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Dive into the research topics where Todd Wisialowski is active.

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Featured researches published by Todd Wisialowski.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2006

Differentiation of Arrhythmia Risk of the Antibacterials Moxifloxacin, Erythromycin, and Telithromycin Based on Analysis of Monophasic Action Potential Duration Alternans and Cardiac Instability

Todd Wisialowski; Kimberly Crimin; Juntyma Engtrakul; John P. O'Donnell; Bernard Fermini; Anthony A. Fossa

Antibacterial drugs are known to have varying degrees of cardiovascular liability associated with QT prolongation that can lead to the ventricular arrhythmia torsade de pointes. The purpose of these studies was to compare the assessment for the arrhythmogenic risk of moxifloxacin, erythromycin, and telithromycin. Each drug caused dose-dependent inhibition of the rapidly activating delayed rectifier potassium current encoded by the human ether-á-go-go-related gene (hERG) with IC20 concentrations of 31 μM (moxifloxacin), 21 μM (erythromycin), and 11 μM (telithromycin). These drugs were also evaluated in an anesthetized guinea pig model to measure changes in monophasic action potential duration (MAPD) and to quantify beat-to-beat alternations in MAPD during rapid ventricular pacing. Moxifloxacin dose dependently increased MAPD and caused a rate-dependent increase in alternans at the highest achieved free drug concentration (41 μM). Erythromycin also increased MAPD at its highest free drug concentration (58 μM), but alternans occurred at a relatively lower therapeutic multiple (13.9 μM), and the magnitude of alternans at higher concentrations was independent of pacing rate. Further analysis of the data showed that the beat-to-beat pattern of alternans with erythromycin was less stable than that with moxifloxacin and suggestive of greater arrhythmogenic liability. In contrast to erythromycin and moxifloxacin, telithromycin decreased both MAPD and alternans at the highest achievable drug concentration (7.9 μM). The relative risk at therapeutic concentrations is erythromycin > moxifloxacin > telithromycin and appears to be consistent with clinical observations of torsade de pointes in patients.


Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 2012

Improved preclinical cardiovascular therapeutic indices with long-term inhibition of norepinephrine reuptake using reboxetine

Anthony A. Fossa; Todd Wisialowski; Thomas Cremers; Marieke Van der Hart; Elaine Tseng; Shibing Deng; Hans Rollema; Ellen Q. Wang

Norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (NRIs) acutely increase norepinephrine (NE) levels, but therapeutic antidepressant activity is only observed after weeks of treatment because central NE levels progressively increase during continued drug exposure. Similarly, while NRIs acutely increase blood pressure (BP) and heart rate (HR) due to enhanced sympathetic neurotransmission, chronic treatment changes the responsiveness of the central noradrenergic system and suppresses these effects via autonomic regulation. To better understand the relationship between NE increases and cardiovascular safety, we investigated acute and chronic effects of the NRI reboxetine on central NE release and on BP and HR and electrical alternans, a measure of arrhythmia liability, in guinea pigs. NE release was assessed by microdialysis in medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) and hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN); BP and HR were measured by telemetry. Animals were treated for 28 days with 15 mg/kg/day of reboxetine or vehicle via an osmotic minipump and then challenged with acute intravenous doses of reboxetine. Animals chronically treated with reboxetine had 2-fold higher extracellular basal NE levels in mPFC and PVN compared to basal levels after chronic vehicle treatment. BP was significantly increased after the first day of treatment, and gradually returned to vehicle levels by day 21. These data indicate that chronic NRI treatment may lead to an increase in central NE levels and a concomitant reduction in BP based on exposure-response curves compared to vehicle treatment, suggesting a larger separation between preclinical estimates of efficacy vs. safety compared to acute NRI treatment.


British Journal of Pharmacology | 2018

Can non‐clinical repolarization assays predict the results of clinical thorough QT studies? Results from a research consortium

Eunjung Park; Gary A. Gintant; Daoqin Bi; Devi Kozeli; Syril Pettit; Jennifer Pierson; Matthew Skinner; James Willard; Todd Wisialowski; John Koerner; Jean-Pierre Valentin

Translation of non‐clinical markers of delayed ventricular repolarization to clinical prolongation of the QT interval corrected for heart rate (QTc) (a biomarker for torsades de pointes proarrhythmia) remains an issue in drug discovery and regulatory evaluations. We retrospectively analysed 150 drug applications in a US Food and Drug Administration database to determine the utility of established non‐clinical in vitro IKr current human ether‐à‐go‐go‐related gene (hERG), action potential duration (APD) and in vivo (QTc) repolarization assays to detect and predict clinical QTc prolongation.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2017

Novel 3-fluoro-6-methoxyquinoline derivatives as inhibitors of bacterial DNA gyrase and topoisomerase IV ☆

Mark J. Mitton-Fry; Steven J. Brickner; Judith C. Hamel; Rose Barham; Lori Brennan; Jeffrey M. Casavant; Xiaoyuan Ding; Steven M. Finegan; Joel R. Hardink; Thuy Hoang; Michael D. Huband; Meghan Maloney; Anthony Marfat; Sandra P. McCurdy; Dale McLeod; Chakrapani Subramanyam; Michael Plotkin; Usa Reilly; John Schafer; Gregory G. Stone; Daniel P. Uccello; Todd Wisialowski; Kwansik Yoon; Richard P. Zaniewski; Christopher Zook

Novel (non-fluoroquinolone) inhibitors of bacterial type II topoisomerases (NBTIs) are an emerging class of antibacterial agents. We report an optimized series of cyclobutylaryl-substituted NBTIs. Compound 14 demonstrated excellent activity both in vitro (S. aureus MIC90=0.125μg/mL) and in vivo (systemic and tissue infections). Enhanced inhibition of Topoisomerase IV correlated with improved activity in S. aureus strains with mutations conferring resistance to NBTIs. Compound 14 also displayed an improved hERG IC50 of 85.9μM and a favorable profile in the anesthetized guinea pig model.


Toxicologic Pathology | 2014

Hemodynamic correlates of drug-induced vascular injury in the rat using high-frequency ultrasound imaging.

Terri Swanson; Teri Conte; Ben Deeley; Susan Portugal; John M. Kreeger; Leslie Obert; E. Clive Joseph; Todd Wisialowski; Sharon A. Sokolowski; Catherine Rief; Paul Nugent; Michael P. Lawton; Bradley E. Enerson

Several classes of drugs have been shown to cause drug-induced vascular injury (DIVI) in preclinical toxicity studies. Measurement of blood flow and vessel diameter in numerous vessels and across various tissues by ultrasound imaging has the potential to be a noninvasive translatable biomarker of DIVI. Our objective was to demonstrate the utility of high-frequency ultrasound imaging for measuring changes in vascular function by evaluating blood flow and vessel diameter in the superior mesenteric arteries (SMA) of rats treated with compounds that are known to cause DIVI and are known vasodilators in rat: fenoldopam, CI-1044, and SK&F 95654. Blood flow, vessel diameter, and other parameters were measured in the SMA at 4, 8, and 24 hr after dosing. Mild to moderate perivascular accumulations of mononuclear cells, neutrophils in tunica adventitia, and superficial tunica media as well as multifocal hemorrhage and necrosis in the tunica media were found in animals 24 hr after treatment with fenoldopam and SK&F 95654. Each compound caused marked increases in blood flow and shear stress as early as 4 hr after dosing. These results suggest that ultrasound imaging may constitute a functional correlate for the microscopic finding of DIVI in the rat.


Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology | 2017

Cellular and functional actions of tofacitinib related to the pathophysiology of hibernoma development

Zaher A. Radi; W. Mark Vogel; Phillip M. Bartholomew; Petra Koza-Taylor; Alexandros Papanikolaou; Todd Wisialowski; Prashant R. Nambiar; Douglas J. Ball

ABSTRACT Tofacitinib is an oral JAK inhibitor for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis. In the 2‐year carcinogenicity study with tofacitinib, increased incidence of hibernoma (a neoplasm of brown adipose tissue [BAT]) was noted in female rats at ≥30 mg/kg/day (≥41x human exposure multiples). Thus, signaling pathways within BAT were investigated by measuring BAT: weight, cell proliferation biomarkers, content of basal and prolactin‐induced phosphorylated Signal Transducer and Activator of Transcription (STAT), and uncoupling protein 1 (UCP‐1). The relationship between cardiovascular hemodynamics and plasma norepinephrine (NE) levels was also investigated. Tofacitinib administered to female rats at doses of 10, 30, or 75 mg/kg/day for 14 days increased BAT weight at 75 mg/kg/day and cell proliferation at ≥30 mg/kg/day. JAK inhibition, observed as lower pSTAT3 and pSTAT5 in BAT, was noted at ≥10 mg/kg/day, while lower activity of BAT was observed as lower UCP‐1 protein at ≥30 mg/kg/day. In cultured brown adipocytes, prolactin‐induced increase in pSTAT5 and pSTAT3 were inhibited by tofacitinib in a concentration‐dependent manner. Tofacitinib lowered blood pressure, increased heart rate, and resulted in dose‐dependent increases in circulating NE. Thus, JAK/STAT inhibition in BAT and sympathetic stimulation are two factors which might contribute to the genesis of hibernomas by tofacitinib in rats.


Journal of Pharmacological and Toxicological Methods | 2018

Cardiac sodium channel antagonism – Translation of preclinical in vitro assays to clinical QRS prolongation

Stephen Jenkinson; Asser Bassyouni; Jason Cordes; Bernard Fermini; Donglin Guo; David Potter; David S. Ramirez; Jill Steidl-Nichols; Sunny Z. Sun; Todd Wisialowski

INTRODUCTION Cardiac sodium channel antagonists have historically been used to treat cardiac arrhythmias by preventing the reentry of the electrical impulse that could occur following myocardial damage. However, clinical studies have highlighted a significant increase in mortality associated with such treatment. Cardiac sodium channel antagonist activity is now seen as an off-target pharmacology that should be mitigated during the drug development process. The aim of this study was to examine the correlation between in vitro/ex vivo assays that are routinely used to measure Nav1.5 activity and determine the translatability of the individual assays to QRS prolongation in the clinic. METHODS A set of clinical compounds with known Nav1.5 activity was profiled in several in vitro/ex vivo assays (binding, membrane potential, patch clamp and the Langendorff isolated heart). Clinical data comprising compound exposure levels and changes in QRS interval were obtained from the literature. Sensitivity/specificity analysis was performed with respect to the clinical outcome. RESULTS The in vitro assays showed utility in predicting QRS prolongation in the clinic. Optimal thresholds were defined for each assay (binding: IC20; membrane potential: IC10; patch clamp: IC20) and sensitivity (69-88%) and specificity (53-84%) values were shown to be similar between assay formats. DISCUSSION The data provide clear statistical insight into the translatability of Nav1.5 antagonism data generated in vitro to potential clinical outcomes. These results improve our ability to understand the liability posed by such activity in novel development compounds at an early stage.


Toxicological Sciences | 2017

Use of Rat Primary Mesenteric Cells for the Prediction of PDE4 Inhibitor Drug-Induced Vascular Injury

Mark Gosink; Robert E. Chapin; Dean Wilkie; Scott Davenport; Steven W. Kumpf; Bradley E. Enerson; Christopher Houle; Petra Koza-Taylor; Todd Wisialowski; Michael P. Lawton

Drug-induced vascular injury (DIVI) in preclinical studies can delay, if not terminate, a drug development program. Clinical detection of DIVI can be very difficult as there are no definitive biomarkers known to reliably detect this disorder in all instances. The preclinical identification of DIVI requires detailed microscopic examination of a wide range of tissues although one of the most commonly affected areas in rats is the mesenteric vasculature. The reason for this predisposition of mesenteric arteries in rats as well as the exact mechanism and cell types involved in the initial development of these lesions have not been fully elucidated. We hypothesized that by using a mixed culture of cells from rat mesenteric tissue, we would be able to identify an RNA expression signature that could predict the invivo development of DIVI. Five compounds designed to inhibit Phosphodiesterase 4 activity (PDE4i) were chosen as positive controls. PDE4is are well known to induce DIVI in the mesenteric vasculature of rats and there is microscopic evidence that this is associated, at least in part, with a proinflammatory mechanism. We surveyed, by qRT-PCR, the expression of 96 genes known to be involved in inflammation and using a Random-Forest model, identified 12 genes predictive of invivo DIVI outcomes in rats. Using these genes, we were able to cross-validate the ability of the Random-Forest modeling to predict the concentration at which PDE4i caused DIVI invivo.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2004

Dynamic Beat-to-Beat Modeling of the QT-RR Interval Relationship: Analysis of QT Prolongation during Alterations of Autonomic State versus Human Ether a-go-go-Related Gene Inhibition

Anthony A. Fossa; Todd Wisialowski; Anthony Magnano; Eric A. Wolfgang; Roxanne L. Winslow; William P. Gorczyca; Kimberly Crimin; David Raunig


European Journal of Pharmacology | 2004

Differential effect of HERG blocking agents on cardiac electrical alternans in the guinea pig.

Anthony A. Fossa; Todd Wisialowski; Eric A. Wolfgang; Ellen Wang; Michael J. Avery; David Raunig; Bernard Fermini

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