Publications by authors named "Mohammad A Al-Sayah"

Posttranslational modifications (PTMs) are potential critical quality attributes in biotherapeutic development, as they can affect drug efficacy and safety. Tyrosine sulfation plays a critical role in protein-protein interactions and has been found on many surface receptors as well as antibody complementarity-determining regions (CDR). However, the presence and function of tyrosine sulfation in therapeutic proteins have not been broadly investigated due to difficulties in detecting the modification.

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Article Synopsis
  • Ipatasertib (GDC-0068) is a targeted cancer treatment being developed by Genentech/Roche, focusing on inhibiting the Akt protein kinase, with studies examining its effects both alone and with other therapies.
  • An open-label study with radiolabeled ipatasertib assessed how the drug is absorbed, metabolized, and excreted, showing a bioavailability of 34.0% and similar terminal half-lives for oral and intravenous forms.
  • The majority of the drug recovered was metabolized, primarily through hepatic pathways, with the main metabolic process being -dealkylation facilitated by the CYP3A enzyme.
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Biological therapeutics are major contributors to the pharmaceutical pipeline and continue to grow in sales and scope. Additionally, the field's understanding of cancer biology has advanced such that biopharmaceuticals can harness the power of the immune system for oncology treatments. Several of these novel therapeutics are engineered versions of naturally occurring proteins designed to improve therapeutic properties including potency, target engagement and half-life extension.

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Peptide therapeutics are a growing modality in the pharmaceutical industry and expanding these therapeutics to hit intracellular targets would require establishing cell permeability. Rapid measurement target-agnostic cell permeability of peptides is still analytically challenging. In this study, we demonstrate the development of a rapid high-throughput label-free methodology based on a MALDI-hydrogen-deuterium exchange mass spectrometry (MALDI-HDX-MS) approach to rank-order peptide cell membrane permeability using live THP-1 and AsPc-1 cells.

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Recent advances in the field of cancer biology have accelerated the discovery and development of novel biopharmaceuticals. At the forefront of these drug development efforts are high-throughput screening, compressed timelines, and limited sample quantities, all characteristic of the discovery space. To meet program targets, large numbers of protein variants must be produced, screened, and characterized, presenting a daunting analytical challenge.

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Micro- and nano-carrier formulations have been developed as drug delivery systems for active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) that suffer from poor physico-chemical, pharmacokinetic, and pharmacodynamic properties. Encapsulating the APIs in such systems can help improve their stability by protecting them from harsh conditions such as light, oxygen, temperature, pH, enzymes, and others. Consequently, the API's dissolution rate and bioavailability are tremendously improved.

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We report that selective -phosphorylation of aminoimidazoles results in a key steering element that controls isomeric selectivity in the condensation of β-ethoxy acrylamides and aminoimidazoles to furnish imidazo[1,2-]pyrimidines. We identified conditions that provide highly selective (99:1) phosphorylation at the endo- or exocyclic nitrogen. Either the 2-amino or 4-amino isomer of the (benzo)imidazo[1,2-]pyrimidine products could be isolated in 64-95% yield.

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Identification and localization of modifications in peptides containing multiple disulfide bonds is challenging due to inefficient fragmentation in mass spectrometry (MS) analysis. In cases where MS fragmentation techniques such as electron capture dissociation (ECD), electron transfer dissociation (ETD), and ultraviolet photodissociation (UVPD) fail to achieve efficient fragmentation, off-line disulfide bond reduction techniques are typically employed prior to MS analysis. Some commonly used reducing agents include dithiothreitol (DTT) and tris(2-carboxyethyl)phosphine (TCEP).

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Enantioselective analysis is an essential requirement during the pharmaceutical development of chiral drug molecules. In pre-clinical and clinical studies, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) mandates the assessment of "in vivo" inter-conversion of chiral drugs to determine their physiological effects. In-vivo analysis of the active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) and its potential metabolites could be quite challenging due to their low abundance (ng/mL levels) and matrix interferences.

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Ultra performance LC (UPLC) was evaluated as an efficient screening approach to facilitate method development for drug candidates. Three stationary phases were screened: C-18, phenyl, and Shield RP 18 with column dimensions of 150 mm x 2.1 mm, 1.

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Proteomics and peptidomics could benefit from simple methods for high-resolution separation of oligopeptides analogous to slab gel electrophoresis of proteins. Gels of Pluronic F127 copolymer surfactant were investigated as media for slab gel electrophoresis of oligopeptides using a trypsin digest of myoglobin. Concentrated solutions of Pluronic F127 are fluid at low temperatures ( View Article and Find Full Text PDF