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Dive into the research topics where Val S. Goodfellow is active.

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Featured researches published by Val S. Goodfellow.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2013

The new small-molecule mixed-lineage kinase 3 inhibitor URMC-099 is neuroprotective and anti-inflammatory in models of human immunodeficiency virus-associated neurocognitive disorders.

Daniel F. Marker; Marie-Ève Tremblay; Jenna M. Puccini; Justin Barbieri; Mary A. Gantz Marker; Colin J. Loweth; E Christopher Muly; Shao-Ming Lu; Val S. Goodfellow; Stephen Dewhurst; Harris A. Gelbard

Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-associated neurocognitive disorders (HAND) is a significant source of disability in the HIV-infected population. Even with stringent adherence to anti-retroviral therapy, >50% of patients living with HIV-1 will develop HAND (Heaton et al., 2010). Because suppression of viral replication alone is not enough to stop HAND progression, there is a need for an adjunctive neuroprotective therapy in this population. To this end, we have developed a small-molecule brain-penetrant inhibitor with activity against mixed-lineage kinase 3 (MLK3), named URMC-099. MLK3 activation is associated with many of the pathologic hallmarks of HAND (Bodner et al., 2002, 2004; Sui et al., 2006) and therefore represents a prime target for adjunctive therapy based on small-molecule kinase inhibition. Here we demonstrate the anti-inflammatory and neuroprotective effects of URMC-099 in multiple murine and rodent models of HAND. In vitro, URMC-099 treatment reduced inflammatory cytokine production by HIV-1 Tat-exposed microglia and prevented destruction and phagocytosis of cultured neuronal axons by these cells. In vivo, URMC-099 treatment reduced inflammatory cytokine production, protected neuronal architecture, and altered the morphologic and ultrastructural response of microglia to HIV-1 Tat exposure. In conclusion, these data provide compelling in vitro and in vivo evidence to investigate the utility of URMC-099 in other models of HAND with the goal of advancement to an adjunctive therapeutic agent.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Discovery, Synthesis, and Characterization of an Orally Bioavailable, Brain Penetrant Inhibitor of Mixed Lineage Kinase 3

Val S. Goodfellow; Colin J. Loweth; Satheesh Babu Ravula; Torsten Wiemann; Thong X. Nguyen; Yang Xu; Daniel Todd; David W. Sheppard; Scott Pollack; Oksana Polesskaya; Daniel F. Marker; Stephen Dewhurst; Harris A. Gelbard

Inhibition of mixed lineage kinase 3 (MLK3) is a potential strategy for treatment of Parkinsons disease and HIV-1 associated neurocognitive disorders (HAND), requiring an inhibitor that can achieve significant brain concentration levels. We report here URMC-099 (1) an orally bioavailable (F = 41%), potent (IC50 = 14 nM) MLK3 inhibitor with excellent brain exposure in mouse PK models and minimal interference with key human CYP450 enzymes or hERG channels. The compound inhibits LPS-induced TNFα release in microglial cells, HIV-1 Tat-induced release of cytokines in human monocytes and up-regulation of phospho-JNK in Tat-injected brains of mice. Compound 1 likely functions in HAND preclinical models by inhibiting multiple kinase pathways, including MLK3 and LRRK2 (IC50 = 11 nM). We compare the kinase specificity and BBB penetration of 1 with CEP-1347 (2). Compound 1 is well tolerated, with excellent in vivo activity in HAND models, and is under investigation for further development.


Molecular Diversity | 1996

Rationally designed non-peptides: Variously substituted piperazine libraries for the discovery of bradykinin antagonists and other G-protein-coupled receptor ligands

Val S. Goodfellow; Chris P. Laudeman; J. Ivan Gerrity; Michael Burkard; Eric Strobel; John S. Zuzack; Don A. McLeod

SummaryMolecular modeling studies of potent decapeptide bradykinin antagonists suggested the de novo design of peptide mimetics based on a 1,2,3,4-tetrasubstituted 1,4-piperazin-6-one scaffold. These de novo-designed antagonists exhibited only modest potency (IC50 ∼ 55 μM) on a cloned human B2 receptor and antagonist activity in an in vitro human-cell functional assay. The success of these structures led to the creation of prototype libraries based on variously substituted 1,4-piperazine scaffolds, which allowed a rapid and general search of pharmacophores attached to a piperazine scaffold. The parent piperazinedione structures and fully reduced piperazine libraries differ from recently reported diketopiperazine libraries in the use of diverse nonnatural amino acids, on-resin-submonomer synthesis to provide more diverse N-substituted structures, and the adaptation of simultaneous ring closure and resin cleavage to drive the formation of highly hindered amide bonds. Using this chemistry, a rationally directed non-peptide library of approximately 2500 N,N′-disubstituted piperazines and piperazinediones was synthesized and screened for ligand affinity on bradykinin, neurokinin, and opioid receptors. A number of lead structures were identified. Notably, a bradykinin antagonist lead, CP-2458, with good receptor selectivity and antagonist activity in human-cell assays was identified and is undergoing optimization by traditional and combinatorial methods.


Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine | 2016

The mixed lineage kinase-3 inhibitor URMC-099 improves therapeutic outcomes for long-acting antiretroviral therapy

Gang Zhang; Dongwei Guo; Prasanta K. Dash; Mariluz Araínga; Jayme Wiederin; Nicole A. Haverland; Jaclyn S. Knibbe-Hollinger; Andrea Martinez-Skinner; Pawel Ciborowski; Val S. Goodfellow; Tadeusz A. Wysocki; Beata J. Wysocki; Larisa Y. Poluektova; Xin Ming Liu; JoEllyn McMillan; Santhi Gorantla; Harris A. Gelbard; Howard E. Gendelman

During studies to extend the half-life of crystalline nanoformulated antiretroviral therapy (nanoART) the mixed lineage kinase-3 inhibitor URMC-099, developed as an adjunctive neuroprotective agent was shown to facilitate antiviral responses. Long-acting ritonavir-boosted atazanavir (nanoATV/r) nanoformulations co-administered with URMC-099 reduced viral load and the numbers of HIV-1 infected CD4+ T-cells in lymphoid tissues more than either drug alone in infected humanized NOD/SCID/IL2Rγc-/- mice. The drug effects were associated with sustained ART depots. Proteomics analyses demonstrated that the antiretroviral responses were linked to affected phagolysosomal storage pathways leading to sequestration of nanoATV/r in Rab-associated recycling and late endosomes; sites associated with viral maturation. URMC-099 administered with nanoATV induced a dose-dependent reduction in HIV-1p24 and reverse transcriptase activity. This drug combination offers a unique chemical marriage for cell-based viral clearance. From the Clinical Editor: Although successful in combating HIV-1 infection, the next improvement in antiretroviral therapy (nanoART) would be to devise long acting therapy, such as intra-cellular depots. In this report, the authors described the use of nanoformulated antiretroviral therapy given together with the mixed lineage kinase-3 inhibitor URMC-099, and showed that this combination not only prolonged drug half-life, but also had better efficacy. The findings are hoped to be translated into the clinical setting in the future.


Molecular Immunology | 2014

MLK3 regulates fMLP-stimulated neutrophil motility.

Oksana Polesskaya; Christopher Wong; Luis Lebron; Jeffrey M. Chamberlain; Harris A. Gelbard; Val S. Goodfellow; Minsoo Kim; John L. Daiss; Stephen Dewhurst

INTRODUCTION Mixed lineage kinase 3 (MLK3) is part of the intracellular regulatory system that connects extracellular cytokine or mitogen signals received through G-protein coupled receptors to changes in gene expression. MLK3 activation stimulates motility of epithelial cells and epithelial-derived tumor cells, but its role in mediating the migration of other cell types remains unknown. Since neutrophils play a crucial role in innate immunity and contribute to the pathogenesis of several diseases, we therefore examined whether MLK3 might regulate the motility of mouse neutrophils responding to a chemotactic stimulus, the model bacterial chemoattractant fMLP. METHODS The expression of Mlk3 in mouse neutrophils was determined by immunocytochemistry and by RT-PCR. In vitro chemotaxis in a gradient of fMLP, fMLP-stimulated random motility, fMLP-stimulated F-actin formation were measured by direct microscopic observation using neutrophils pre-treated with a novel small molecule inhibitor of MLK3 (URMC099) or neutrophils obtained from Mlk3-/- mice. In vivo effects of MLK3 inhibition were measured by counting the fMLP-induced accumulation of neutrophils in the peritoneum following pre-treatment with URMC099 in wild-type C57Bl/6 or mutant Mlk3-/- mice. RESULTS The expression of Mlk3 mRNA and protein was observed in neutrophils purified from wild-type C57Bl/6 mice but not in neutrophils from mutant Mlk3-/- mice. Chemotaxis by wild-type neutrophils induced by a gradient of fMLP was reduced by pre-treatment with URMC099. Neutrophils from C57Bl/6 mice pretreated with URMC099 and neutrophils from Mlk3-/- mice moved far less upon fMLP-stimulation and did not form F-actin as readily as untreated neutrophils from C57Bl/6 controls. In vivo recruitment of neutrophils into the peritoneum by fMLP was significantly reduced in wild-type mice treated with URMC099, as well as in untreated Mlk3-/- mice-thereby confirming the role of MLK3 in neutrophil migration. CONCLUSIONS Mlk3 mRNA is expressed in murine neutrophils. Genetic or pharmacologic inhibition of MLK3 blocks fMLP-mediated motility of neutrophils both in vitro and in vivo, suggesting that MLK3 may be a therapeutic target in human diseases characterized by exuberant neutrophil migration.


Biochemical Pharmacology | 1997

Bradykinin antagonists in human systems: Correlation between receptor binding, calcium signalling in isolated cells, and functional activity in isolated ileum☆

Maciej Wieczorek; Anna Pilyavskaya; Michael Burkard; John S. Zuzack; Steven W. Jones; Mary Francis; Virginia E. Beckey; Sherman Ross; Val S. Goodfellow; Timothy D. Fitzpatrick; Manoj V. Marathe; Albert Gyorkos; Lyle W. Spruce; William M. Selig; John M. Stewart; Lajos Gera; Eric T. Whalley

The determination of the relationship between ligand affinity and bioactivity is important for the understanding of receptor function in biological systems and for drug development. Several physiological and pathophysiological functions of bradykinin (BK) are mediated via the B2 receptor. In this study, we have examined the relationship between B2 receptor (soluble and membrane-bound) binding of BK peptidic antagonists, inhibition of calcium signalling at a cellular level, and in vitro inhibition of ileum contraction. Only human systems were employed in the experiments. Good correlations between the studied activities of BK antagonists were observed for a variety of different peptidic structures. The correlation coefficients (r) were in the range of 0.905 to 0.955. In addition, we analyzed the effect of the C-terminal Arg9 removal from BK and its analogs on B2 receptor binding. The ratios of binding constants (Ki(+Arg)/Ki(-Arg)) for the Arg9 containing compounds and the corresponding des-Arg9 analogs varied from about 10 to 250,000. These ratios strongly depend on the chemical structures of the compounds. The highest ratios were observed for two natural agonist pairs, BK/des-Arg9-BK and Lys0-BK/des-Arg9-Lys0-BK.


Archive | 2008

CYSTEINE PROTEASE INHIBITORS

Lyle W. Spruce; Albert Gyorkos; John C. Cheronis; Val S. Goodfellow; Axel H. Leimer; John M. Young; James Ivan Gerrity


Archive | 2009

Mlk inhibitors and methods of use

Harris A. Gelbard; Stephen Dewhurst; Val S. Goodfellow; Torsten Wiemann; Colin J. Loweth


Archive | 1998

Substituted oxadiazole cysteine protease inhibitors

Lyle W. Spruce; Albert Gyorkos; John C. Cheronis; Val S. Goodfellow; Axel H. Leimer; John M. Young; James Ivan Gerrity


Archive | 1995

Method for preparing and identifying N-substitued 1,4-piperazines and N-substituted 1,4-piperazinediones

Val S. Goodfellow; Donald A. Mcleod; James Ivan Gerrity; Christopher P. Laudeman; Michael Burkard

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Burns C. Blaxall

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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