Taylor J. Evers
Emory University
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Featured researches published by Taylor J. Evers.
Integrative Biology | 2012
Shijun Zhu; Terry W. Moore; Xiaoqian Lin; Nao Morii; Alessandra Mancini; Randy B. Howard; Deborah G. Culver; Richard F. Arrendale; Prabhakar Reddy; Taylor J. Evers; Hongzheng Zhang; Gabriel Sica; Zhuo Georgia Chen; Aiming Sun; Haian Fu; Fadlo R. Khuri; Dong M. Shin; James P. Snyder; Mamoru Shoji
Objectives are to examine the efficacy, pharmacokinetics, and toxicology of a synthetic curcumin analog EF31 in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma. The synthesis of EF31 was described for the first time. Solubility of EF24 and EF31 was compared using nephelometric analysis. Human head and neck squamous cell carcinoma Tu212 xenograft tumors were established in athymic nude mice and treated with EF31 i.p. once daily five days a week for about 5-6 weeks. The long term effect of EF31 on the NF-κB signaling system in the tumors was examined by Western blot analysis. EF31 at 25 mg kg(-1), i.p. inhibited tumor growth almost completely. Solubilities of EF24 and EF31 are <10 and 13 μg mL(-1) or <32 and 47 μM, respectively. The serum chemistry profiles of treated mice were within the limits of normal, they revealed a linear increase of C(max). EF31 decreased the level of phosphorylation of NF-κB p65. In conclusion, the novel synthetic curcumin analog EF31 is efficacious in inhibiting the growth of Tu212 xenograft tumors and may be useful for treating head and neck squamous cell carcinoma. The long term EF31 treatment inhibited NF-κB p65 phosphorylation in xenografts, implicating downregulation of cancer promoting transcription factors such as angiogenesis and metastasis.
Science Translational Medicine | 2014
Stefanie A. Krumm; Dan Yan; E. S. Hovingh; Taylor J. Evers; T. Enkirch; G. P. Reddy; Aiming Sun; Manohar Saindane; Richard F. Arrendale; G. Painter; Dennis C. Liotta; Michael G. Natchus; V. von Messling; Richard K. Plemper
An orally available, shelf-stable pan-morbillivirus inhibitor targeting a viral polymerase effectively treats ferrets infected with a lethal dose of a measles-like virus. A Boon for Measles Eradication Measles virus causes about 150,000 deaths per year globally despite the existence of an effective vaccine. Insufficient vaccination coverage and vaccine refusal cause gaps in population immunity that challenge current measles virus eradication goals. In their new work, Krumm et al. explore whether an antiviral therapeutic blocking the measles virus RNA polymerase can aid in solving this problem by suppressing measles-like disease. The authors show that the drug efficiently inhibits the RNA polymerase of canine distemper virus (CDV), which is closely related to the measles virus and causes lethal, measles-like disease in ferrets. They demonstrated that prophylactic treatment of CDV-infected ferrets by mouth reduced viral load and prolonged survival. When treatment was initiated 3 days after infection, disease was completely suppressed. All of the animals survived the infection and developed immunity against the virus, which protected against later challenge with a lethal virus dose. Next, the authors generated drug-resistant CDV strains and demonstrated that resistant viruses caused milder disease than did the parent strain and were transmitted less efficiently between animals. These results suggest that this drug may be useful in the future for preemptive treatment of unprotected human contacts of measles cases. Measles virus is a highly infectious morbillivirus responsible for major morbidity and mortality in unvaccinated humans. The related, zoonotic canine distemper virus (CDV) induces morbillivirus disease in ferrets with 100% lethality. We report an orally available, shelf-stable pan-morbillivirus inhibitor that targets the viral RNA polymerase. Prophylactic oral treatment of ferrets infected intranasally with a lethal CDV dose reduced viremia and prolonged survival. Ferrets infected with the same dose of virus that received post-infection treatment at the onset of viremia showed low-grade viral loads, remained asymptomatic, and recovered from infection, whereas control animals succumbed to the disease. Animals that recovered also mounted a robust immune response and were protected against rechallenge with a lethal CDV dose. Drug-resistant viral recombinants were generated and found to be attenuated and transmission-impaired compared to the genetic parent virus. These findings may pioneer a path toward an effective morbillivirus therapy that could aid measles eradication by synergizing with vaccination to close gaps in herd immunity due to vaccine refusal.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012
J. Maina Ndungu; Stefanie A. Krumm; Dan Yan; Richard F. Arrendale; G. Prabhakar Reddy; Taylor J. Evers; Randy B. Howard; Michael G. Natchus; Manohar Saindane; Dennis C. Liotta; Richard K. Plemper; James P. Snyder; Aiming Sun
The measles virus (MeV), a member of the paramyxovirus family, is an important cause of pediatric morbidity and mortality worldwide. In an effort to provide therapeutic treatments for improved measles management, we previously identified a small, non-nucleoside organic inhibitor of the viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase by means of high-throughput screening. Subsequent structure-activity relationship (SAR) studies around the corresponding pyrazole carboxamide scaffold led to the discovery of 2 (AS-136a), a first generation lead with low nanomolar potency against life MeV and attractive physical properties suitable for development. However, its poor water solubility and low oral bioavailability (F) in rat suggested that the lead could benefit from further SAR studies to improve the biophysical characteristics of the compound. Optimization of in vitro potency and aqueous solubility led to the discovery of 2o (ERDRP-00519), a potent inhibitor of MeV (EC(50) = 60 nM) with an aqueous solubility of approximately 60 μg/mL. The agent shows a 10-fold exposure (AUC/C(max)) increase in the rat model relative to 2, displays near dose proportionality in the range of 10-50 mg/kg, and exhibits good oral bioavailability (F = 39%). The significant solubility increase appears linked to the improved oral bioavailability.
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013
Valarie M Truax; Huanyu Zhao; Brooke M. Katzman; Anthony R. Prosser; Ana A. Alcaraz; Manohar Saindane; Randy B. Howard; Deborah G. Culver; Richard F. Arrendale; Prahbakar R. Gruddanti; Taylor J. Evers; Michael G. Natchus; James P. Snyder; Dennis C. Liotta; Lawrence J. Wilson
A de novo hit-to-lead effort involving the redesign of benzimidazole-containing antagonists of the CXCR4 receptor resulted in the discovery of a novel series of 1,2,3,4-tetrahydroisoquinoline (TIQ) analogues. In general, this series of compounds show good potencies (3-650 nM) in assays involving CXCR4 function, including both inhibition of attachment of X4 HIV-1IIIB virus in MAGI-CCR5/CXCR4 cells and inhibition of calcium release in Chem-1 cells. Series profiling permitted the identification of TIQ-(R)-stereoisomer 15 as a potent and selective CXCR4 antagonist lead candidate with a promising in vitro profile. The drug-like properties of 15 were determined in ADME in vitro studies, revealing low metabolic liability potential. Further in vivo evaluations included pharmacokinetic experiments in rats and mice, where 15 was shown to have oral bioavailability (F = 63%) and resulted in the mobilization of white blood cells (WBCs) in a dose-dependent manner.
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011
Ethel C. Garnier-Amblard; Suzanne G. Mays; Richard F. Arrendale; Mark T. Baillie; Anatoliy S. Bushnev; Deborah G. Culver; Taylor J. Evers; Jason J. Holt; Randy B. Howard; Lanny S. Liebeskind; David S. Menaldino; Michael G. Natchus; John A. Petros; Harsha Ramaraju; G. Prabhakar Reddy; Dennis C. Liotta
Enigmol is a synthetic, orally active 1-deoxysphingoid base analogue that has demonstrated promising activity against prostate cancer. In these studies, the pharmacologic roles of stereochemistry and N-methylation in the structure of enigmols were examined. A novel enantioselective synthesis of all four possible 2S-diastereoisomers of enigmol (2-aminooctadecane-3,5-diols) from l-alanine is reported, which features a Liebeskind-Srogl cross-coupling reaction between l-alanine thiol ester and (E)-pentadec-1-enylboronic acid as the key step. In vitro biological evaluation of the four enigmol diastereoisomers and 2S,3S,5S-N-methylenigmol against two prostate cancer cell lines (PC-3 and LNCaP) indicates that all but one diastereomer demonstrate potent oncolytic activity. In nude mouse xenograft models of human prostate cancer, enigmol was equally effective as standard prostate cancer therapies (androgen deprivation or docetaxel), and two of the enigmol diastereomers, 2S,3S,5R-enigmol and 2S,3R,5S-enigmol, also caused statistically significant inhibition of tumor growth. A pharmacokinetic profile of enigmol and N-methylenigmol is also presented.
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012
David B. Guthrie; Donald G. Stein; Dennis C. Liotta; Mark A. Lockwood; Iqbal Sayeed; Fahim Atif; Richard F. Arrendale; G. Prabhakar Reddy; Taylor J. Evers; Jose R. Marengo; Randy B. Howard; Deborah G. Culver; Michael G. Natchus
After more than 30 years of research and 30 failed clinical trials with as many different treatments, progesterone is the first agent to demonstrate robust clinical efficacy as a treatment for traumatic brain injuries. It is currently being investigated in two, independent phase III clinical trials in hospital settings; however, it presents a formidable solubility challenge that has so far prevented the identification of a formulation that would be suitable for emergency field response use or battlefield situations. Accordingly, we have designed and tested a novel series of water-soluble analogues that address this critical need. We report here the synthesis of C-20 oxime conjugates of progesterone as therapeutic agents for traumatic brain injuries with comparable efficacy in animal models of traumatic brain injury and improved solubility and pharmacokinetic profiles. Pharmacodynamic analysis reveals that a nonprogesterone steroidal analogue may be primarily responsible for the observed activity.
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2016
Eric Miller; Suzanne G. Mays; Mark T. Baillie; Randy B. Howard; Deborah G. Culver; Manohar Saindane; Sarah T. Pruett; Jason J. Holt; David S. Menaldino; Taylor J. Evers; G. Prabhakar Reddy; Richard F. Arrendale; Michael G. Natchus; John A. Petros; Dennis C. Liotta
The orally bioavailable 1-deoxy-sphingosine analog, Enigmol, has demonstrated anticancer activity in numerous in vivo settings. However, as no Enigmol analog with enhanced potency in vitro has been identified, a new strategy to improve efficacy in vivo by increasing tumor uptake was adopted. Herein, synthesis and biological evaluation of two novel fluorinated Enigmol analogs, CF3-Enigmol and CF2-Enigmol, are reported. Each analog was equipotent to Enigmol in vitro, but achieved higher plasma and tissue levels than Enigmol in vivo. Although plasma and tissue exposures were anticipated to trend with fluorine content, CF2-Enigmol absorbed into tissue at strikingly higher concentrations than CF3-Enigmol. Using mouse xenograft models of prostate cancer, we also show that CF3-Enigmol underperformed Enigmol-mediated inhibition of tumor growth and elicited systemic toxicity. By contrast, CF2-Enigmol was not systemically toxic and demonstrated significantly enhanced antitumor activity as compared to Enigmol.
Current Cancer Drug Targets | 2014
Shijun Zhu; Terry W. Moore; Nao Morii; Randy B. Howard; Deborah G. Culver; Richard F. Arrendale; Prabhakar Reddy; Taylor J. Evers; Hongzheng Zhang; Gabriel Sica; Zhuo Georgia Chen; Aiming Sun; Haian Fu; Fadlo R. Khuri; Dong M. Shin; James P. Snyder; Mamoru Shoji
The natural compound curcumin has been investigated as an anticancer agent in many cellular systems, in animal models and in the clinic. The overriding negative characteristics of curcumin are its low solubility, weak potency and poor bioavailability. We have examined the efficacy and mechanism of action of a synthetic curcumin analog, UBS109, in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma. By nephelometry, this analog exhibits considerably greater solubility than curcumin. Pharmacokinetic studies of a single oral dose of UBS109 in mice revealed that peak plasma concentrations were reached at 0.5 hours post-dose (Tmax) with average plasma concentrations (Cmax) of 131 and 248 ng/mL for oral doses of 50 and 150 mg/kg, respectively. The terminal elimination half-lives (T½) for these doses averaged 3.7 and 4.5 hours, respectively. In both in vitro and in vivo studies, we found that UBS109 decreased the levels of phosphorylated IKKβ and phosphorylated p65 and, unexpectedly, increased the levels of phosphorylated IκBα by Western blot analysis. These observations may suggest that UBS109 suppresses tumor growth through, in part, inhibition of NF-κB p65 phosphorylation by PKAc and not through IκBα. Finally, we demonstrate that UBS109 is efficacious in retarding the growth of Tu212 (head and neck) squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) xenograft tumors in mice and may be useful for treating head and neck SCC tumors.
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012
Esmeralda V. S. Meyer; Jason J. Holt; Kathryn R. Girard; Mark T. Ballie; Anatoliy S. Bushnev; Stacey A. Lapp; David S. Menaldino; Richard F. Arrendale; G. Prabhakar Reddy; Taylor J. Evers; Randy B. Howard; Deborah G. Culver; Dennis C. Liotta; Mary R. Galinski; Michael G. Natchus
Plasmodium-infected erythrocytes have been shown to employ sphingolipids from both endogenous metabolism as well as existing host pools. Therapeutic agents that limit these supplies have thus emerged as intriguing, mechanistically distinct putative targets for the treatment of malaria infections. In an initial screen of our library of sphingolipid pathway modulators for efficacy against two strains of the predominant human malaria species Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium knowlesi, a series of orally available, 1-deoxysphingoid bases were found to possess promising in vitro antimalarial activity. To better understand the structural requirements that are necessary for this observed activity, a second series of modified analogues were prepared and evaluated. Initial pharmacokinetic assessments of key analogues were investigated to evaluate plasma and red blood cell concentrations in vivo.
The Journal of Urology | 2013
Suzanne G. Mays; Mark T. Baillie; Eric Miller; Anatoliy S. Bushnev; Sarah T. Pruett; Deborah G. Culver; Taylor J. Evers; Jingjing Gao; G. Prakabahr Reddy; Michael G. Natchus; Richard F. Arrendale; Randy B. Howard; Dennis C. Liotta; John A. Petros