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Dive into the research topics where Yulong Hong is active.

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Featured researches published by Yulong Hong.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2006

G-protein-coupled receptor microarrays for multiplexed compound screening.

Yulong Hong; Brian L. Webb; Sadashiva Pai; Ann M. Ferrie; Jinlin Peng; Fang Lai; Joydeep Lahiri; Gloria Biddlecome; Brian Rasnow; Michael Johnson; Hosung Min; Ye Fang; John Salon

Conventional assay methods for discovering and profiling drug-target interactions are typically developed on a target-by-target basis and hence can be cumbersome to enable and orchestrate. Herein the authors report a solid-state ligand-binding assay that operates in a multiplexed mode to report compound activity against a micorarray-configured panel of G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) targets. The pharmacological fidelity of the system is high, and its miniaturized “plug-and-play” format provides improved efficiency both in terms of execution time and reagent consumption. Taken together, these features make the system ideally suited to explore the structure-activity relationship of compounds across a broad region of target class space.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2004

Fabrication and Application of G Protein-Coupled Receptor Microarrays

Ye Fang; Brian L. Webb; Yulong Hong; Ann M. Ferrie; Fang Lai; Anthony G. Frutos; Joydeep Lahiri

The increased number of drug targets and compounds demands novel high-throughput screening technologies that could be used for parallel analysis of many genes and proteins. Protein microarrays are evolving promising technologies for the parallel analysis of many proteins with respect to their abundance, location, modifications, and interactions with other biological and chemical molecules. This chapter specifically describes the fabrication of G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) microarrays, a unique subset of protein microarrays, using contact-pin printing technology. The bioassays and potential applications of GPCR microarrays for the determination of compound affinities and potencies are also included.


Assay and Drug Development Technologies | 2009

Development of multiplexed microarray binding assays for high-throughput drug discovery.

Yulong Hong; Li Liu; Sadashiva Pai; James N. Graf; Hongwei Rao; Jeffrey G. Lynn; Carlo van Staden; Paul H. Lee; Fang Lai; John Salon

The ability to combine primary hit identification assays with target profiling would significantly streamline the current drug discovery process. Working towards this end, we report here the development of a microarray-based ligand binding assay that supports multiplexed analysis of G protein-coupled receptor systems in a 96-well microplate format that is compatible with the equipment and infrastructure typical of high-throughput screening laboratories. A prototype microarray was generated by pin-printing seven different receptors within the wells of a specially coated glass-bottom microplate and assaying with a cocktail of fluorescent ligands. Development of the multiplexed system included optimization of methods for depositing receptor membrane proteins and establishing a generic set of assay conditions that simultaneously satisfied the pharmacology requirements of all of the receptor systems included on the array. The multiplexed system is shown to produce valid pharmacological results as evidenced by its ability to report K(i) values for receptor-specific fluorescent ligands and rank ordered potencies for diagnostic displacing compounds comparable to values generated by conventional simplexed assays. Moreover, the results of a 40-compound mini-screen confirmed that the assay accurately identifies valid hits. The results suggest the assay may be immediately suitable for routine profiling tasks and demonstrate the potential of the format for high-throughput multiplexed drug discovery.


Drug Metabolism and Disposition | 2017

Evaluation of a Novel Renewable Hepatic Cell Model for Prediction of Clinical CYP3A4 Induction Using a Correlation-Based Relative Induction Score Approach.

Rongjun Zuo; Feng Li; Sweta Parikh; Li Cao; Kirsten Cooper; Yulong Hong; Jin Liu; Ronald A. Faris; Daochuan Li; Hongbing Wang

Metabolism enzyme induction-mediated drug-drug interactions need to be carefully characterized in vitro for drug candidates to predict in vivo safety risk and therapeutic efficiency. Currently, both the Food and Drug Administration and European Medicines Agency recommend using primary human hepatocytes as the gold standard in vitro test system for studying the induction potential of candidate drugs on cytochrome P450 (CYP), CYP3A4, CYP1A2, and CYP2B6. However, primary human hepatocytes are known to bear inherent limitations such as limited supply and large lot-to-lot variations, which result in an experimental burden to qualify new lots. To overcome these shortcomings, a renewable source of human hepatocytes (i.e., Corning HepatoCells) was developed from primary human hepatocytes and was evaluated for in vitro CYP3A4 induction using methods well established by the pharmaceutical industry. HepatoCells have shown mature hepatocyte-like morphology and demonstrated primary hepatocyte-like response to prototypical inducers of all three CYP enzymes with excellent consistency. Importantly, HepatoCells retain a phenobarbital-responsive nuclear translocation of human constitutive androstane receptor from the cytoplasm, characteristic to primary hepatocytes. To validate HepatoCells as a useful tool to predict potential clinical relevant CYP3A4 induction, we tested three different lots of HepatoCells with a group of clinical strong, moderate/weak CYP3A4 inducers, and noninducers. A relative induction score calibration curve-based approach was used for prediction. HepatoCells showed accurate prediction comparable to primary human hepatocytes. Together, these results demonstrate that Corning HepatoCells is a reliable in vitro model for drug-drug interaction studies during the early phase of drug testing.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2005

Functional GPCR Microarrays

Yulong Hong; Brian L. Webb; Hui Su; Eric J. Mozdy; Ye Fang; Qi Wu; Li Liu; Jonathan Beck; Ann M. Ferrie; Srikanth Raghavan; John C. Mauro; Alain Carre; Dirk Müeller; Fang Lai; Brian Rasnow; Michael K. Johnson; Hosung Min; John Salon; Joydeep Lahiri


Mrs Bulletin | 2006

Applications of Biomembranes in Drug Discovery

Ye Fang; Yulong Hong; Brian L. Webb; Joydeep Lahiri


Archive | 2005

Porous substrates and arrays comprising the same

Everett W. Coonan; Ye Fang; Ann M. Ferrie; Xiaodong Fu; Yulong Hong; Thomas M. Leslie; Xinghua Li; Beth Costello Monahan; Eric J. Mozdy; Dirk Muller; Cameron Wayne Tanner; Patrick David Tepesch; John F. Wight; Po Ki Yuen


Archive | 2008

Membrane arrays and methods of manufacture

Alain Carre; Alexander M. Efremov; Ye Fang; Yulong Hong; Valerie Lacarriere; Joydeep Lahiri; Fang Lai; John C. Mauro; Srikanth Raghavan; Brian L. Webb


Analytical Biochemistry | 2007

Multiplexing G protein-coupled receptors in microarrays: A radioligand-binding assay

Bruce A. Posner; Yulong Hong; Eric Benvenuti; Michael Potchoiba; Dave Nettleton; Li Lui; Ann M. Ferrie; Fang Lai; Ye Fang; Juan Miret; Chris Wielis; Brian L. Webb


Archive | 2003

Multiplexed binding assays for receptor arrays

Ye Fang; Yulong Hong; Joydeep Lahiri; Fang Lai; Jinlin Peng; Brian L. Webb; Ann M. Ferrie

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Brian Rasnow

California Institute of Technology

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