the dosing frequency associated with retinal disease treatments.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Lack of Involvement of CEP Adducts in TLR Activation and in Angiogenesis

John S. Gounarides; Jennifer Cobb; Jing Zhou; Frank Cook; Xuemei Yang; Hong Yin; Erik Meredith; Chang Rao; Qian Huang; YongYao Xu; Karen Anderson; Andrea De Erkenez; Sha-Mei Liao; Maura Crowley; Natasha Buchanan; Stephen Poor; Yubin Qiu; Elizabeth Fassbender; Siyuan Shen; Amber Woolfenden; Amy Jensen; Rosemarie Cepeda; Bijan Etemad-Gilbertson; Shelby Giza; Muneto Mogi; Bruce D Jaffee; Sassan Azarian

Proteins that are post-translationally adducted with 2-(ω-carboxyethyl)pyrrole (CEP) have been proposed to play a pathogenic role in age-related macular degeneration, by inducing angiogenesis in a Toll Like Receptor 2 (TLR2)-dependent manner. We have investigated the involvement of CEP adducts in angiogenesis and TLR activation, to assess the therapeutic potential of inhibiting CEP adducts and TLR2 for ocular angiogenesis. As tool reagents, several CEP-adducted proteins and peptides were synthetically generated by published methodology and adduction was confirmed by NMR and LC-MS/MS analyses. Structural studies showed significant changes in secondary structure in CEP-adducted proteins but not the untreated proteins. Similar structural changes were also observed in the treated unadducted proteins, which were treated by the same adduction method except for one critical step required to form the CEP group. Thus some structural changes were unrelated to CEP groups and were artificially induced by the synthesis method. In biological studies, the CEP-adducted proteins and peptides failed to activate TLR2 in cell-based assays and in an in vivo TLR2-mediated retinal leukocyte infiltration model. Neither CEP adducts nor TLR agonists were able to induce angiogenesis in a tube formation assay. In vivo, treatment of animals with CEP-adducted protein had no effect on laser-induced choroidal neovascularization. Furthermore, in vivo inactivation of TLR2 by deficiency in Myeloid Differentiation factor 88 (Myd88) had no effect on abrasion-induced corneal neovascularization. Thus the CEP-TLR2 axis, which is implicated in other wound angiogenesis models, does not appear to play a pathological role in a corneal wound angiogenesis model. Collectively, our data do not support the mechanism of action of CEP adducts in TLR2-mediated angiogenesis proposed by others.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2016

Core Replacements in a Potent Series of VEGFR-2 Inhibitors and Their Impact on Potency, Solubility, and hERG.

Nello Mainolfi; James C. Powers; Erik Meredith; Jason Matthew Elliott; Karl G. Gunderson; Stephen Poor; Fang Liu; Karen S. Anderson

Anti-VEGF therapy has been a clinically validated treatment of age-related macular degeneration (AMD). We have recently reported the discovery of indole based oral VEGFR-2 inhibitors that provide sustained ocular retention and efficacy in models of wet-AMD. We disclose herein the synthesis and the biological evaluation of a series of novel core replacements as an expansion of the reported indole based VEGFR-2 inhibitor series. Addition of heteroatoms to the existing core and/or rearranging the heteroatoms around the 6-5 bicyclic ring structure produced a series of compounds that generally retained good on-target potency and an improved solubility profile. The hERG affinity was proven not be dependent on the change in lipophilicity through alteration of the core structure. A serendipitous discovery led to the identification of a new indole-pyrimidine connectivity: from 5-hydroxy to 6-hydroxyindole with potentially vast implication on the in vitro/in vivo properties of this class of compounds.


Journal of Ocular Pharmacology and Therapeutics | 2018

Amount of Mononuclear Phagocyte Infiltrate Does Not Predict Area of Experimental Choroidal Neovascularization (CNV)

Adrian Will-Orrego; Yubin Qiu; Elizabeth Fassbender; Siyuan Shen; Jorge Aranda; Namrata Kotagiri; Michael Maker; Sha-Mei Liao; Bruce D Jaffee; Stephen Poor

Abstract Purpose: Mononuclear phagocytes (MNPs) are present in neovascular age-related macular degeneration (nv AMD) which is also called choroidal neovascularization (CNV). The number and phenotype of the MNPs depend upon the local environment in the CNV and effect of nv AMD therapy. We investigated ocular cell infiltration and conditions that modulate angiogenesis in a laser-induced mouse CNV model. Methods: We developed assays to quantify MNPs in our established mouse CNV model. One MNP assay quantified the number of subretinal cells peripheral to the CNV lesions. A second assay semiquantitatively assesses the number of MNPs localized to the CNV lesion. We used these assays to measure the effect of toll-like receptor-2 (TLR-2) activation, anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) therapy, and chemokine (C-C motif) ligand 2 (Ccl2) genetic deletion on MNP infiltration after laser injury. Results: Laser injury induced blood vessel growth and infiltration of MNPs. Systemic administration of a TLR-2 activating peptide increased laser-induced CNV area, MNP cell numbers, and MNP density over the CNV lesions. Systemic administration of a VEGF antibody reduced CNV area, while Ccl2 genetic deletion increased CNV area. Despite the change in amount of angiogenesis, MNP infiltration was, surprisingly, unchanged in these 2 conditions. Conclusions: MNP quantification provides biological insights for candidate AMD therapies. The number of infiltrating MNP cells does not correlate with the amount of laser-induced CNV area.


Archive | 2013

Compositions and methods that utilize a peptide tag that binds to hyaluronan

Joy Ghosh; Michael Roguska; Andrew Anh Nguyen; Thomas Pietzonka; Stephen Poor; Matthais Machacek; Chad E Bigelow


Archive | 2015

Compositions and methods for long acting proteins

Joy Ghosh; Michael Roguska; Andrew Anh Nguyen; Thomas Pietzonka; Stephen Poor; Matthias Machacek; Chad E Bigelow


Archive | 2014

COMPOSITIONS AND METHODS FOR LONG ACTING MOLECULES

Joy Ghosh; Michael Roguska; Andrew Anh Nguyen; Thomas Pietzonka; Stephen Poor; Matthais Machacek; Chad E Bigelow


Archive | 2011

Dosing regimes for the treatment of ocular vascular disease

Mitchell Brigell; Peter End; Vinayak Hosagrahara; Bruce D Jaffee; Erik Meredith; Ronald Newton; Stephen Poor; Yubin Qiu

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