Zhaogen Chen
Eli Lilly and Company
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Publication
Featured researches published by Zhaogen Chen.
The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2011
Yasuyuki Kimura; Masahiro Fujita; Jinsoo Hong; Talakad Lohith; Robert L. Gladding; Sami S. Zoghbi; Johannes A. Tauscher; Nancy Goebl; Karen S. Rash; Zhaogen Chen; Concepcion Pedregal; Vanessa N. Barth; Victor W. Pike; Robert B. Innis
Our laboratory developed (S)-3-(2′-fluoro-6′,7′-dihydrospiro[piperidine-4,4′-thieno[3,2-c]pyran]-1-yl)-2-(2-fluorobenzyl)-N-methylpropanamide (11C-NOP-1A), a new radioligand for the nociceptin/orphanin FQ peptide (NOP) receptor, with high affinity (Ki, 0.15 nM) and appropriate lipophilicity (measured logD, 3.4) for PET brain imaging. Here, we assessed the utility of 11C-NOP-1A for quantifying NOP receptors in the monkey brain and estimated the radiation safety profile of this radioligand based on its biodistribution in monkeys. Methods: Baseline and blocking PET scans were acquired from head to thigh for 3 rhesus monkeys for approximately 120 min after 11C-NOP-1A injection. These 6 PET scans were used to quantify NOP receptors in the brain and to estimate radiation exposure to organs of the body. In the blocked scans, a selective nonradioactive NOP receptor antagonist (SB-612111; 1 mg/kg intravenously) was administered before 11C-NOP-1A. In all scans, arterial blood was sampled to measure the parent radioligand 11C-NOP-1A. Distribution volume (VT; a measure of receptor density) was calculated with a compartment model using brain and arterial plasma data. Radiation-absorbed doses were calculated using the MIRD Committee scheme. Results: After 11C-NOP-1A injection, peak uptake of radioactivity in the brain had a high concentration (∼5 standardized uptake value), occurred early (∼12 min), and thereafter washed out quickly. VT (mL · cm−3) was highest in the neocortex (∼20) and lowest in hypothalamus and cerebellum (∼13). SB-612111 blocked approximately 50%–70% of uptake and reduced VT in all brain regions to approximately 7 mL · cm−3. Distribution was well identified within 60 min of injection and stable for the remaining 60 min, consistent with only parent radioligand and not radiometabolites entering the brain. Whole-body scans confirmed that the brain had specific (i.e., displaceable) binding but could not detect specific binding in peripheral organs. The effective dose for humans estimated from the baseline scans in monkeys was 5.0 μSv/MBq. Conclusion: 11C-NOP-1A is a useful radioligand for quantifying NOP receptors in the monkey brain, and its radiation dose is similar to that of other 11C-labeled ligands for neuroreceptors. 11C-NOP-1A appears to be a promising candidate for measuring NOP receptors in the human brain.
ACS Chemical Neuroscience | 2014
Elizabeth M. Joshi; Anne B. Need; John Mehnert Schaus; Zhaogen Chen; Dana R. Benesh; Charles H. Mitch; Stuart Morton; Thomas J. Raub; Lee A. Phebus; Vanessa N. Barth
Positron emission tomography (PET) imaging has become a useful noninvasive technique to explore molecular biology within living systems; however, the utility of this method is limited by the availability of suitable radiotracers to probe specific targets and disease biology. Methods to identify potential areas of improvement in the ability to predict small molecule performance as tracers prior to radiolabeling would speed the discovery of novel tracers. In this retrospective analysis, we characterized the brain penetration or peak SUV (standardized uptake value), binding potential (BP), and brain exposure kinetics across a series of known, nonradiolabeled PET ligands using in vivo LC-MS/MS (liquid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry) and correlated these parameters with the reported PET ligand performance in nonhuman primates and humans available in the literature. The PET tracers studied included those reported to label G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs), intracellular enzymes, and transporters. Additionally, data for each tracer was obtained from a mouse brain uptake assay (MBUA), previously published, where blood-brain barrier (BBB) penetration and clearance parameters were assessed and compared against similar data collected on a broad compound set of central nervous system (CNS) therapeutic compounds. The BP and SUV identified via nonradiolabeled LC-MS/MS, while different from the published values observed in the literature PET tracer data, allowed for an identification of initial criteria values we sought to facilitate increased potential for success from our early discovery screening paradigm. Our analysis showed that successful, as well as novel, clinical PET tracers exhibited BP of greater than 1.5 and peak SUVs greater than approximately 150% at 5 min post dose in rodents. The brain kinetics appeared similar between both techniques despite differences in tracer dose, suggesting linearity across these dose ranges. The assessment of tracers in a CNS exposure model, the mouse brain uptake assessment (MBUA), showed that those compound with initial brain-to-plasma ratios >2 and unbound fraction in brain homogenate >0.01 were more likely to be clinically successful PET ligands. Taken together, early incorporation of a LC/MS/MS cold tracer discovery assay and a parallel MBUA can be an useful screening paradigm to prioritize and rank order potential novel PET radioligands during early tracer discovery efforts. Compounds considered for continued in vivo PET assessments can be identified quickly by leveraging in vitro affinity and selectivity measures, coupled with data from a MBUA, primarily the 5 min brain-to-plasma ratio and unbound fraction data. Coupled utilization of these data creates a strategy to efficiently screen for the identification of appropriate chemical space to invest in for radiotracer discovery.
Archive | 2002
Zhaogen Chen; Michael Philip Cohen; Matthew Joseph Fisher; Bruno Giethlen; James Ronald Gillig; Jefferson R. McCowan; Shawn Christopher Miller; John Mehnert Schaus
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2011
Victor W. Pike; Karen Rash; Zhaogen Chen; Concepcion Pedregal; Michael A. Statnick; Yasuyuki Kimura; Jinsoo Hong; Sami S. Zoghbi; Masahiro Fujita; Miguel A. Toledo; Nuria Diaz; Susan L. Gackenheimer; Johannes Tauscher; Vanessa N. Barth; Robert B. Innis
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012
Concepcion Pedregal; Elizabeth M. Joshi; Miguel A. Toledo; Celia Lafuente; Nuria Diaz; Maria Angeles Martinez-Grau; Alma Jiménez; Ana Benito; Antonio Navarro; Zhaogen Chen; Daniel R. Mudra; Steven D. Kahl; Karen Rash; Michael A. Statnick; Vanessa N. Barth
Archive | 2008
Zhaogen Chen; Chafig Hamdouchi Hamdouchi; Erik James Hembre; Philip Arthur Hipsking; Jason Kenneth Myers; James Lee Toth; Takako Takakuwa
Archive | 2008
Thomas Daniel Aicher; Mark Joseph Chicarelli; Ronald Jay Hinklin; Hongqi Tian; Owen Brendan Wallace; Zhaogen Chen; Thomas Edward Mabry; Jefferson R. McCowan; Nancy June Snyder; Leonard L. Winneroski; John Gordon Allen
Archive | 2007
Thomas Daniel Aicher; Zhaogen Chen; Ronald Jay Hinklin; Gary Alan Hite; Alexei Pavlovych Krasutsky; Renhua Li; Jefferson R. McCowan; Ashraf Saeed; Nancy June Snyder; James Lee Toth; Owen Brendan Wallace; Junior Leonard Larry Winneroski; Yanping Xu; Jeremy Schulenburg York
Archive | 2007
Zhaogen Chen; Chafiq Hamdouchi; Erik James Hembre; Philip Arthur Hipskind; Jason Kenneth Myers; Takako Takakuwa; James Lee Toth
Archive | 2005
Thomas Daniel Aicher; Mark Joseph Chicarelli; Ronald Jay Hinklin; Hongqi Tian; Owen Brendan Wallace; Jefferson R. McCowan; Nancy June Snyder; Leonard Larry Junio Winneroski; Thomas Edward Mabry; John Gordon Allen; Zhaogen Chen