Wesley Anderson
Eli Lilly and Company
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Featured researches published by Wesley Anderson.
Neuropharmacology | 2014
Linda Rorick-Kehn; Michael A. Statnick; Elizabeth L. Eberle; Jamie H. McKinzie; Steven D. Kahl; Beth M. Forster; Conrad J. Wong; Xia Li; Robert S. Crile; David Shaw; Allison E. Sahr; Benjamin L. Adams; Steven J. Quimby; Nuria Diaz; Alma Jiménez; Concepcion Pedregal; Charles H. Mitch; Kelly L. Knopp; Wesley Anderson; Jeffrey W. Cramer; David L. McKinzie
Kappa opioid receptors and their endogenous neuropeptide ligand, dynorphin A, are densely localized in limbic and cortical areas comprising the brain reward system, and appear to play a key role in modulating stress and mood. Growing literature indicates that kappa receptor antagonists may be beneficial in the treatment of mood and addictive disorders. However, existing literature on kappa receptor antagonists has used extensively JDTic and nor-BNI which exhibit long-lasting pharmacokinetic properties that complicate experimental design and interpretation of results. Herein, we report for the first time the in vitro and in vivo pharmacological profile of a novel, potent kappa opioid receptor antagonist with excellent selectivity over other receptors and markedly improved drug-like properties over existing research tools. LY2456302 exhibits canonical pharmacokinetic properties that are favorable for clinical development, with rapid absorption (t(max): 1-2 h) and good oral bioavailability (F = 25%). Oral LY2456302 administration selectively and potently occupied central kappa opioid receptors in vivo (ED₅₀ = 0.33 mg/kg), without evidence of mu or delta receptor occupancy at doses up to 30 mg/kg. LY2456302 potently blocked kappa-agonist-mediated analgesia and disruption of prepulse inhibition, without affecting mu-agonist-mediated effects at doses >30-fold higher. Importantly, LY2456302 did not block kappa-agonist-induced analgesia one week after administration, indicating lack of long-lasting pharmacodynamic effects. In contrast to the nonselective opioid antagonist naltrexone, LY2456302 produced antidepressant-like effects in the mouse forced swim test and enhanced the effects of imipramine and citalopram. LY2456302 reduced ethanol self-administration in alcohol-preferring (P) rats and, unlike naltrexone, did not exhibit significant tolerance upon 4 days of repeated dosing. LY2456302 is a centrally-penetrant, potent, kappa-selective antagonist with pharmacokinetic properties favorable for clinical development and activity in animal models predictive of efficacy in mood and addictive disorders.
Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2014
Jeffrey M. Witkin; Carl D. Overshiner; Xia Li; John T. Catlow; Graham N. Wishart; Douglas A. Schober; Beverly A. Heinz; Alexander Nikolayev; Vladimir Tolstikov; Wesley Anderson; Richard E. Higgs; Ming-Shang Kuo; Christian C. Felder
Scopolamine produces rapid and significant symptom improvement in patients with depression, and most notably in patients who do not respond to current antidepressant treatments. Scopolamine is a nonselective muscarinic acetylcholine receptor antagonist, and it is not known which one or more of the five receptor subtypes in the muscarinic family are mediating these therapeutic effects. We used the mouse forced-swim test, an antidepressant detecting assay, in wild-type and transgenic mice in which each muscarinic receptor subtype had been genetically deleted to define the relevant receptor subtypes. Only the M1 and M2 knockout (KO) mice had a blunted response to scopolamine in the forced-swim assay. In contrast, the effects of the tricyclic antidepressant imipramine were not significantly altered by gene deletion of any of the five muscarinic receptors. The muscarinic antagonists biperiden, pirenzepine, and VU0255035 (N-[3-oxo-3-[4-(4-pyridinyl)-1-piper azinyl]propyl]-2,1,3-benzothiadiazole-4-sulfonamide) with selectivity for M1 over M2 receptors also demonstrated activity in the forced-swim test, which was attenuated in M1 but not M2 receptor KO mice. An antagonist with selectivity of M2 over M1 receptors (SCH226206 [(2-amino-3-methyl-phenyl)-[4-[4-[[4-(3 chlorophenyl)sulfonylphenyl]methyl]-1-piperidyl]-1-piperidyl]methanone]) was also active in the forced-swim assay, and the effects were deleted in M2−/− mice. Brain exposure and locomotor activity in the KO mice demonstrated that these behavioral effects of scopolamine are pharmacodynamic in nature. These data establish muscarinic M1 and M2 receptors as sufficient to generate behavioral effects consistent with an antidepressant phenotype and therefore as potential targets in the antidepressant effects of scopolamine.
Neuropharmacology | 2017
Jeffrey M. Witkin; Paul L. Ornstein; Charles H. Mitch; Renhua Li; Stephon C. Smith; Beverly A. Heinz; Xu Shan Wang; Chuanxi Xiang; Joan H. Carter; Wesley Anderson; Xia Li; Lisa M. Broad; Francesca Pasqui; Stephen M. Fitzjohn; Helen Sanger; Jodi L. Smith; John T. Catlow; Steven Swanson; James A. Monn
&NA; Metabotropic glutamate 2/3 (mGlu2/3) receptors are of considerable interest owing to their role in modulating glutamate transmission via presynaptic, postsynaptic and glial mechanisms. As part of our ongoing efforts to identify novel ligands for these receptors, we have discovered (1S,2R,3S,4S,5R,6R)‐2‐amino‐3‐[(3,4‐difluorophenyl)sulfanylmethyl]‐4‐hydroxy‐bicyclo[3.1.0]hexane‐2,6‐dicarboxylic acid; (LY3020371), a potent and selective orthosteric mGlu2/3 receptor antagonist. In this account, we characterize the effects of LY3020371 in membranes and cells expressing human recombinant mGlu receptor subtypes as well as in native rodent and human brain tissue preparations, providing important translational information for this molecule. In membranes from cells expressing recombinant human mGlu2 and mGlu3 receptor subtypes, LY3020371.HCl competitively displaced binding of the mGlu2/3 agonist ligand [3H]‐459477 with high affinity (hmGlu2 Ki = 5.26 nM; hmGlu3 Ki = 2.50 nM). In cells expressing hmGlu2 receptors, LY3020371.HCl potently blocked mGlu2/3 agonist (DCG‐IV)‐inhibited, forskolin‐stimulated cAMP formation (IC50 = 16.2 nM), an effect that was similarly observed in hmGlu3‐expressing cells (IC50 = 6.21 nM). Evaluation of LY3020371 in cells expressing the other human mGlu receptor subtypes revealed high mGlu2/3 receptor selectivity. In rat native tissue assays, LY3020371 demonstrated effective displacement of [3H]‐459477 from frontal cortical membranes (Ki = 33 nM), and functional antagonist activity in cortical synaptosomes measuring both the reversal of agonist‐suppressed second messenger production (IC50 = 29 nM) and agonist‐inhibited, K+‐evoked glutamate release (IC50 = 86 nM). Antagonism was fully recapitulated in both primary cultured cortical neurons where LY3020371 blocked agonist‐suppressed spontaneous Ca2+ oscillations (IC50 = 34 nM) and in an intact hippocampal slice preparation (IC50 = 46 nM). Functional antagonist activity was similarly demonstrated in synaptosomes prepared from epileptic human cortical or hippocampal tissues, suggesting a translation of the mGlu2/3 antagonist pharmacology from rat to human. Intravenous dosing of LY3020371 in rats led to cerebrospinal fluid drug levels that are expected to effectively block mGlu2/3 receptors in vivo. Taken together, these results establish LY3020371 as an important new pharmacological tool for studying mGlu2/3 receptors in vitro and in vivo. This article is part of the Special Issue entitled ‘Metabotropic Glutamate Receptors, 5 years on’. HighlightsLY3020371 is a highly potent and selective antagonist of human mGlu2/3 receptors.Highly consistent antagonist potencies exhibited in rat brain tissue assays.Dose‐proportionate plasma and csf pharmacokinetics after i.v. dosing.Pharmacologically relevant csf concentrations for i.v. doses between 0.3 and 10 mg/kg.LY3020371 is a new tool for studying mGlu2/3 receptors in vitro and in vivo.
Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2017
Stephen N. Mitchell; Keith A. Wafford; Guy Carter; Gary Gilmour; Jennifer Li; Brian J. Eastwood; Carl D. Overshiner; Xia Li; Linda Rorick-Kehn; Kurt Rasmussen; Wesley Anderson; Alexander Nikolayev; Vladamir Tolstikov; Ming-Shang Kuo; John T. Catlow; Renhua Li; Stephen Smith; Charles H. Mitch; Paul L. Ornstein; Stephen Swanson; James A. Monn
The ability of the N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor antagonist ketamine to alleviate symptoms in patients suffering from treatment-resistant depression (TRD) is well documented. In this paper, we directly compare in vivo biologic responses in rodents elicited by a recently discovered metabotropic glutamate (mGlu) 2/3 receptor antagonist 2-amino-3-[(3,4-difluorophenyl)sulfanylmethyl]-4-hydroxy-bicyclo[3.1.0]hexane-2,6-dicarboxylic acid (LY3020371) with those produced by ketamine. Both LY3020371 and ketamine increased the number of spontaneously active dopamine cells in the ventral tegmental area of anesthetized rats, increased O2 in the anterior cingulate cortex, promoted wakefulness, enhanced the efflux of biogenic amines in the prefrontal cortex, and produced antidepressant-related behavioral effects in rodent models. The ability of LY3020371 to produce antidepressant-like effects in the forced-swim assay in rats was associated with cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) drug levels that matched concentrations required for functional antagonist activity in native rat brain tissue preparations. Metabolomic pathway analyses from analytes recovered from rat CSF and hippocampus demonstrated that both LY3020371 and ketamine activated common pathways involving GRIA2 and ADORA1. A diester analog of LY3020371 [bis(((isopropoxycarbonyl)oxy)-methyl) (1S,2R,3S,4S,5R,6R)-2-amino-3-(((3,4-difluorophenyl)thio)methyl)-4-hydroxy-bicyclo[3.1.0]hexane-2,6-dicarboxylate (LY3027788)] was an effective oral prodrug; when given orally, it recapitulated effects of intravenous doses of LY3020371 in the forced-swim and wake-promotion assays, and augmented the antidepressant-like effects of fluoxetine or citalopram without altering plasma or brain levels of these compounds. The broad overlap of biologic responses produced by LY3020371 and ketamine supports the hypothesis that mGlu2/3 receptor blockade might be a novel therapeutic approach for the treatment of TRD patients. LY3020371 and LY3027788 represent molecules that are ready for clinical tests of this hypothesis.
Cns & Neurological Disorders-drug Targets | 2017
Anna E. Martin; Douglas A. Schober; Alexander Nikolayev; Vladimir Tolstikov; Wesley Anderson; Richard E. Higgs; Ming-Shang Kuo; Anastasia Laksmanan; John T. Catlow; Xia Li; Christian C. Felder
BACKGROUND Conventional antidepressants lack efficacy for many patients (treatmentresistant depression or TRD) and generally take weeks to produce full therapeutic response in others. Emerging data has identified certain drugs such as ketamine as rapidly-acting antidepressants for major depressive disorder and TRD. Scopolamine, a drug used to treat motion sickness and nausea, has also been demonstrated to function as a rapidly-acting antidepressant. The mechanisms associated with efficacy in TRD patients and rapid onset of action have been suggested to involve a-Amino-3-hydroxy- 5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA) receptor and mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) signaling. Since the work on these mechanisms with scopolamine has been limited, the present set of experiments was designed to further explore these mechanisms of action. METHOD Male, NIH Swiss mice demonstrated a robust and immediate antidepressant signature with ketamine or scopolamine when studied under the forced-swim test. RESULTS The AMPA receptor antagonist NBQX prevented this antidepressant-like effect of scopolamine and ketamine. An orally-bioavilable mTOR inhibitor (AZD8055) also attenuated the antidepressant- like effects of scopolamine and ketamine. Scopolamine was also shown to augment the antidepressant- like effect of the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor citalopram. When given in combination, scopolamine and ketamine acted synergistically to produce antidepressant-like effects. Although drug interaction data suggested that additional mechanisms might be at play, metabolomic analysis of frontal cortex and plasma from muscarinic M1+/+ and M1 -/- mice given scopolamine or vehicle did not reveal any hints as to the nature of these additional mechanisms of action. CONCLUSION Overall, the data substantiate and extend the idea that AMPA and mTOR signaling pathways are necessary for the antidepressant-like effects of scopolamine and ketamine, mechanisms that appear to be of general significance for TRD therapeutic agents.
winter simulation conference | 2007
Bernard McGarvey; Nancy J. Dynes; Burch C. Lin; Wesley Anderson; James P. Kremidas; James C. Felli
Clinical trials constitute large, complex, and resource intensive activities for pharmaceutical companies. Accurate prediction of patient enrollment would represent a major step forward in optimizing clinical trials. Currently models for patient enrollment that are both accurate and fast are not available. We present a discrete event model of the patient enrollment process that is accurate and uses relatively small CPU times. This model is now being used on a regular basis to predict the enrollment of patients for large trials with around 13,000 patients and has led to significant reduction in the time it takes to make these predictions.
Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2016
Kjell A. Svensson; Beverly A. Heinz; John Mehnert Schaus; James P. Beck; Junliang Hao; Joseph H. Krushinski; M. R. Reinhard; Michael Philip Cohen; S. L. Hellman; B. G. Getman; Xushan Wang; M. M. Menezes; D. L. Maren; Julie F. Falcone; Wesley Anderson; Rebecca A. Wright; S. M. Morin; Kelly L. Knopp; B. L. Adams; B. Rogovoy; I. Okun; Todd M. Suter; Michael A. Statnick; Donald R. Gehlert; David L. Nelson; Virginia L. Lucaites; R. Emkey; Neil W. DeLapp; Todd R. Wiernicki; J. W. Cramer
Allosteric potentiators amplify the sensitivity of physiologic control circuits, a mode of action that could provide therapeutic advantages. This hypothesis was tested with the dopamine D1 receptor potentiator DETQ [2-(2,6-dichlorophenyl)-1-((1S,3R)-3-(hydroxymethyl)-5-(2-hydroxypropan-2-yl)-1-methyl-3,4-dihydroisoquinolin-2(1H)-yl)ethan-1-one]. In human embryonic kidney 293 (HEK293) cells expressing the human D1 receptor, DETQ induced a 21-fold leftward shift in the cAMP response to dopamine, with a Kb of 26 nM. The maximum response to DETQ alone was ∼12% of the maximum response to dopamine, suggesting weak allosteric agonist activity. DETQ was ∼30-fold less potent at rat and mouse D1 receptors and was inactive at the human D5 receptor. To enable studies in rodents, an hD1 knock-in mouse was generated. DETQ (3–20 mg/kg orally) caused a robust (∼10-fold) increase in locomotor activity (LMA) in habituated hD1 mice but was inactive in wild-type mice. The LMA response to DETQ was blocked by the D1 antagonist SCH39166 and was dependent on endogenous dopamine. LMA reached a plateau at higher doses (30–240 mg/kg) even though free brain levels of DETQ continued to increase over the entire dose range. In contrast, the D1 agonists SKF 82958, A-77636, and dihydrexidine showed bell-shaped dose-response curves with a profound reduction in LMA at higher doses; video-tracking confirmed that the reduction in LMA caused by SKF 82958 was due to competing stereotyped behaviors. When dosed daily for 4 days, DETQ continued to elicit an increase in LMA, whereas the D1 agonist A-77636 showed complete tachyphylaxis by day 2. These results confirm that allosteric potentiators may have advantages compared with direct-acting agonists.
Neurology | 2017
Shannon L. Risacher; Wesley Anderson; Arnaud Charil; Peter Castelluccio; Sergey Shcherbinin; Andrew J. Saykin; Adam J. Schwarz
Objective: To test the hypothesis that cortical and hippocampal volumes, measured in vivo from volumetric MRI (vMRI) scans, could be used to identify variant subtypes of Alzheimer disease (AD) and to prospectively predict the rate of clinical decline. Methods: Amyloid-positive participants with AD from the Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) 1 and ADNI2 with baseline MRI scans (n = 229) and 2-year clinical follow-up (n = 100) were included. AD subtypes (hippocampal sparing [HpSpMRI], limbic predominant [LPMRI], typical AD [tADMRI]) were defined according to an algorithm analogous to one recently proposed for tau neuropathology. Relationships between baseline hippocampal volume to cortical volume ratio (HV:CTV) and clinical variables were examined by both continuous regression and categorical models. Results: When participants were divided categorically, the HpSpMRI group showed significantly more AD-like hypometabolism on 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose-PET (p < 0.05) and poorer baseline executive function (p < 0.001). Other baseline clinical measures did not differ across the 3 groups. Participants with HpSpMRI also showed faster subsequent clinical decline than participants with LPMRI on the Alzheimers Disease Assessment Scale, 13-Item Subscale (ADAS-Cog13), Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), and Functional Assessment Questionnaire (all p < 0.05) and tADMRI on the MMSE and Clinical Dementia Rating Sum of Boxes (CDR-SB) (both p < 0.05). Finally, a larger HV:CTV was associated with poorer baseline executive function and a faster slope of decline in CDR-SB, MMSE, and ADAS-Cog13 score (p < 0.05). These associations were driven mostly by the amount of cortical rather than hippocampal atrophy. Conclusions: AD subtypes with phenotypes consistent with those observed with tau neuropathology can be identified in vivo with vMRI. An increased HV:CTV ratio was predictive of faster clinical decline in participants with AD who were clinically indistinguishable at baseline except for a greater dysexecutive presentation.
European Journal of Operational Research | 2007
James C. Felli; Wesley Anderson; James P. Kremidas; Stephen J. Ruberg
Clinical trials constitute large, resource-intensive endeavors for pharmaceutical companies, academic institutions and government agencies. Accounts have estimated the number of patients involved in clinical trials in the US as high as 725,000 patients with costs in excess of
Alzheimers & Dementia | 2016
Justin T. Hole; Margaret M. Racke; John Tzaferis; Feng Liu; Herold Oluoch; Zeshan Ahmed; Alice Fisher; Wesley Anderson; Philip Iversent; Celedon Gonzales; Zhixiang Yang; Leonard N. Boggs; Scott A. Monk; Dustin J. Mergott; Ying Yt. Yang; Jirong Lu; Michael C. Irizarry; John R. Sims; Patrick C. May; Michael Hutton; Christer Nordstedt; Ronald B. DeMattos
19 billion. Despite the scope of these activities, little has been done by way of a general model to highlight the progression of patients through the various stages of a clinical trial. We present a semi-Markov model that can be used to explore the patient population profile of a clinical trial for arbitrarily many patient classes, trial sites and start-times.