Publications by authors named "Corey E"

Bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) signaling is important in prostate development and prostate cancer (PCa) progression. However, because of the multiple effects of different BMPs, no final conclusions have been made as to the role of BMPs in PCa. In our studies, we have focused on BMP-7 because it is involved in prostate morphogenesis, and its expression is regulated by androgens.

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Diels-Alder reactions of various combinations of maleimides and 1,3-dienes with cationic oxazaborolidines as catalysts have been shown to be highly efficient and enantioselective.

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Odorants inhibit as well as excite olfactory receptor neurons (ORNs) in many species of animals. Cyclic nucleotide-dependent activation of canonical mammalian ORNs is well established but it is still unclear how odorants inhibit these cells. Here we further implicate phosphoinositide-3-kinase (PI3K), an indispensable element of PI signaling in many cellular processes, in olfactory transduction in rodent ORNs.

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Alkynylaluminum reagents undergo enantioselective conjugate addition to cyclic alpha,beta-enones in the presence of chiral bisphosphine complexes of Ni(II).

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Electron-pair repulsion in 2-methoxyheteroarenes is important for N, but not for O or S heteroatoms.

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This paper reports a method for highly enantioselective Diels-Alder reaction with an acetylene equivalent to produce chiral-bridged dienes. These dienes, by coordination to Rh(I), can serve as catalysts for the enantioselective addition of vinyl or aryl groups to alpha,beta-unsaturated ketones.

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Background: A number of minimally invasive technologies exist for the treatment of prostate cancer (CaP), each with their associated morbidities. We sought to test the efficacy of low dose alternating electric current (LDAEC) to inhibit CaP growth in a preclinical setting and determine its effect on normal tissue.

Methods: In the first study, two power settings, 15 or 25 mA of current, and two treatment times, 15 or 60 min, were evaluated in C4-2B CaP xenografts.

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Treatments for advanced prostate cancer (CaP) typically involve androgen deprivation therapy. However, most patients eventually develop castration-resistant CaP (CRPC) for which highly effective therapies are limited. We explored the efficacy of a novel agent, HE3235, in inhibiting growth of CRPC in preclinical models.

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Background: Prostate cancer (PCa) has a propensity to metastasize to bone. Tumor cells replace bone marrow and can elicit an osteoblastic, osteolytic, or mixed bone response. Our objective was to elucidate the mechanisms and key factors involved in promoting osteoclastogenesis in PCa bone metastasis.

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The first enantioselective synthesis of lupeol has been developed by applying two carefully crafted cation-pi cyclization stages to generate the pentacyclic structure with complete stereocontrol. The synthesis (Scheme 1) is noteworthy because of its brevity and also because it solves a longstanding problem in the field of natural product synthesis.

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Recent evidence has revived interest in the idea that phosphoinositides (PIs) may play a role in signal transduction in mammalian olfactory receptor neurons (ORNs). To provide direct evidence that odorants indeed activate PI signaling in ORNs, we used adenoviral vectors carrying two different fluorescently tagged probes, the pleckstrin homology (PH) domains of phospholipase C delta 1 (PLC delta 1) and the general receptor of phosphoinositides (GRP1), to monitor PI activity in the dendritic knobs of ORNs in vivo. Odorants mobilized PI(4,5)P(2)/IP(3) and PI(3,4,5)P(3), the substrates and products of PLC and PI3K.

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It is proposed that facial selectivity in the Jacobsen epoxidation is determined by electrostatic and steric factors with a two-step pathway involving a carbocationic intermediate.

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Objective: To identify the quantitative trait loci (QTL) that contribute to hip dysplasia in dogs.

Animals: 192 Labrador Retrievers.

Procedures: Hip dysplasia was measured by use of the Norberg angle (NA), dorsolateral subluxation (DLS) score, and distraction index (DI).

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Background: Dasatinib is a small molecule kinase inhibitor that has recently been shown to inhibit Src family kinases (SFK) and also has activity against CaP. Of importance to metastatic CaP, which frequently metastasises to bone, SFK are also vital to the regulation of bone remodelling. We sought to determine the ability of dasatinib to inhibit growth of CaP in bone.

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Background: The mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) regulate cell growth, differentiation, and stress responses, and many critical signaling pathways are subject to cross-regulation by MAPK signaling. Previous studies have yielded evidence of cross-talk between the MAPK pathways and androgen receptor (AR) signaling, which plays a critical role in growth control of both normal prostate and prostate cancer (PCa). Objective of this study was to evaluate the expression of MAPK-like protein nemo-like kinase (NLK) in PCa and its effects on AR-mediated transcription.

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The discovery that cortistatins A and J show noteworthy antiangiogenic activity prompted an investigation of the possibility that simpler and much more easily made compounds based on a steroid core might have useful bioactivity. These studies have led to the development of several potent, water-soluble compounds that may be suitable for local application to treat ocular wet macular degeneration, an important cause of blindness, as well as for treatment of various other angiogenesis-dependent diseases. One of these substances was tested in a mouse retinal angiogenesis model and found to inhibit angiogenesis at a locally administered dose of 500 pmol.

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Short, practical, and scalable syntheses of (+/-)-7-methylomuralide and (-)-7-methylomuralide have been developed. Three consecutive tandem reaction pairs establish all of the carbons and the stereochemistry of the target molecule, vastly simplifying the synthetic scheme from N-trichloroethoxycarbonyl glycine. The chiral directing group controls the absolute stereochemistry of the key aldol reaction.

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Androst-5-ene-3beta, 17beta-diol (AED) is an adrenal hormone that has been reported to sustain prostate cancer growth after androgen deprivation therapy (ADT). LNCaP cells express a mutated androgen receptor that confers the ability to respond not only to androgen but also to oestrogen and adrenal hormones such as AED, and thus provide a cell line useful for identifying compounds capable of inhibiting AED-stimulated cell growth. We sought to determine whether structurally related steroids could inhibit AED-stimulated LNCaP cell growth in vitro and tumour growth in vivo.

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Hip dysplasia is a common inherited trait of dogs that results in secondary osteoarthritis. In this article the methods used to uncover the mutations contributing to this condition are reviewed, beginning with hip phenotyping. Coarse, genome-wide, microsatellite-based screens of pedigrees of greyhounds and dysplastic Labrador retrievers were used to identify linked quantitative trait loci (QTL).

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The oxazaborolidine-catalyzed reduction of 2,2-disubstituted cycloalkan-1,3-diones or hindered 2,2-disubstituted cyclic ketones using catecholborane as reductant proceeds with greater enantioselectivity when N,N-diethylaniline is added. It has now been shown that the effect of this additive is to catalyze the conversion of a harmful minor impurity in catalyst preparations to the active catalyst.

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A large number of novel therapeutics is currently undergoing clinical evaluation for the treatment of prostate cancer, and small molecule signal transduction inhibitors are a promising class of agents. These inhibitors have recently become a standard therapy in renal cell carcinoma and offer significant promise in prostate cancer. Through an understanding of the key pathways involved in prostate cancer progression, a rational drug design can be aimed at the molecules critical to cellular signaling.

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Over the past several decades a revolution has occurred in chemistry that has essentially been unnoticed by those outside the field, even in other sciences. In brief, this includes the following: 1) our understanding of how chemical reactions occur, 2) our ability to invent new reactions, 3) our ability to utilize reactions that construct a vast assortment of useful or complicated molecules, and 4) our ability to apply chemical principles and knowledge to understand biological and medical problems. Within synthetic chemistry, a new science has been set in place beside the old, especially in terms of the control of absolute and relative stereochemistry and the creation of new types of useful catalysts that function in ways that were hitherto unimaginable.

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Evidence is presented that Cu(MnO(4))(2) effectively epoxidizes trisubstituted steroid olefins by a nonconcerted pathway.

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The DNA archives developed at veterinary medical teaching hospitals will be important resources for mapping disease loci and identifying underlying genes. The most important feature of a DNA archive is accurate identification or exclusion of diseases in each animal. Such archives will be complimentary resources to tissue banks that are currently available.

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Fusion promotion by measles virus (MV) depends on an interaction between the hemagglutinin (H) and fusion (F) glycoproteins. Amino acid substitutions in MV H that drastically reduce hemagglutinating activity result in an increase in the amount of H (primarily the 74 kDa isoform) detectable in a complex with F at the cell surface. This is in direct contrast to the loss of the ability to detect a complex between the fusion protein of Newcastle disease virus and most attachment proteins that lack receptor binding activity.

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