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Featured researches published by Yongxin Han.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002

Selective, reversible caspase-3 inhibitor is neuroprotective and reveals distinct pathways of cell death after neonatal hypoxic-ischemic brain injury

Byung Hee Han; Daigen Xu; Junjeong Choi; Yongxin Han; Steven Xanthoudakis; Sophie Roy; John Tam; John Vaillancourt; John Colucci; Robert Siman; Andre Giroux; George S. Robertson; Robert Zamboni; Donald W. Nicholson; David M. Holtzman

Hypoxia-ischemia (H-I) in the developing brain results in brain injury with prominent features of both apoptosis and necrosis. A peptide-based pan-caspase inhibitor is neuroprotective against neonatal H-I brain injury, suggesting a central role of caspases in brain injury. Because previously studied peptide-based caspase inhibitors are not potent and are only partially selective, the exact contribution of specific caspases and other proteases to injury after H-I is not clear. In this study, we explored the neuroprotective effects of a small, reversible caspase-3 inhibitor M826. M826 selectively and potently inhibited both caspase-3 enzymatic activity and apoptosis in cultured cells in vitro. In a rat model of neonatal H-I, M826 blocked caspase-3 activation and cleavage of its substrates, which begins 6 h and peaks 24 h after H-I. Although M826 significantly reduced DNA fragmentation and brain tissue loss, it did not prevent calpain activation in the cortex. This activation, which is associated with excitotoxic/necrotic cell injury, occurred within 30 min to 2 h after H-I even in the presence of M826. Similar to calpain activation, we found evidence of caspase-2 processing within 30 min to 2 h after H-I that was not affected by M826. Caspase-2 processing appeared to be secondary to calpain-mediated cleavage and was not associated with caspase-2 activation. These data suggest that caspase-3 specifically contributes to delayed cell death and brain injury after neonatal H-I and that calpain activation is associated with and likely a marker for the early component of excitotoxic/necrotic brain injury previously demonstrated in this model.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2004

Differential efficacy of caspase inhibitors on apoptosis markers during sepsis in rats and implication for fractional inhibition requirements for therapeutics

Nathalie Méthot; JingQi Huang; Nathalie Coulombe; John P. Vaillancourt; Dita M. Rasper; John Tam; Yongxin Han; John Colucci; Robert Zamboni; Steven Xanthoudakis; Sylvie Toulmond; Donald W. Nicholson; Sophie Roy

A rodent model of sepsis was used to establish the relationship between caspase inhibition and inhibition of apoptotic cell death in vivo. In this model, thymocyte cell death was blocked by Bcl-2 transgene, indicating that apoptosis was predominantly dependent on the mitochondrial pathway that culminates in caspase-3 activation. Caspase inhibitors, including the selective caspase-3 inhibitor M867, were able to block apoptotic manifestations both in vitro and in vivo but with strikingly different efficacy for different cell death markers. Inhibition of DNA fragmentation required substantially higher levels of caspase-3 attenuation than that required for blockade of other apoptotic events such as spectrin proteolysis and phosphatidylserine externalization. These data indicate a direct relationship between caspase inhibition and some apoptotic manifestations but that small quantities of uninhibited caspase-3 suffice to initiate genomic DNA breakdown, presumably through the escape of catalytic quantities of caspase-activated DNase. These findings suggest that putative caspase-independent apoptosis may be overestimated in some systems since blockade of spectrin proteolysis and other cell death markers does not accurately reflect the high degrees of caspase-3 inhibition needed to prevent DNA fragmentation. Furthermore, this requirement presents substantial therapeutic challenges owing to the need for persistent and complete caspase blockade.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2004

Reducing the Peptidyl Features of Caspase-3 Inhibitors: A Structural Analysis.

Joseph W. Becker; Jennifer Rotonda; Stephen M. Soisson; Renee Aspiotis; Christopher I. Bayly; Sébastien Francoeur; Michel Gallant; Marga Garcia-Calvo; Andre Giroux; Erich L. Grimm; Yongxin Han; Dan McKay; Donald W. Nicholson; Erin P. Peterson; Johanne Renaud; Sophie Roy; Nancy A. Thornberry; Robert Zamboni


Archive | 2006

EP4 Receptor Agonist, Compositions and Methods Thereof

Xavier Billot; John Colucci; Yongxin Han; Marie-Claire Wilson; Robert N. Young


Archive | 2003

Pyrrolidin-2-on derivatives as ep4 receptor agonists

Zavier Billot; Yongxin Han; Robert N. Young; Mario Girard; Marie-Claire Wilson


Archive | 2003

Ep4 receptor agonists

Xavier Billot; Jean-luc Beaunard; Yongxin Han; Robert N. Young; John Colucci; Mario Girard; Marie-Claire Wilson


Archive | 2008

Fused aromatic ptp-1b inhibitors

John Colucci; Marie-Claire Wilson; Yongxin Han; Claude Dufresne; Michel Belley; Cheuk K. Lau; Christopher I. Bayly


Archive | 2004

Prostaglandin analogs as ep4 receptor antagonists

Xavier Billot; John Colucci; Yongxin Han; Marie-Claire Wilson; Robert N. Young


Archive | 2004

Irreversible caspase-3 inhibitors as active site probes

John Colucci; André Giroux; Yongxin Han; Nathalie Méthot; Donald W. Nicholson; Sophie Roy; John P. Vaillancourt; Paul Tawa


Archive | 2008

Dérivés de naphtalène et quinoléine sulfonylurée comme antagonistes du récepteur ep4

Jason Burch; Julie Farand; Yongxin Han; Claudio Sturino

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Sophie Roy

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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Andre Giroux

Washington University in St. Louis

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