Publications by authors named "Jonathan Bauman"

Article Synopsis
  • - Ritlecitinib is an oral medication being developed for treating moderate-to-severe alopecia areata, functioning as an irreversible inhibitor of specific kinases.
  • - A study using advanced mass spectroscopy explored how ritlecitinib is absorbed, distributed, metabolized, and eliminated in the body, revealing key pharmacokinetic parameters like a clearance rate of 43.7 L/h and a bioavailability of 64%.
  • - The research found that ritlecitinib binds to plasma proteins and is mainly cleared through urine, with metabolic processes involving various cytochrome P450 enzymes and glutathione-related conjugation playing significant roles.
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There is a growing incidence of heat-related illnesses due to rising global temperatures. Heat-related illnesses range from mild to severe, with heat stroke being the most critical. The wet bulb global temperature index considers humidity and solar intensity; its use is recommended to estimate heat stress on an individual and mitigate risk.

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Objective: The aim of this study was to evaluate whether dimensions of sleep quality were associated with homeostatic and hedonic eating behaviors among children with healthy weight (BMI-for-age < 90%) but varying maternal weight status.

Methods: A total of 77 children (mean [SD], age: 7.4 [0.

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Discovery efforts leading to the identification of ervogastat (PF-06865571), a systemically acting diacylglycerol acyltransferase (DGAT2) inhibitor that has advanced into clinical trials for the treatment of non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) with liver fibrosis, are described herein. Ervogastat is a first-in-class DGAT2 inhibitor that addressed potential development risks of the prototype liver-targeted DGAT2 inhibitor PF-06427878. Key design elements that culminated in the discovery of ervogastat are (1) replacement of the metabolically labile motif with a 3,5-disubstituted pyridine system, which addressed potential safety risks arising from a cytochrome P450-mediated -dearylation of PF-06427878 to a reactive quinone metabolite precursor, and (2) modifications of the amide group to a 3-THF group, guided by metabolite identification studies coupled with property-based drug design.

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Abrocitinib is an oral once-daily Janus kinase 1 selective inhibitor being developed for the treatment of moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis. This study examined the disposition of abrocitinib in male participants following oral and intravenous administration using accelerator mass spectroscopy methodology to estimate pharmacokinetic parameters and characterize metabolite (M) profiles. The results indicated abrocitinib had a systemic clearance of 64.

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This cross-sectional study was conducted as an experiential project in a graduate Program Evaluation class. We worked together as a team to solve difficulties that occurred when evaluating a program for the first time, including overcoming initial fears and identifying the appropriate focus. The goal of this study was to identify the most common barriers to attendance at Bridgehaven Mental Health Services, a community-based outpatient program tailored to aid in the transition from hospitals to community living.

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Ongoing interest in the discovery of selective JAK3 inhibitors led us to design novel covalent inhibitors that engage the JAK3 residue Cys909 by cyanamide, a structurally and mechanistically differentiated electrophile from other cysteine reacting groups previously incorporated in JAK3 covalent inhibitors. Through crystallography, kinetic, and computational studies, interaction of cyanamide 12 with Cys909 was optimized leading to potent and selective JAK3 inhibitors as exemplified by 32. In relevant cell-based assays and in agreement with previous results from this group, 32 demonstrated that selective inhibition of JAK3 is sufficient to drive JAK1/JAK3-mediated cellular responses.

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A novel series of morpholine-based nonsteroidal mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists is reported. Starting from a pyrrolidine HTS hit 9 that possessed modest potency but excellect selectivity versus related nuclear hormone receptors, a series of libraries led to identification of morpholine lead 10. After further optimization, cis disubstituted morpholine 22 was discovered, which showed a 45-fold boost in binding affinity and corresponding functional potency compared to 13.

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PF-06651600, a newly discovered potent JAK3-selective inhibitor, is highly efficacious at inhibiting γc cytokine signaling, which is dependent on both JAK1 and JAK3. PF-06651600 allowed the comparison of JAK3-selective inhibition to pan-JAK or JAK1-selective inhibition, in relevant immune cells to a level that could not be achieved previously without such potency and selectivity. In vitro, PF-06651600 inhibits Th1 and Th17 cell differentiation and function, and in vivo it reduces disease pathology in rat adjuvant-induced arthritis as well as in mouse experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis models.

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N-Methyl-2-[3-((E)-2-pyridin-2-yl-vinyl)-1H-indazol-6-ylsulfanyl]-benzamide (axitinib) is an oral inhibitor of vascular endothelial growth factor receptors 1-3, which is approved for the treatment of advanced renal cell cancer. Human [(14)C]-labeled clinical studies indicate axitinib's primary route of clearance is metabolism. The aims of the in vitro experiments presented herein were to identify and characterize the enzymes involved in axitinib metabolic clearance.

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The contribution of drug metabolites to the pharmacologic and toxicologic activity of a drug can be important; however, for a variety of reasons metabolites can frequently be difficult to synthesize. To meet the need of having samples of drug metabolites for further study, we have developed biosynthetic methods coupled with quantitative NMR spectroscopy (qNMR) to generate solutions of metabolites of known structure and concentration. These quantitative samples can be used in a variety of ways when a synthetic sample is unavailable, including pharmacologic assays, standards for in vitro work to help establish clearance pathways, and/or as analytical standards for bioanalytical work to ascertain exposure, among others.

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A design for the selective release of drug molecules in the liver was tested, involving the attachment of a representative active agent by an ester linkage to various 2-substituted 5-aminovaleric acid carbamates. The anticipated pathway of carboxylesterase-1-mediated carbamate cleavage followed by lactamization and drug release was frustrated by unexpectedly high sensitivity of the ester linkage toward hydrolysis by carboxylesterase-2 and other microsomal components.

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The United States Public Health Service Administration is alerting medical professionals that a substantial percentage of cocaine imported into the United States is adulterated with levamisole, a veterinary pharmaceutical that can cause blood cell disorders such as severe neutropenia and agranulocytosis. Levamisole was previously approved in combination with fluorouracil for the treatment of colon cancer; however, the drug was withdrawn from the U.S.

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The measurement of the effect of new chemical entities on human UDP-glucuronosyltransferase (UGT) marker activities using in vitro experimentation represents an important experimental approach in drug development to guide clinical drug-interaction study designs or support claims that no in vivo interaction will occur. Selective high-performance liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry functional assays of authentic glucuronides for five major hepatic UGT probe substrates were developed: β-estradiol-3-glucuronide (UGT1A1), trifluoperazine-N-glucuronide (UGT1A4), 5-hydroxytryptophol-O-glucuronide (UGT1A6), propofol-O-glucuronide (UGT1A9), and zidovudine-5'-glucuronide (UGT2B7). High analytical sensitivity permitted characterization of enzyme kinetic parameters at low human liver microsomal and recombinant UGT protein concentration (0.

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Backbone N-methylation is common among peptide natural products and has a substantial impact on both the physical properties and the conformational states of cyclic peptides. However, the specific impact of N-methylation on passive membrane diffusion in cyclic peptides has not been investigated systematically. Here we report a method for the selective, on-resin N-methylation of cyclic peptides to generate compounds with drug-like membrane permeability and oral bioavailability.

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Because of a preconceived notion that eliminating reactive metabolite (RM) formation with new drug candidates could mitigate the risk of idiosyncratic drug toxicity, the potential for RM formation is routinely examined as part of lead optimization efforts in drug discovery. Likewise, avoidance of "structural alerts" is almost a norm in drug design. However, there is a growing concern that the perceived safety hazards associated with structural alerts and/or RM screening tools as standalone predictors of toxicity risks may be over exaggerated.

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As part of a strategy to deliver short-acting calcium-sensing receptor (CaSR) antagonists, the metabolically labile thiomethyl functionality was incorporated into the zwitterionic amino alcohol derivative 3 with the hope of increasing human clearance through oxidative metabolism, while delivering a pharmacologically inactive sulfoxide metabolite. The effort led to the identification of thioanisoles 22 and 23 as potent and orally active CaSR antagonists with a rapid onset of action and short pharmacokinetic half-lives, which led to a rapid and transient stimulation of parathyroid hormone in a dose-dependent fashion following oral administration to rats. On the basis of the balance between target pharmacology, safety, and human disposition profiles, 22 and 23 were advanced as clinical candidates for the treatment of osteoporosis.

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The synthesis and structure-activity relationship studies on 5-trifluoromethylpyrido[4,3-d]pyrimidin-4(3H)-ones as antagonists of the human calcium receptor (CaSR) have been recently disclosed [ Didiuk et al. ( 2009 ) Bioorg. Med.

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The design and profile of a series of zwitterionic calcium sensing receptor negative allosteric modulators is described. Evaluation of key analogues using a rat model demonstrate a robust response, significantly improved potency over ronacaleret and have the potential as an oral, anabolic treatment for osteoporosis.

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Previous studies have demonstrated the CYP3A4 mediated oxidation of the 5-aminooxindole motif, present in the trifluoromethylpyrimidine class of PYK-2 inhibitors, to a reactive bis-imine species, which can be trapped with glutathione (GSH) in human liver microsomal incubations. The corresponding 5-aminobenzsultam derivatives, which should possess a similar oxidative liability, do not form GSH conjugates in microsomal incubations. In the current study, we conducted a retrospective analysis on representative 5-aminooxindole and 5-aminobenzsultam PYK-2 inhibitors utilizing CYP3A4 molecular docking and quantum chemical calculations to rationalize the bioactivation differences.

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The biochemical basis for S9-dependent mutagenic response of the 5-HT(2C) receptor agonist and diazinylpiperazine derivative 1 in the Salmonella Ames assay involves P450-mediated bioactivation to DNA-reactive quinone-methide, aldehyde and nitrone intermediates. Mechanistic information pertaining to the metabolism of 1 was used in the design of diazinylpiperazine 5 to eliminate the safety liability. While 5 was negative in the Ames assay, the compound retained the ability of 1 to form certain electrophilic intermediates.

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Prediction of the metabolic sites for new compounds, synthesized or virtual, is important in the rational design of compounds with increased resistance to metabolism. The aim of the present investigation was to use rational design together with MetaSite, an in silico tool for predicting metabolic soft spots, to synthesize compounds that retain their pharmacological effects but are metabolically more stable in the presence of cytochrome P450 (P450) enzymes. The model compound for these studies was the phenethyl amide (1) derivative of the nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) indomethacin.

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The synthesis and SAR for a series of diaminopyrimidines as PYK2 inhibitors are described. Using a combination of library and traditional medicinal chemistry techniques, a FAK-selective chemical series was transformed into compounds possessing good PYK2 potency and 10- to 20-fold selectivity against FAK. Subsequent studies found that the majority of the compounds were positive in a reactive metabolite assay, an indicator for potential toxicological liabilities.

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It is generally accepted that bioactivation of relatively inert functional groups (toxicophores) to reactive metabolites is an obligatory step in the pathogenesis of certain idiosyncratic adverse drug reactions (IADRs). IADRs cannot be detected in regulatory animal toxicity studies and, given their low frequency of occurrence in humans (1 in 10,000 to 1 in 100,000), they are often not detected until the drug has gained broad exposure in a large patient population. The detection of IADRs during late clinical trials or after a drug has been released can lead to an unanticipated restriction in its use, and even in its withdrawal.

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