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Dive into the research topics where Tricia J. Vos is active.

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Featured researches published by Tricia J. Vos.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Antitumor activity of MLN8054, an orally active small-molecule inhibitor of Aurora A kinase

Mark Manfredi; Jeffrey A. Ecsedy; Kristan Meetze; Suresh K. Balani; Olga Burenkova; Wei Chen; Katherine M. Galvin; Kara M. Hoar; Jessica Huck; Patrick J. LeRoy; Emily T. Ray; Todd B. Sells; Bradley Stringer; Stephen G. Stroud; Tricia J. Vos; Deborah R. Wysong; Mengkun Zhang; Joseph B. Bolen; Christopher F. Claiborne

Increased Aurora A expression occurs in a variety of human cancers and induces chromosomal abnormalities during mitosis associated with tumor initiation and progression. MLN8054 is a selective small-molecule Aurora A kinase inhibitor that has entered Phase I clinical trials for advanced solid tumors. MLN8054 inhibits recombinant Aurora A kinase activity in vitro and is selective for Aurora A over the family member Aurora B in cultured cells. MLN8054 treatment results in G2/M accumulation and spindle defects and inhibits proliferation in multiple cultured human tumor cells lines. Growth of human tumor xenografts in nude mice was dramatically inhibited after oral administration of MLN8054 at well tolerated doses. Moreover, the tumor growth inhibition was sustained after discontinuing MLN8054 treatment. In human tumor xenografts, MLN8054 induced mitotic accumulation and apoptosis, phenotypes consistent with inhibition of Aurora A. MLN8054 is a selective inhibitor of Aurora A kinase that robustly inhibits growth of human tumor xenografts and represents an attractive modality for therapeutic intervention of human cancers.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2011

Design and Optimization of Potent and Orally Bioavailable Tetrahydronaphthalene Raf Inhibitors

Alexandra E. Gould; Ruth Adams; Sharmila Adhikari; Kathleen Aertgeerts; Roushan Afroze; Christopher Blackburn; Emily F. Calderwood; Ryan Chau; Jouhara Chouitar; Matthew O. Duffey; Dylan England; Cheryl A. Farrer; Nancy Forsyth; Khristofer Garcia; Jeffery Gaulin; Paul D. Greenspan; Ribo Guo; Sean Harrison; Shih-Chung Huang; Natalia Iartchouk; Dave Janowick; Mi-Sook Kim; Bheemashankar Kulkarni; Steven P. Langston; Jane X. Liu; Li-Ting Ma; Saurabh Menon; Hirotake Mizutani; Erin Paske; Christelle C. Renou

Inhibition of mutant B-Raf signaling, through either direct inhibition of the enzyme or inhibition of MEK, the direct substrate of Raf, has been demonstrated preclinically to inhibit tumor growth. Very recently, treatment of B-Raf mutant melanoma patients with a selective B-Raf inhibitor has resulted in promising preliminary evidence of antitumor activity. This article describes the design and optimization of tetrahydronaphthalene-derived compounds as potent inhibitors of the Raf pathway in vitro and in vivo. These compounds possess good pharmacokinetic properties in rodents and inhibit B-Raf mutant tumor growth in mouse xenograft models.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Discovery and optimization of N-acyl and N-aroylpyrazolines as B-Raf kinase inhibitors.

Christopher Blackburn; Matthew O. Duffey; Alexandra E. Gould; Bheemashankar Kulkarni; Jane X. Liu; Saurabh Menon; Masayuki Nagayoshi; Tricia J. Vos; Juliet Williams

A high throughput screen identified N-aroylpyrazoline 1 as a selective inhibitor of the V600E mutant of B-Raf kinase. Parallel synthesis of acyl, aroyl, and sulfonyl derivatives led to the identification of several potent inhibitors in both enzymatic and cellular (pERK) assays such as compound 42.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Discovery of a Potent and Orally Bioavailable Benzolactam-Derived Inhibitor of Polo-Like Kinase 1 (MLN0905).

Matthew O. Duffey; Tricia J. Vos; Ruth Adams; Jennifer Alley; Justin Anthony; Cynthia Barrett; Indu T. Bharathan; Douglas Bowman; Nancy J. Bump; Ryan Chau; Courtney Cullis; Denise L. Driscoll; Amy Elder; Nancy Forsyth; Jonathan Frazer; Jianping Guo; Luyi Guo; Marc L. Hyer; David A. Janowick; Bheemashankar Kulkarni; Sujen Lai; Kerri Lasky; Gang Li; Jing Li; Debra Liao; Jeremy D. Little; Bo Peng; Mark G. Qian; Dominic J. Reynolds; Mansoureh Rezaei

This article describes the discovery of a series of potent inhibitors of Polo-like kinase 1 (PLK1). Optimization of this benzolactam-derived chemical series produced an orally bioavailable inhibitor of PLK1 (12c, MLN0905). In vivo pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic experiments demonstrated prolonged mitotic arrest after oral administration of 12c to tumor bearing nude mice. A subsequent efficacy study in nude mice achieved tumor growth inhibition or regression in a human colon tumor (HT29) xenograft model.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015

MLN8054 and Alisertib (MLN8237): Discovery of Selective Oral Aurora A Inhibitors

Todd B. Sells; Ryan Chau; Jeffrey A. Ecsedy; Rachel E. Gershman; Kara M. Hoar; Jessica Huck; David A. Janowick; Vivek J. Kadambi; Patrick J. LeRoy; Matthew Stirling; Stephen G. Stroud; Tricia J. Vos; Deborah R. Wysong; Mengkun Zhang; Suresh K. Balani; Joseph B. Bolen; Mark Manfredi; Christopher F. Claiborne

The Aurora kinases are essential for cell mitosis, and the dysregulation of Aurora A and B have been linked to the etiology of human cancers. Investigational agents MLN8054 (8) and alisertib (MLN8237, 10) have been identified as high affinity, selective, orally bioavailable inhibitors of Aurora A that have advanced into human clinical trials. Alisertib (10) is currently being evaluated in multiple Phase II and III clinical trials in hematological malignancies and solid tumors.


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2012

MLN0905, a Small-Molecule PLK1 Inhibitor, Induces Antitumor Responses in Human Models of Diffuse Large B-cell Lymphoma

Judy Shi; Kerri Lasky; Vaishali Shinde; Bradley Stringer; Mark G. Qian; Debra Liao; Ray Liu; Denise L. Driscoll; Michelle Tighe Nestor; Benjamin S. Amidon; Youlan Rao; Matt O. Duffey; Mark Manfredi; Tricia J. Vos; Natalie D’Amore; Marc Hyer

Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is the most common of the non–Hodgkin lymphomas, accounting for up to 30% of all newly diagnosed lymphoma cases. Current treatment options for this disease are effective, but not always curative; therefore, experimental therapies continue to be investigated. We have discovered an experimental, potent, and selective small-molecule inhibitor of PLK1, MLN0905, which inhibits cell proliferation in a broad range of human tumor cells including DLBCL cell lines. In our report, we explored the pharmacokinetic, pharmacodynamic, and antitumor properties of MLN0905 in DLBCL xenograft models grown in mice. These studies indicate that MLN0905 modulates the pharmacodynamic biomarker phosphorylated histone H3 (pHisH3) in tumor tissue. The antitumor activity of MLN0905 was evaluated in three human subcutaneous DLBCL xenograft models, OCI LY-10, OCI LY-19, and PHTX-22L (primary lymphoma). In each model, MLN0905 yielded significant antitumor activity on both a continuous (daily) and intermittent dosing schedule, underscoring dosing flexibility. The antitumor activity of MLN0905 was also evaluated in a disseminated xenograft (OCI LY-19) model to better mimic human DLBCL disease. In the disseminated model, MLN0905 induced a highly significant survival advantage. Finally, MLN0905 was combined with a standard-of-care agent, rituximab, in the disseminated OCI LY-19 xenograft model. Combining rituximab and MLN0905 provided both a synergistic antitumor effect and a synergistic survival advantage. Our findings indicate that PLK1 inhibition leads to pharmacodynamic pHisH3 modulation and significant antitumor activity in multiple DLBCL models. These data strongly suggest evaluating PLK1 inhibitors as DLBCL anticancer agents in the clinic. Mol Cancer Ther; 11(9); 2045–53. ©2012 AACR.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Plk1 inhibition causes post-mitotic DNA damage and senescence in a range of human tumor cell lines.

Denise L. Driscoll; Arijit Chakravarty; Doug Bowman; Vaishali S. Shinde; Kerri Lasky; Judy Shi; Tricia J. Vos; Bradley Stringer; Ben Amidon; Natalie D'Amore; Marc L. Hyer

Plk1 is a checkpoint protein whose role spans all of mitosis and includes DNA repair, and is highly conserved in eukaryotes from yeast to man. Consistent with this wide array of functions for Plk1, the cellular consequences of Plk1 disruption are diverse, spanning delays in mitotic entry, mitotic spindle abnormalities, and transient mitotic arrest leading to mitotic slippage and failures in cytokinesis. In this work, we present the in vitro and in vivo consequences of Plk1 inhibition in cancer cells using potent, selective small-molecule Plk1 inhibitors and Plk1 genetic knock-down approaches. We demonstrate for the first time that cellular senescence is the predominant outcome of Plk1 inhibition in some cancer cell lines, whereas in other cancer cell lines the dominant outcome appears to be apoptosis, as has been reported in the literature. We also demonstrate strong induction of DNA double-strand breaks in all six lines examined (as assayed by γH2AX), which occurs either during mitotic arrest or mitotic-exit, and may be linked to the downstream induction of senescence. Taken together, our findings expand the view of Plk1 inhibition, demonstrating the occurrence of a non-apoptotic outcome in some settings. Our findings are also consistent with the possibility that mitotic arrest observed as a result of Plk1 inhibition is at least partially due to the presence of unrepaired double-strand breaks in mitosis. These novel findings may lead to alternative strategies for the development of novel therapeutic agents targeting Plk1, in the selection of biomarkers, patient populations, combination partners and dosing regimens.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Discovery and optimization of pyrazoline compounds as B-Raf inhibitors.

Matthew O. Duffey; Ruth Adams; Christopher Blackburn; Ryan W. Chau; Susan Chen; Katherine M. Galvin; Khristofer Garcia; Alexandra E. Gould; Paul D. Greenspan; Sean Harrison; Shih-Chung Huang; Mi-Sook Kim; Bheemashankar Kulkarni; Steven P. Langston; Jane X. Liu; Li-Ting Ma; Saurabh Menon; Masayuki Nagayoshi; R. Scott Rowland; Tricia J. Vos; Tianlin Xu; Johnny J. Yang; Shaoxia Yu; Qin Zhang

The discovery of novel pyrazoline derivatives as B-Raf (V600E) inhibitors is described in this report. Chemical modification of the pyrazoline scaffold led to the development of SAR and identified potent and selective inhibitors of B-Raf (V600E). Determination of the pharmacokinetic properties of selected inhibitors is also reported.


Cancer Research | 2011

Abstract 3573: A small molecule PLK1 inhibitor, MLN0905, yields broad anti-tumor activity in human xenograft tumor models, and synergizes with taxane therapy

Kerri Lasky; Judy Shi; Vaishali Shinde; Bradley Stringer; Mark G. Qian; Debra Liao; Ray Liu; Matthew O. Duffey; Tricia J. Vos; Natalie D'Amore; Marc Hyer; Youlan Rao

PLK1 is a serine/threonine mitotic kinase that plays a key role in mitotic cell cycle progression, and its over-expression has been linked to poor patient prognosis. We have discovered a potent and selective small molecule inhibitor of PLK1, MLN0905, which reduces cell viability and inhibits cell proliferation in a broad range of human tumor cells. We explored the pharmacokinetic, pharmacodynamic, and anti-tumor properties on MLN0905 in human xenograft models grown in rodents. MLN0905 rapidly and extensively distributed to xenograft tumor with a high tumor-to-plasma exposure ratio. In human xenograft tumor tissue, MLN0905 modulates the pharmacodynamic biomarker phospho-Histone H3 (in a dose dependent fashion), enabling us to track pathway modulation in vivo. MLN0905 demonstrated robust anti-tumor activity (partial and complete responses) in a variety of solid and hematological human xenograft models, including cancers derived from colon (HCT-116, HT29), NSCLC (Calu-6), Ovarian (SKOV3), and Lymphoma (OCI-LY19, OCI-LY10, and the primary lymphoma PHTX-22L). Significant anti-tumor activity was observed when dosing on either a continuous (daily) or intermittent schedule, underscoring the dosing flexibility with this compound. In the SKOV3 and Calu-6 xenograft models, MLN0905 yielded a synergistic anti-tumor response when combined with the standard of care therapy Taxane. This is the first report of a PLK1 inhibitor synergizing with taxane therapy in vivo. In summary, our findings indicate MLN0905 has good drug-like pharmacokinetic properties, modulates the biomarker phospho-Histone H3, and yields significant anti-tumor activity in multiple xenograft models. These preclinical data support further evaluating MLN0905 as a novel anti-cancer agent. Citation Format: {Authors}. {Abstract title} [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 102nd Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2011 Apr 2-6; Orlando, FL. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2011;71(8 Suppl):Abstract nr 3573. doi:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2011-3573


Archive | 2002

Melanocortin-4 receptor binding compounds and methods of use thereof

Martin P. Maguire; Mingshi Dai; Tricia J. Vos

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Stephen G. Stroud

Millennium Pharmaceuticals

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Todd B. Sells

Millennium Pharmaceuticals

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Matthew O. Duffey

Millennium Pharmaceuticals

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Lloyd J. Payne

Millennium Pharmaceuticals

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Richard J. Boyce

Millennium Pharmaceuticals

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Stuart Travers

Millennium Pharmaceuticals

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Gang Li

Millennium Pharmaceuticals

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