erb-041 and Disease-Models--Animal

erb-041 has been researched along with Disease-Models--Animal* in 4 studies

Other Studies

4 other study(ies) available for erb-041 and Disease-Models--Animal

ArticleYear
Therapeutic candidates for the Zika virus identified by a high-throughput screen for Zika protease inhibitors.
    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 2020, 12-08, Volume: 117, Issue:49

    When Zika virus emerged as a public health emergency there were no drugs or vaccines approved for its prevention or treatment. We used a high-throughput screen for Zika virus protease inhibitors to identify several inhibitors of Zika virus infection. We expressed the NS2B-NS3 Zika virus protease and conducted a biochemical screen for small-molecule inhibitors. A quantitative structure-activity relationship model was employed to virtually screen ∼138,000 compounds, which increased the identification of active compounds, while decreasing screening time and resources. Candidate inhibitors were validated in several viral infection assays. Small molecules with favorable clinical profiles, especially the five-lipoxygenase-activating protein inhibitor, MK-591, inhibited the Zika virus protease and infection in neural stem cells. Members of the tetracycline family of antibiotics were more potent inhibitors of Zika virus infection than the protease, suggesting they may have multiple mechanisms of action. The most potent tetracycline, methacycline, reduced the amount of Zika virus present in the brain and the severity of Zika virus-induced motor deficits in an immunocompetent mouse model. As Food and Drug Administration-approved drugs, the tetracyclines could be quickly translated to the clinic. The compounds identified through our screening paradigm have the potential to be used as prophylactics for patients traveling to endemic regions or for the treatment of the neurological complications of Zika virus infection.

    Topics: Animals; Antiviral Agents; Artificial Intelligence; Chlorocebus aethiops; Disease Models, Animal; Drug Evaluation, Preclinical; High-Throughput Screening Assays; Immunocompetence; Inhibitory Concentration 50; Methacycline; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Protease Inhibitors; Quantitative Structure-Activity Relationship; Small Molecule Libraries; Vero Cells; Zika Virus; Zika Virus Infection

2020
Estrogen receptor beta agonism increases survival in experimentally induced sepsis and ameliorates the genomic sepsis signature: a pharmacogenomic study.
    The Journal of infectious diseases, 2010, Apr-15, Volume: 201, Issue:8

    Nonsteroidal agonists have been developed that selectively bind to and activate estrogen receptor beta (ERbeta) rather than estrogen receptor alpha (ERalpha). ERbeta is expressed equally in both male and female mammals in multiple extragonadal tissues. Work reported elsewhere has demonstrated that ERbeta agonists have beneficial effects in multiple (but not all) models of inflammatory diseases and also increase survival in experimentally induced sepsis.. In these experiments, ERbeta agonists (ERB-041 or WAY-202196) were compared with vehicle control in the murine cecal ligation and puncture (CLP) model and in the pneumococcal pneumonia model of sepsis. The effect of WAY-202196 on the gene expression profile in the CLP model was further studied by transcriptome analysis of lung and small intestine tissue samples.. ERbeta agonists provided a significant survival benefit in both experimental models of bacterial sepsis. This survival advantage was accompanied by reduced histologic evidence of tissue damage, reduced transcription of multiple proinflammatory proteins by transcriptome analysis and was not associated with increased bacterial outgrowth.. ERbeta agonist administration provided a survival advantage in septic animals and appears to be a promising therapeutic modality in sepsis.

    Topics: Animals; Disease Models, Animal; Estrogen Receptor beta; Female; Gene Expression Profiling; Male; Mice; Mice, Inbred BALB C; Naphthols; Oxazoles; Pneumonia, Pneumococcal; Sepsis; Transcription, Genetic

2010
A selective estrogen receptor-beta agonist causes lesion regression in an experimentally induced model of endometriosis.
    Human reproduction (Oxford, England), 2005, Volume: 20, Issue:4

    Endometriosis is a common gynaecological problem of uncertain aetiology. It affects primarily young, reproductive-aged women and can result in chronic pelvic pain and infertility. Current approved therapies have significant side-effects and hysterectomy is employed as a final solution. ERB-041 is a selective estrogen receptor-beta (ERbeta) agonist that has anti-inflammatory activity in preclinical models of arthritis and inflammatory bowel disease, but is inactive in many preclinical models of classic estrogen activity. Because endometriosis is now thought to be, at least in part, an inflammatory disease, we evaluated ERB-041's activity in an experimentally induced model of endometriosis.. Athymic nude mice (ovariectomized or intact) were implanted with tissue fragments of normal human endometrium. After establishment of lesions for 11-14 days, mice were treated with ERB-041 for 15-17 days. Upon euthanasia, the number of lesions, their size and location were noted. Five lesions were recovered for RNA analysis.. Across six studies, ERB-041 caused complete lesion regression in 40-75% of the mice studied. The compound appeared to be equally effective in gonad-intact as in ovariectomized mice, and analysed recovered lesions expressed ERalpha but not ERbeta mRNA.. ERB-041 and possibly other ERbeta selective agonists may be a useful new approach to treating endometriosis.

    Topics: Adolescent; Adult; Animals; Biopsy; Disease Models, Animal; Endometriosis; Endometrium; Estrogen Receptor beta; Female; Humans; Mice; Mice, Nude; Middle Aged; Organ Culture Techniques; Ovariectomy; Oxazoles; RNA, Messenger

2005
Evaluation of an estrogen receptor-beta agonist in animal models of human disease.
    Endocrinology, 2003, Volume: 144, Issue:10

    The discovery of a second estrogen receptor (ER), called ERbeta, in 1996 sparked intense interest within the scientific community to discover its role in mediating estrogen action. However, despite more than 6 yr of research into the function of this receptor, its physiological role in mediating estrogen action remains unclear and controversial. We have developed a series of highly selective agonists for ERbeta and have characterized their activity in several clinically relevant rodent models of human disease. The activity of one such compound, ERB-041, is reported here. We conclude from these studies that ERbeta does not mediate the bone-sparing activity of estrogen on the rat skeleton and that it does not affect ovulation or ovariectomy-induced weight gain. In addition, these compounds are nonuterotrophic and nonmammotrophic. However, ERB-041 has a dramatic beneficial effect in the HLA-B27 transgenic rat model of inflammatory bowel disease and the Lewis rat adjuvant-induced arthritis model. Daily oral doses as low as 1 mg/kg reverse the chronic diarrhea of HLA-B27 transgenic rats and dramatically improve histological disease scores in the colon. The same dosing regimen in the therapeutic adjuvant-induced arthritis model reduces joint scores from 12 (maximal inflammation) to 1 over a period of 10 d. Synovitis and Mankin (articular cartilage) histological scores are also significantly lowered (50-75%). These data suggest that one function of ERbeta may be to modulate the immune response, and that ERbeta-selective ligands may be therapeutically useful agents to treat chronic intestinal and joint inflammation.

    Topics: Animals; Animals, Genetically Modified; Arthritis, Experimental; beta 2-Microglobulin; Bone Density; Bone Diseases, Metabolic; Cell Line; Disease Models, Animal; Estrogen Receptor beta; Female; HLA-B27 Antigen; Humans; Inflammatory Bowel Diseases; Mammary Glands, Animal; Mice; Ovariectomy; Oxazoles; Rats; Rats, Inbred Lew; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Receptors, Estrogen; Uterus; Weight Gain

2003