Cook, James M.

Link to this page

Authority KeyName Variants
orcid::0000-0001-5512-3022
  • Cook, James M. (64)
  • Cook, James (9)
  • Cook, James M (2)
Projects
NanoCellEmoCog - Neuroimmune aspects of mood, anxiety and cognitive effects of leads/drug candidates acting at GABAA and/or sigma-2 receptors: In vitro/in vivo delineation by nano- and hiPSC-based platform Behavioral ?ffects following repeated administration of newly synthesized ligands selective for distinct subtypes of GABAA receptor benzodiazepine binding site: comparison with standard psychopharmacologic drugs
Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development, Republic of Serbia, Grant no. 451-03-68/2020-14/200161 (University of Belgrade, Faculty of Pharmacy) NIMH NIH HHS 46851
Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development, Republic of Serbia, Grant no. 451-03-68/2020-14/200026 (University of Belgrade, Institute of Chemistry, Technology and Metallurgy - IChTM)
Development of micro- and nanosystems as carriers for drugs with anti-inflammatory effect and methods for their characterization National Science Foundation, Division of Chemistry [CHE-1625735]
Applied Analytical Chemistry for help with spectroscopy and the National Science Foundation, Division of Chemis- try [CHE-1625735] Bradley-Herzfeld Foundation
CEEPUS project CIII-RS-1113-02-1819-M-118533 - Central European Knowledge Alliance for Teaching, Learning & Research in Pharmaceutical Technology (CEKA PharmTech). Chemistry synthesis funded by NIH (DA-043204, R01NS076517) to JMC
DA‐ 043204 and NS‐076517 and the National Science Foundation, Divi- sion of Chemistry [Grant CHE‐1625735]. Division of Chemistry through grant CHE-1625735 to JC. The APC was funded by the Ministry of Education, Science and Technological, Development, the Republic of Serbia
Granting agencies for support: DA‐043204 and NS‐076517 and the National Science Foundation, Division of Chemistry [Grant CHE‐1625735] Harry Bradley Foundation
Henry and Nelly Pence Foundation Trust AA029023, DA-043204, DA054177, NS-076517 Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development, Republic of Serbia, Grant no. 451-03-68/2020-14/200126 (University of Belgrade, Faculty of Mining and Geology)
Strukturne, hemijske i molekularne karakteristike nekih biljnih vrsta – fundamentalni značaj i primenljivost Bihejvioralna karakterizacija novosintetisanih supstanci selektivnih za pojedine podtipove benzodiazepinskog mesta vezivanja GABA A receptora
Razvoj i primena proizvoda na bazi mineralnih sirovina u proizvodnji bezbedne hrane Milwaukee Institute for Drug Design
Milwaukee Institute for Drug Discovery and the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee's Shimadzu Laboratory Milwaukee Institute of Drug Discovery
Ministry of Science, R. Serbia - 175066 National Institute of Health (NIH) - MH093723
National Institutes of Health (NIH) - R01 NS076517 National Institutes of Health, USA (R01 NS076517, R01 MH096463 to JC)
National Institutes of Health, USA through grants R01 NS076517 and R01 MH096463 and National Science Foundation National Science Foundation, Division of Chemistry (CHE- 1625735 to JC)

Author's Bibliography

Vascular effects of midazolam, flumazenil, and a novel imidazobenzodiazepine MP-III-058 on isolated rat aorta

Gajić Bojić, Milica; Treven, Marco; Pandey, Kamal P; Tiruveedhula, Phani Babu V V N; Santrač, Anja; Đukanović, Đorđe; Vojinović, Nataša; Amidžić, Ljiljana; Škrbić, Ranko; Scholze, Petra; Ernst, Margot; Cook, James M; Savić, Miroslav

(Canadian Science Publishing, 2024)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Gajić Bojić, Milica
AU  - Treven, Marco
AU  - Pandey, Kamal P
AU  - Tiruveedhula, Phani Babu V V N
AU  - Santrač, Anja
AU  - Đukanović, Đorđe
AU  - Vojinović, Nataša
AU  - Amidžić, Ljiljana
AU  - Škrbić, Ranko
AU  - Scholze, Petra
AU  - Ernst, Margot
AU  - Cook, James M
AU  - Savić, Miroslav
PY  - 2024
UR  - https://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5619
AB  - Hypotensive influences of benzodiazepines and other GABAA receptor ligands, recognized in clinical practice, seem to stem from the existence of “vascular” GABAA receptors in peripheral blood vessels, besides any mechanisms in the central and peripheral nervous systems. We aimed to further elucidate the vasodilatatory effects of ligands acting through GABAA receptors. Using immunohistochemistry, the rat aortic smooth muscle layer was found to express GABAA γ 2 and α1-5 subunit proteins. To confirm the role of “vascular” GABAA receptors, we investigated the vascular effects of standard benzodiazepines, mida-zolam, and flumazenil, as well as the novel compound MP-III-058. Using two-electrode voltage clamp electrophysiology and radioligand binding assays, MP-III-058 was found to have modest binding but substantial functional selectivity for α5β3γ 2 over other αxβ3γ 2 GABAA receptors. Tissue bath assays revealed comparable vasodilatory effects of MP-III-058 and midazo-lam, both of which at 100 μmol/L concentrations had efficacy similar to prazosin. Flumazenil exhibited weak vasoactivity per se, but significantly prevented the relaxant effects of midazolam and MP-III-058. These studies indicate the existence of functional GABAA receptors in the rat aorta, where ligands exert vasodilatory effects by positive modulation of the benzodiazepine binding site, suggesting the potential for further quest for leads with optimized pharmacokinetic properties as prospective adjuvant vasodilators.
PB  - Canadian Science Publishing
T2  - Canadian  Journal of Physiology and  Pharmacology
T1  - Vascular effects of midazolam, flumazenil, and a novel imidazobenzodiazepine MP-III-058 on isolated rat aorta
VL  - 102
IS  - 3
SP  - 206
EP  - 217
DO  - 10.1139/cjpp-2023-0285
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Gajić Bojić, Milica and Treven, Marco and Pandey, Kamal P and Tiruveedhula, Phani Babu V V N and Santrač, Anja and Đukanović, Đorđe and Vojinović, Nataša and Amidžić, Ljiljana and Škrbić, Ranko and Scholze, Petra and Ernst, Margot and Cook, James M and Savić, Miroslav",
year = "2024",
abstract = "Hypotensive influences of benzodiazepines and other GABAA receptor ligands, recognized in clinical practice, seem to stem from the existence of “vascular” GABAA receptors in peripheral blood vessels, besides any mechanisms in the central and peripheral nervous systems. We aimed to further elucidate the vasodilatatory effects of ligands acting through GABAA receptors. Using immunohistochemistry, the rat aortic smooth muscle layer was found to express GABAA γ 2 and α1-5 subunit proteins. To confirm the role of “vascular” GABAA receptors, we investigated the vascular effects of standard benzodiazepines, mida-zolam, and flumazenil, as well as the novel compound MP-III-058. Using two-electrode voltage clamp electrophysiology and radioligand binding assays, MP-III-058 was found to have modest binding but substantial functional selectivity for α5β3γ 2 over other αxβ3γ 2 GABAA receptors. Tissue bath assays revealed comparable vasodilatory effects of MP-III-058 and midazo-lam, both of which at 100 μmol/L concentrations had efficacy similar to prazosin. Flumazenil exhibited weak vasoactivity per se, but significantly prevented the relaxant effects of midazolam and MP-III-058. These studies indicate the existence of functional GABAA receptors in the rat aorta, where ligands exert vasodilatory effects by positive modulation of the benzodiazepine binding site, suggesting the potential for further quest for leads with optimized pharmacokinetic properties as prospective adjuvant vasodilators.",
publisher = "Canadian Science Publishing",
journal = "Canadian  Journal of Physiology and  Pharmacology",
title = "Vascular effects of midazolam, flumazenil, and a novel imidazobenzodiazepine MP-III-058 on isolated rat aorta",
volume = "102",
number = "3",
pages = "206-217",
doi = "10.1139/cjpp-2023-0285"
}
Gajić Bojić, M., Treven, M., Pandey, K. P., Tiruveedhula, P. B. V. V. N., Santrač, A., Đukanović, Đ., Vojinović, N., Amidžić, L., Škrbić, R., Scholze, P., Ernst, M., Cook, J. M.,& Savić, M.. (2024). Vascular effects of midazolam, flumazenil, and a novel imidazobenzodiazepine MP-III-058 on isolated rat aorta. in Canadian  Journal of Physiology and  Pharmacology
Canadian Science Publishing., 102(3), 206-217.
https://doi.org/10.1139/cjpp-2023-0285
Gajić Bojić M, Treven M, Pandey KP, Tiruveedhula PBVVN, Santrač A, Đukanović Đ, Vojinović N, Amidžić L, Škrbić R, Scholze P, Ernst M, Cook JM, Savić M. Vascular effects of midazolam, flumazenil, and a novel imidazobenzodiazepine MP-III-058 on isolated rat aorta. in Canadian  Journal of Physiology and  Pharmacology. 2024;102(3):206-217.
doi:10.1139/cjpp-2023-0285 .
Gajić Bojić, Milica, Treven, Marco, Pandey, Kamal P, Tiruveedhula, Phani Babu V V N, Santrač, Anja, Đukanović, Đorđe, Vojinović, Nataša, Amidžić, Ljiljana, Škrbić, Ranko, Scholze, Petra, Ernst, Margot, Cook, James M, Savić, Miroslav, "Vascular effects of midazolam, flumazenil, and a novel imidazobenzodiazepine MP-III-058 on isolated rat aorta" in Canadian  Journal of Physiology and  Pharmacology, 102, no. 3 (2024):206-217,
https://doi.org/10.1139/cjpp-2023-0285 . .

New Imidazodiazepine Analogue, 5-(8-Bromo-6-(pyridin-2-yl)-4H-benzo[f]imidazo[1,5-a][1,4]diazepin-3-yl)oxazole, Provides a Simplified Synthetic Scheme, High Oral Plasma and Brain Exposures, and Produces Antiseizure Efficacy in Mice, and Antiepileptogenic Activity in Neural Networks in Brain Slices from a Patient with Mesial Temporal Lobe Epilepsy

Sharmin, Dishary; Divović, Branka; Ping, Xingjie; Cerne, Rok; Smith, Jodi L.; Rezvanian, Sepideh; Mondal, Prithu; Michelle, Meyer Jean; Kiley, Molly E.; Arnold, Leggy A.; Mian, Md Yeunus; Pandey, Kamal P.; Jin, Xiaoming; Mitrović, Jelena; Đorović, Đorđe; Lippa, Arnold; Cook, James M.; Golani, Lalit K.; Scholze, Petra; Savić, Miroslav; Witkin, Jeffrey M.

(American Chemical Society, 2024)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Sharmin, Dishary
AU  - Divović, Branka
AU  - Ping, Xingjie
AU  - Cerne, Rok
AU  - Smith, Jodi L.
AU  - Rezvanian, Sepideh
AU  - Mondal, Prithu
AU  - Michelle, Meyer Jean
AU  - Kiley, Molly E.
AU  - Arnold, Leggy A.
AU  - Mian, Md Yeunus
AU  - Pandey, Kamal P.
AU  - Jin, Xiaoming
AU  - Mitrović, Jelena
AU  - Đorović, Đorđe
AU  - Lippa, Arnold
AU  - Cook, James M.
AU  - Golani, Lalit K.
AU  - Scholze, Petra
AU  - Savić, Miroslav
AU  - Witkin, Jeffrey M.
PY  - 2024
UR  - https://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5505
AB  - KRM-II-81 (1) is an imidazodiazepine GABAA receptor (GABAAR) potentiator with broad antiseizure efficacy and a low sedative burden. A brominated analogue, DS-II-73 (5), was synthesized and pharmacologically characterized as a potential backup compound as KRM-II-81 moves forward into development. The synthesis from 2-amino-5-bromophenyl)(pyridin-2yl)methanone (6) was processed in five steps with an overall yield of 38% and without the need for a palladium catalyst. GABAAR binding occurred with a Ki of 150 nM, and only 3 of 41 screened binding sites produced inhibition ≥50% at 10 μM, and the potency to induce cytotoxicity was ≥240 mM. DS-II-73 was selective for α2/3/5- over that of α1-containing GABAARs. Oral exposure of plasma and brain of rats was more than sufficient to functionally impact GABAARs. Tonic convulsions in mice and lethality induced by pentylenetetrazol were suppressed by DS-II-73 after oral administration and latencies to clonic and tonic seizures were prolonged. Cortical slice preparations from a patient with pharmacoresistant epilepsy (mesial temporal lobe) showed decreases in the frequency of local field potentials by DS-II-73. As with KRM-II-81, the motor-impairing effects of DS-II-73 were low compared to diazepam. Molecular docking studies of DS-II-73 with the α1β3γ2L-configured GABAAR showed low interaction with α1His102 that is suggested as a potential molecular mechanism for its low sedative side effects. These findings support the viability of DS-II-73 as a backup molecule for its ethynyl analogue, KRM-II-81, with the human tissue data providing translational credibility.
PB  - American Chemical Society
T2  - ACS Chemical Neuroscience
T1  - New Imidazodiazepine Analogue, 5-(8-Bromo-6-(pyridin-2-yl)-4H-benzo[f]imidazo[1,5-a][1,4]diazepin-3-yl)oxazole, Provides a Simplified Synthetic Scheme, High Oral Plasma and Brain Exposures, and Produces Antiseizure Efficacy in Mice, and Antiepileptogenic Activity in Neural Networks in Brain Slices from a Patient with Mesial Temporal Lobe Epilepsy
VL  - 15
IS  - 3
SP  - 517
EP  - 526
DO  - 10.1021/acschemneuro.3c00555
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Sharmin, Dishary and Divović, Branka and Ping, Xingjie and Cerne, Rok and Smith, Jodi L. and Rezvanian, Sepideh and Mondal, Prithu and Michelle, Meyer Jean and Kiley, Molly E. and Arnold, Leggy A. and Mian, Md Yeunus and Pandey, Kamal P. and Jin, Xiaoming and Mitrović, Jelena and Đorović, Đorđe and Lippa, Arnold and Cook, James M. and Golani, Lalit K. and Scholze, Petra and Savić, Miroslav and Witkin, Jeffrey M.",
year = "2024",
abstract = "KRM-II-81 (1) is an imidazodiazepine GABAA receptor (GABAAR) potentiator with broad antiseizure efficacy and a low sedative burden. A brominated analogue, DS-II-73 (5), was synthesized and pharmacologically characterized as a potential backup compound as KRM-II-81 moves forward into development. The synthesis from 2-amino-5-bromophenyl)(pyridin-2yl)methanone (6) was processed in five steps with an overall yield of 38% and without the need for a palladium catalyst. GABAAR binding occurred with a Ki of 150 nM, and only 3 of 41 screened binding sites produced inhibition ≥50% at 10 μM, and the potency to induce cytotoxicity was ≥240 mM. DS-II-73 was selective for α2/3/5- over that of α1-containing GABAARs. Oral exposure of plasma and brain of rats was more than sufficient to functionally impact GABAARs. Tonic convulsions in mice and lethality induced by pentylenetetrazol were suppressed by DS-II-73 after oral administration and latencies to clonic and tonic seizures were prolonged. Cortical slice preparations from a patient with pharmacoresistant epilepsy (mesial temporal lobe) showed decreases in the frequency of local field potentials by DS-II-73. As with KRM-II-81, the motor-impairing effects of DS-II-73 were low compared to diazepam. Molecular docking studies of DS-II-73 with the α1β3γ2L-configured GABAAR showed low interaction with α1His102 that is suggested as a potential molecular mechanism for its low sedative side effects. These findings support the viability of DS-II-73 as a backup molecule for its ethynyl analogue, KRM-II-81, with the human tissue data providing translational credibility.",
publisher = "American Chemical Society",
journal = "ACS Chemical Neuroscience",
title = "New Imidazodiazepine Analogue, 5-(8-Bromo-6-(pyridin-2-yl)-4H-benzo[f]imidazo[1,5-a][1,4]diazepin-3-yl)oxazole, Provides a Simplified Synthetic Scheme, High Oral Plasma and Brain Exposures, and Produces Antiseizure Efficacy in Mice, and Antiepileptogenic Activity in Neural Networks in Brain Slices from a Patient with Mesial Temporal Lobe Epilepsy",
volume = "15",
number = "3",
pages = "517-526",
doi = "10.1021/acschemneuro.3c00555"
}
Sharmin, D., Divović, B., Ping, X., Cerne, R., Smith, J. L., Rezvanian, S., Mondal, P., Michelle, M. J., Kiley, M. E., Arnold, L. A., Mian, M. Y., Pandey, K. P., Jin, X., Mitrović, J., Đorović, Đ., Lippa, A., Cook, J. M., Golani, L. K., Scholze, P., Savić, M.,& Witkin, J. M.. (2024). New Imidazodiazepine Analogue, 5-(8-Bromo-6-(pyridin-2-yl)-4H-benzo[f]imidazo[1,5-a][1,4]diazepin-3-yl)oxazole, Provides a Simplified Synthetic Scheme, High Oral Plasma and Brain Exposures, and Produces Antiseizure Efficacy in Mice, and Antiepileptogenic Activity in Neural Networks in Brain Slices from a Patient with Mesial Temporal Lobe Epilepsy. in ACS Chemical Neuroscience
American Chemical Society., 15(3), 517-526.
https://doi.org/10.1021/acschemneuro.3c00555
Sharmin D, Divović B, Ping X, Cerne R, Smith JL, Rezvanian S, Mondal P, Michelle MJ, Kiley ME, Arnold LA, Mian MY, Pandey KP, Jin X, Mitrović J, Đorović Đ, Lippa A, Cook JM, Golani LK, Scholze P, Savić M, Witkin JM. New Imidazodiazepine Analogue, 5-(8-Bromo-6-(pyridin-2-yl)-4H-benzo[f]imidazo[1,5-a][1,4]diazepin-3-yl)oxazole, Provides a Simplified Synthetic Scheme, High Oral Plasma and Brain Exposures, and Produces Antiseizure Efficacy in Mice, and Antiepileptogenic Activity in Neural Networks in Brain Slices from a Patient with Mesial Temporal Lobe Epilepsy. in ACS Chemical Neuroscience. 2024;15(3):517-526.
doi:10.1021/acschemneuro.3c00555 .
Sharmin, Dishary, Divović, Branka, Ping, Xingjie, Cerne, Rok, Smith, Jodi L., Rezvanian, Sepideh, Mondal, Prithu, Michelle, Meyer Jean, Kiley, Molly E., Arnold, Leggy A., Mian, Md Yeunus, Pandey, Kamal P., Jin, Xiaoming, Mitrović, Jelena, Đorović, Đorđe, Lippa, Arnold, Cook, James M., Golani, Lalit K., Scholze, Petra, Savić, Miroslav, Witkin, Jeffrey M., "New Imidazodiazepine Analogue, 5-(8-Bromo-6-(pyridin-2-yl)-4H-benzo[f]imidazo[1,5-a][1,4]diazepin-3-yl)oxazole, Provides a Simplified Synthetic Scheme, High Oral Plasma and Brain Exposures, and Produces Antiseizure Efficacy in Mice, and Antiepileptogenic Activity in Neural Networks in Brain Slices from a Patient with Mesial Temporal Lobe Epilepsy" in ACS Chemical Neuroscience, 15, no. 3 (2024):517-526,
https://doi.org/10.1021/acschemneuro.3c00555 . .

Overcoming the low solubility of novel pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (CW-02-79) by combination of drug-phospholipid complex and nanoemulsion technology: design and physicochemical evaluation

Stanković, Tijana; Ilić, Tanja; Petković, Miloš; Pantelić, Ivana; Dobričić, Vladimir; Cook, James M.; Savić, Miroslav; Savić, Snežana

(2024)

TY  - GEN
AU  - Stanković, Tijana
AU  - Ilić, Tanja
AU  - Petković, Miloš
AU  - Pantelić, Ivana
AU  - Dobričić, Vladimir
AU  - Cook, James M.
AU  - Savić, Miroslav
AU  - Savić, Snežana
PY  - 2024
UR  - https://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5578
AB  - The low aqueous and oil solubility of the novelpyrazoloquinolinone ligand (CW-02-79) with significantbinding affinity for sigma-2 receptors in the brain hindersthe development of conventional parenteral formulationsand thus a comprehensive evaluation of its efficacy andsafety. ...
T1  - Overcoming the low solubility of novel pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (CW-02-79) by combination of drug-phospholipid complex and nanoemulsion technology: design and physicochemical evaluation
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_5578
ER  - 
@misc{
author = "Stanković, Tijana and Ilić, Tanja and Petković, Miloš and Pantelić, Ivana and Dobričić, Vladimir and Cook, James M. and Savić, Miroslav and Savić, Snežana",
year = "2024",
abstract = "The low aqueous and oil solubility of the novelpyrazoloquinolinone ligand (CW-02-79) with significantbinding affinity for sigma-2 receptors in the brain hindersthe development of conventional parenteral formulationsand thus a comprehensive evaluation of its efficacy andsafety. ...",
title = "Overcoming the low solubility of novel pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (CW-02-79) by combination of drug-phospholipid complex and nanoemulsion technology: design and physicochemical evaluation",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_5578"
}
Stanković, T., Ilić, T., Petković, M., Pantelić, I., Dobričić, V., Cook, J. M., Savić, M.,& Savić, S.. (2024). Overcoming the low solubility of novel pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (CW-02-79) by combination of drug-phospholipid complex and nanoemulsion technology: design and physicochemical evaluation. .
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_5578
Stanković T, Ilić T, Petković M, Pantelić I, Dobričić V, Cook JM, Savić M, Savić S. Overcoming the low solubility of novel pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (CW-02-79) by combination of drug-phospholipid complex and nanoemulsion technology: design and physicochemical evaluation. 2024;.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_5578 .
Stanković, Tijana, Ilić, Tanja, Petković, Miloš, Pantelić, Ivana, Dobričić, Vladimir, Cook, James M., Savić, Miroslav, Savić, Snežana, "Overcoming the low solubility of novel pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (CW-02-79) by combination of drug-phospholipid complex and nanoemulsion technology: design and physicochemical evaluation" (2024),
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_5578 .

Overcoming the low solubility of novel pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (CW-02-79) by combination of drug-phospholipid complex and nanoemulsion technology: design and physicochemical evaluation

Stanković, Tijana; Ilić, Tanja; Petković, Miloš; Pantelić, Ivana; Dobričić, Vladimir; Cook, James M.; Savić, Miroslav; Savić, Snežana

(International Society of Drug Delivery Sciences and Technology (APGI), 2024)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Stanković, Tijana
AU  - Ilić, Tanja
AU  - Petković, Miloš
AU  - Pantelić, Ivana
AU  - Dobričić, Vladimir
AU  - Cook, James M.
AU  - Savić, Miroslav
AU  - Savić, Snežana
PY  - 2024
UR  - https://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5577
AB  - The low aqueous and oil solubility of the novel
pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (CW-02-79) with significant
binding affinity for sigma-2 receptors in the brain hinders
the development of conventional parenteral formulations
and thus a comprehensive evaluation of its efficacy and
safety. ...
PB  - International Society of Drug Delivery Sciences and Technology (APGI)
PB  - International Association for Pharmaceutical Technology (APV)
PB  - Italian Society of Technology and Legislation (S.T.E.L.F)
C3  - 14th World Meeting on Pharmaceutics, Biopharmaceutics and Pharmaceutical Technology, 18 - 21 March 2024, Vienna, Austria
T1  - Overcoming the low solubility of novel pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (CW-02-79) by combination of drug-phospholipid complex and nanoemulsion technology: design and physicochemical evaluation
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_5577
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Stanković, Tijana and Ilić, Tanja and Petković, Miloš and Pantelić, Ivana and Dobričić, Vladimir and Cook, James M. and Savić, Miroslav and Savić, Snežana",
year = "2024",
abstract = "The low aqueous and oil solubility of the novel
pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (CW-02-79) with significant
binding affinity for sigma-2 receptors in the brain hinders
the development of conventional parenteral formulations
and thus a comprehensive evaluation of its efficacy and
safety. ...",
publisher = "International Society of Drug Delivery Sciences and Technology (APGI), International Association for Pharmaceutical Technology (APV), Italian Society of Technology and Legislation (S.T.E.L.F)",
journal = "14th World Meeting on Pharmaceutics, Biopharmaceutics and Pharmaceutical Technology, 18 - 21 March 2024, Vienna, Austria",
title = "Overcoming the low solubility of novel pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (CW-02-79) by combination of drug-phospholipid complex and nanoemulsion technology: design and physicochemical evaluation",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_5577"
}
Stanković, T., Ilić, T., Petković, M., Pantelić, I., Dobričić, V., Cook, J. M., Savić, M.,& Savić, S.. (2024). Overcoming the low solubility of novel pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (CW-02-79) by combination of drug-phospholipid complex and nanoemulsion technology: design and physicochemical evaluation. in 14th World Meeting on Pharmaceutics, Biopharmaceutics and Pharmaceutical Technology, 18 - 21 March 2024, Vienna, Austria
International Society of Drug Delivery Sciences and Technology (APGI)..
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_5577
Stanković T, Ilić T, Petković M, Pantelić I, Dobričić V, Cook JM, Savić M, Savić S. Overcoming the low solubility of novel pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (CW-02-79) by combination of drug-phospholipid complex and nanoemulsion technology: design and physicochemical evaluation. in 14th World Meeting on Pharmaceutics, Biopharmaceutics and Pharmaceutical Technology, 18 - 21 March 2024, Vienna, Austria. 2024;.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_5577 .
Stanković, Tijana, Ilić, Tanja, Petković, Miloš, Pantelić, Ivana, Dobričić, Vladimir, Cook, James M., Savić, Miroslav, Savić, Snežana, "Overcoming the low solubility of novel pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (CW-02-79) by combination of drug-phospholipid complex and nanoemulsion technology: design and physicochemical evaluation" in 14th World Meeting on Pharmaceutics, Biopharmaceutics and Pharmaceutical Technology, 18 - 21 March 2024, Vienna, Austria (2024),
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_5577 .

The impact of the aqueous phase on the physicochemical characteristics of nanoemulsions loaded with patent protected compound GL-II-73

Đoković, Jelena; Nikolić, Ines; Sharmin, Dishary; Cook, James M.; Savić, Miroslav; Borchard, Gerrit; Savić, Snežana

(International Society of Drug Delivery Sciences and Technology (APGI), 2024)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Đoković, Jelena
AU  - Nikolić, Ines
AU  - Sharmin, Dishary
AU  - Cook, James M.
AU  - Savić, Miroslav
AU  - Borchard, Gerrit
AU  - Savić, Snežana
PY  - 2024
UR  - https://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5575
AB  - INTRODUCTION Temporal lobe epilepsy is characterized by seizures, but can also be associated with mental health problems for which there are no clear treatment regimens. A proprietary compound, GL-II-73 - (4R)-8-ethynyl-6-(2-fluorophenyl)-N,N,4-trimethyl-4H-benzo[f]imidazo[1,5-a][1,4]diazepine-3-carboxamide, a positive allosteric modulator of α5-containing γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) receptors, has been shown to be effective in the treatment of these comorbidities [1]. ...
PB  - International Society of Drug Delivery Sciences and Technology (APGI)
PB  - International Association for Pharmaceutical Technology (APV)
PB  - Italian Society of Technology and Legislation (S.T.E.L.F)
C3  - 14th World Meeting on Pharmaceutics, Biopharmaceutics and Pharmaceutical Technology, 18 - 21 March 2024, Vienna, Austria
T1  - The impact of the aqueous phase on the physicochemical characteristics of nanoemulsions loaded with patent protected compound GL-II-73
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_5575
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Đoković, Jelena and Nikolić, Ines and Sharmin, Dishary and Cook, James M. and Savić, Miroslav and Borchard, Gerrit and Savić, Snežana",
year = "2024",
abstract = "INTRODUCTION Temporal lobe epilepsy is characterized by seizures, but can also be associated with mental health problems for which there are no clear treatment regimens. A proprietary compound, GL-II-73 - (4R)-8-ethynyl-6-(2-fluorophenyl)-N,N,4-trimethyl-4H-benzo[f]imidazo[1,5-a][1,4]diazepine-3-carboxamide, a positive allosteric modulator of α5-containing γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) receptors, has been shown to be effective in the treatment of these comorbidities [1]. ...",
publisher = "International Society of Drug Delivery Sciences and Technology (APGI), International Association for Pharmaceutical Technology (APV), Italian Society of Technology and Legislation (S.T.E.L.F)",
journal = "14th World Meeting on Pharmaceutics, Biopharmaceutics and Pharmaceutical Technology, 18 - 21 March 2024, Vienna, Austria",
title = "The impact of the aqueous phase on the physicochemical characteristics of nanoemulsions loaded with patent protected compound GL-II-73",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_5575"
}
Đoković, J., Nikolić, I., Sharmin, D., Cook, J. M., Savić, M., Borchard, G.,& Savić, S.. (2024). The impact of the aqueous phase on the physicochemical characteristics of nanoemulsions loaded with patent protected compound GL-II-73. in 14th World Meeting on Pharmaceutics, Biopharmaceutics and Pharmaceutical Technology, 18 - 21 March 2024, Vienna, Austria
International Society of Drug Delivery Sciences and Technology (APGI)..
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_5575
Đoković J, Nikolić I, Sharmin D, Cook JM, Savić M, Borchard G, Savić S. The impact of the aqueous phase on the physicochemical characteristics of nanoemulsions loaded with patent protected compound GL-II-73. in 14th World Meeting on Pharmaceutics, Biopharmaceutics and Pharmaceutical Technology, 18 - 21 March 2024, Vienna, Austria. 2024;.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_5575 .
Đoković, Jelena, Nikolić, Ines, Sharmin, Dishary, Cook, James M., Savić, Miroslav, Borchard, Gerrit, Savić, Snežana, "The impact of the aqueous phase on the physicochemical characteristics of nanoemulsions loaded with patent protected compound GL-II-73" in 14th World Meeting on Pharmaceutics, Biopharmaceutics and Pharmaceutical Technology, 18 - 21 March 2024, Vienna, Austria (2024),
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_5575 .

Structural Analogs of the GABAkine KRM-II-81 Are Orally Bioavailable Anticonvulsants without Sedation

Pandey, Kamal P.; Divović, Branka; Rashid, Farjana; Golani, Lalit K.; Cerne, Rok; Zahn, Nicolas M.; Meyer, Michelle Jean; Arnold, Leggy A.; Sharmin, Dishary; Mian, Md Yeunus; Smith, Jodi L.; Ping, Xingjie; Jin, Xiaoming; Lippa, Arnold; Tiruveedhula, Phani Babu V. V. N.; Cook, James M.; Savić, Miroslav; Witkin, Jeffrey M.

(American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapy (ASPET), 2023)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Pandey, Kamal P.
AU  - Divović, Branka
AU  - Rashid, Farjana
AU  - Golani, Lalit K.
AU  - Cerne, Rok
AU  - Zahn, Nicolas M.
AU  - Meyer, Michelle Jean
AU  - Arnold, Leggy A.
AU  - Sharmin, Dishary
AU  - Mian, Md Yeunus
AU  - Smith, Jodi L.
AU  - Ping, Xingjie
AU  - Jin, Xiaoming
AU  - Lippa, Arnold
AU  - Tiruveedhula, Phani Babu V. V. N.
AU  - Cook, James M.
AU  - Savić, Miroslav
AU  - Witkin, Jeffrey M.
PY  - 2023
UR  - https://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5605
AB  - To provide back-up compounds to support the development of the GABAA receptor (GABAAR) potentiator KRM-II-81, three novel analogs were designed: replacing the pyridinyl with 2'-Cl-phenyl (FR-II-60), changing the positions of the N and O atoms in the oxazole ring with addition of an ethyl group (KPPIII-34 and KPP-III-51), or substituting a Br atom for the ethynyl of KRM-II-81 (KPP-III-34). The compounds bound to brain GABAARs. Intraperitoneal administration of FR-II-60 and KPP-III-34 produced anticonvulsant activity in mice [maximal electroshock (MES)-induced seizures or 6 Hz-induced seizures], whereas KPPIII-51 did not. Although all compounds were orally bioavailable, structural changes reduced the plasma and brain (FR-II-60 and KPP-III-51) exposures relative to KRM-II-81. Oral administration of each compound produced dose-dependent increases in the latency for both clonic and tonic seizures and the lethality induced by pentylenetetrazol (PTZ) in mice. Since KPP-III-34 produced the highest brain area under the curve (AUC) exposures, it was selected for further profiling. Oral administration of KPP-III-34 suppressed seizures in corneal-kindled mice, hippocampal paroxysmal discharges in mesial temporal lobe epileptic mice, and PTZ-induced convulsions in rats. Only transient sensorimotor impairment was observed in mice, and doses of KPP-III-34 up to 500 mg/kg did not produce impairment in rats. Molecular docking studies demonstrated that all compounds displayed a reduced propensity for binding to a1His102 compared with the sedating compound alprazolam; the bromine-substituted KPP-III-34 achieved the least interaction. Overall, these findings document the oral bioavailability and anticonvulsant efficacy of three novel analogs of KRM-II-81 with reduced sedative effects. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT A new non-sedating compound, KRM-II-81, with reduced propensity for tolerance is moving into clinical development. Three new analogs were orally bioavailable, produced anticonvulsant effects in rodents, and displayed low sensorimotor impairment. KPP-III-34 demonstrated efficacy in models of pharmacoresistant epilepsy. Docking studies demonstrated a low propensity for compound binding to the a1His102 residue implicated in sedation. Thus, three additional structures have been added to the list of non-sedating imidazodiazepine anticonvulsants that could serve as backups in the clinical development of KRM-II-81. Copyright © 2023 by The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics.
PB  - American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapy (ASPET)
T2  - Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
T1  - Structural Analogs of the GABAkine KRM-II-81 Are Orally Bioavailable Anticonvulsants without Sedation
VL  - 385
IS  - 1
SP  - 50
EP  - 61
DO  - 10.1124/jpet.122.001362
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Pandey, Kamal P. and Divović, Branka and Rashid, Farjana and Golani, Lalit K. and Cerne, Rok and Zahn, Nicolas M. and Meyer, Michelle Jean and Arnold, Leggy A. and Sharmin, Dishary and Mian, Md Yeunus and Smith, Jodi L. and Ping, Xingjie and Jin, Xiaoming and Lippa, Arnold and Tiruveedhula, Phani Babu V. V. N. and Cook, James M. and Savić, Miroslav and Witkin, Jeffrey M.",
year = "2023",
abstract = "To provide back-up compounds to support the development of the GABAA receptor (GABAAR) potentiator KRM-II-81, three novel analogs were designed: replacing the pyridinyl with 2'-Cl-phenyl (FR-II-60), changing the positions of the N and O atoms in the oxazole ring with addition of an ethyl group (KPPIII-34 and KPP-III-51), or substituting a Br atom for the ethynyl of KRM-II-81 (KPP-III-34). The compounds bound to brain GABAARs. Intraperitoneal administration of FR-II-60 and KPP-III-34 produced anticonvulsant activity in mice [maximal electroshock (MES)-induced seizures or 6 Hz-induced seizures], whereas KPPIII-51 did not. Although all compounds were orally bioavailable, structural changes reduced the plasma and brain (FR-II-60 and KPP-III-51) exposures relative to KRM-II-81. Oral administration of each compound produced dose-dependent increases in the latency for both clonic and tonic seizures and the lethality induced by pentylenetetrazol (PTZ) in mice. Since KPP-III-34 produced the highest brain area under the curve (AUC) exposures, it was selected for further profiling. Oral administration of KPP-III-34 suppressed seizures in corneal-kindled mice, hippocampal paroxysmal discharges in mesial temporal lobe epileptic mice, and PTZ-induced convulsions in rats. Only transient sensorimotor impairment was observed in mice, and doses of KPP-III-34 up to 500 mg/kg did not produce impairment in rats. Molecular docking studies demonstrated that all compounds displayed a reduced propensity for binding to a1His102 compared with the sedating compound alprazolam; the bromine-substituted KPP-III-34 achieved the least interaction. Overall, these findings document the oral bioavailability and anticonvulsant efficacy of three novel analogs of KRM-II-81 with reduced sedative effects. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT A new non-sedating compound, KRM-II-81, with reduced propensity for tolerance is moving into clinical development. Three new analogs were orally bioavailable, produced anticonvulsant effects in rodents, and displayed low sensorimotor impairment. KPP-III-34 demonstrated efficacy in models of pharmacoresistant epilepsy. Docking studies demonstrated a low propensity for compound binding to the a1His102 residue implicated in sedation. Thus, three additional structures have been added to the list of non-sedating imidazodiazepine anticonvulsants that could serve as backups in the clinical development of KRM-II-81. Copyright © 2023 by The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics.",
publisher = "American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapy (ASPET)",
journal = "Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics",
title = "Structural Analogs of the GABAkine KRM-II-81 Are Orally Bioavailable Anticonvulsants without Sedation",
volume = "385",
number = "1",
pages = "50-61",
doi = "10.1124/jpet.122.001362"
}
Pandey, K. P., Divović, B., Rashid, F., Golani, L. K., Cerne, R., Zahn, N. M., Meyer, M. J., Arnold, L. A., Sharmin, D., Mian, M. Y., Smith, J. L., Ping, X., Jin, X., Lippa, A., Tiruveedhula, P. B. V. V. N., Cook, J. M., Savić, M.,& Witkin, J. M.. (2023). Structural Analogs of the GABAkine KRM-II-81 Are Orally Bioavailable Anticonvulsants without Sedation. in Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapy (ASPET)., 385(1), 50-61.
https://doi.org/10.1124/jpet.122.001362
Pandey KP, Divović B, Rashid F, Golani LK, Cerne R, Zahn NM, Meyer MJ, Arnold LA, Sharmin D, Mian MY, Smith JL, Ping X, Jin X, Lippa A, Tiruveedhula PBVVN, Cook JM, Savić M, Witkin JM. Structural Analogs of the GABAkine KRM-II-81 Are Orally Bioavailable Anticonvulsants without Sedation. in Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics. 2023;385(1):50-61.
doi:10.1124/jpet.122.001362 .
Pandey, Kamal P., Divović, Branka, Rashid, Farjana, Golani, Lalit K., Cerne, Rok, Zahn, Nicolas M., Meyer, Michelle Jean, Arnold, Leggy A., Sharmin, Dishary, Mian, Md Yeunus, Smith, Jodi L., Ping, Xingjie, Jin, Xiaoming, Lippa, Arnold, Tiruveedhula, Phani Babu V. V. N., Cook, James M., Savić, Miroslav, Witkin, Jeffrey M., "Structural Analogs of the GABAkine KRM-II-81 Are Orally Bioavailable Anticonvulsants without Sedation" in Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, 385, no. 1 (2023):50-61,
https://doi.org/10.1124/jpet.122.001362 . .

Preformulation and development of preliminary nanoemulsion carrier for patent protected compound GL-II-73

Đoković, Jelena; Marković, Bojan; Sharmin, Dishary; Cook, James M.; Savić, Miroslav; Savić, Snežana

(Macedonian Pharmaceutical Association, 2023)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Đoković, Jelena
AU  - Marković, Bojan
AU  - Sharmin, Dishary
AU  - Cook, James M.
AU  - Savić, Miroslav
AU  - Savić, Snežana
PY  - 2023
UR  - https://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5049
AB  - Introduction Nanopharmaceuticals offer a good method to avoid some of the difficulties that novel drug candidates confront. They can be tailored to adjust their water solubility, half-life, biodistribution, and govern the release of the integrated medication. Because of the excipients utilized, lipid nanocarriers (liposomes, nanoemulsions (NEs), nanoparticles) have been used to increase brain targeting (1,2). The investigated compound (GL-II-73) - (4R)-8-ethynyl-6-(2-fluorophenyl)-N,N,4-trimethyl-4H-benzo[f]imidazo[1,5-a] [1,4]diazepine-3-carboxamide is imidazobenzodiazepine (IBZD) ligand that acts as positive allosteric modulator on α-GABAA receptors and was shown to possess combined antidepressant and pro-cognitive effects, making it a promising candidate for further research (3). This work aims to investigate the physicochemical features of GL-II-73 to pick the best parenteral nanodelivery system for prospective research to assess its parameters. Мaterials and methods The saturation solubility of GL-II-73 was determined by adding it in excess to various oils (medium chain triglycerides, soybean, castor, and fish oil) to assess the oil solubility for the substance and select the optimal oil phase composition capable of incorporating the highest concentration of the GL-II-73. It was necessary to test the substance's solubility in buffers of various pH values to determine whether it has pH-dependent solubility. This investigation was carried out by incubating GL-II-73 and studied mediums on vortex for 24 hours and centrifuging to isolate supernatants from which the GL-II-73 concentration was evaluated using the LC-MS/MS method. The measurements were taken three times. In addition, after a 24-hour equilibration interval and determination of the GL-II-73 concentration, the log P value was obtained in an octanol/water system. Based on these findings, preliminary GL-II-73 (NE) was prepared using the high pressure homogenization method. In brief, the oil and aqueous phases were prepared separately and heated to 50 ˚C. They were then pre-mixed at the rotor stator homogenizer before being homogenized for 10 discontinuous cycles at 800 bar on the high pressure homogenizer. After diluting the sample in 1:500, v/v, ultra-purified water, the resulting formulations were characterized in terms of droplet size using the dynamic light scattering (DLS) technique on a Zetasizer Nano ZS90 (Malvern Instruments Ltd., Worcestershire, U.K.). On the same equipment, the NE's zeta potential (ZP) was measured. In addition, the pH and conductivity of the samples were examined. The ultrafiltration technique was used to evaluate the encapsulation efficacy (EE) by depositing 2 ml of the material in Amicon Ultra-4; NMWL 10 kDa filter units and centrifuging at 4500 rcf for 90 minutes. The EE was computed as %EE = ((A formulation A filtrate)/A formulation) 100, where A formulation represents the compound content in the formulation and A filtrate represents the filtrate, which was diluted in methanol and analyzed for Gl-II-73 content using the LC-MS/MS technique. During the one-month storage period, these conditions were monitored. Results and discussion Table 1 shows the solubility of GL-II-73 in the oils and buffers tested. The relatively good oil solubility, together with the log P value of 2.09, suggested that NEs could be promising carriers for GL-II-73. The highest oil solubility was detected in medium chain triglycerides, making them the oil phase of choice for future formulation development. Based on the solubility in 0.1 M HCl and phosphate buffer pH 7.4, it is possible to deduce that GL-II-73 has pH dependent solubility, with increased solubility observed as pH decreases, most likely due to the presence of ionizable functional groups and multiple H-bond acceptors. This suggested that the best EE would most likely be obtained by increasing the pH of the aqueous phase and keeping the chemical entrapped in the NE droplets. Solubility in organic solvents revealed that methanol is the best solvent for GL-II-73, as expected given its greater polarity index compared to isopropanol, which is why it was chosen for future characterization. Based on the solubility study, NE of the following composition was prepared: oil phase - medium chain tryglicerides (20%, w/w), soybean lecithin (2%, w/w), buthylhidroxytoluen (0.05%, w/w) and aqueous phase polysorbate 80 (2%, w/w), glycerol (2.25%, w/w), sodium oleate (0.03%, w/w), GL-II-73 (0.2%, w/w) and highly purified water to 100. The values of physicochemical parameters (Z-ave, PDI, ZP, pH, conductivity, drug content and encapsulation efficacy), measured both initially and after one month of storage, indicate suitability for parenteral administration. Conclusion Preliminary studies suggested that NEs are good prospective carriers for GL-II-73, but further research is needed for stability optimization.
PB  - Macedonian Pharmaceutical Association
PB  - Ss. Cyril and Methodius University in Skopje, Faculty of Pharmacy
C3  - 14th Central European Symposium on Pharmaceutical Technology, 28th - 30th September, Ohrid, N. Macedonia
T1  - Preformulation and development of preliminary nanoemulsion carrier for patent protected compound GL-II-73
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_5049
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Đoković, Jelena and Marković, Bojan and Sharmin, Dishary and Cook, James M. and Savić, Miroslav and Savić, Snežana",
year = "2023",
abstract = "Introduction Nanopharmaceuticals offer a good method to avoid some of the difficulties that novel drug candidates confront. They can be tailored to adjust their water solubility, half-life, biodistribution, and govern the release of the integrated medication. Because of the excipients utilized, lipid nanocarriers (liposomes, nanoemulsions (NEs), nanoparticles) have been used to increase brain targeting (1,2). The investigated compound (GL-II-73) - (4R)-8-ethynyl-6-(2-fluorophenyl)-N,N,4-trimethyl-4H-benzo[f]imidazo[1,5-a] [1,4]diazepine-3-carboxamide is imidazobenzodiazepine (IBZD) ligand that acts as positive allosteric modulator on α-GABAA receptors and was shown to possess combined antidepressant and pro-cognitive effects, making it a promising candidate for further research (3). This work aims to investigate the physicochemical features of GL-II-73 to pick the best parenteral nanodelivery system for prospective research to assess its parameters. Мaterials and methods The saturation solubility of GL-II-73 was determined by adding it in excess to various oils (medium chain triglycerides, soybean, castor, and fish oil) to assess the oil solubility for the substance and select the optimal oil phase composition capable of incorporating the highest concentration of the GL-II-73. It was necessary to test the substance's solubility in buffers of various pH values to determine whether it has pH-dependent solubility. This investigation was carried out by incubating GL-II-73 and studied mediums on vortex for 24 hours and centrifuging to isolate supernatants from which the GL-II-73 concentration was evaluated using the LC-MS/MS method. The measurements were taken three times. In addition, after a 24-hour equilibration interval and determination of the GL-II-73 concentration, the log P value was obtained in an octanol/water system. Based on these findings, preliminary GL-II-73 (NE) was prepared using the high pressure homogenization method. In brief, the oil and aqueous phases were prepared separately and heated to 50 ˚C. They were then pre-mixed at the rotor stator homogenizer before being homogenized for 10 discontinuous cycles at 800 bar on the high pressure homogenizer. After diluting the sample in 1:500, v/v, ultra-purified water, the resulting formulations were characterized in terms of droplet size using the dynamic light scattering (DLS) technique on a Zetasizer Nano ZS90 (Malvern Instruments Ltd., Worcestershire, U.K.). On the same equipment, the NE's zeta potential (ZP) was measured. In addition, the pH and conductivity of the samples were examined. The ultrafiltration technique was used to evaluate the encapsulation efficacy (EE) by depositing 2 ml of the material in Amicon Ultra-4; NMWL 10 kDa filter units and centrifuging at 4500 rcf for 90 minutes. The EE was computed as %EE = ((A formulation A filtrate)/A formulation) 100, where A formulation represents the compound content in the formulation and A filtrate represents the filtrate, which was diluted in methanol and analyzed for Gl-II-73 content using the LC-MS/MS technique. During the one-month storage period, these conditions were monitored. Results and discussion Table 1 shows the solubility of GL-II-73 in the oils and buffers tested. The relatively good oil solubility, together with the log P value of 2.09, suggested that NEs could be promising carriers for GL-II-73. The highest oil solubility was detected in medium chain triglycerides, making them the oil phase of choice for future formulation development. Based on the solubility in 0.1 M HCl and phosphate buffer pH 7.4, it is possible to deduce that GL-II-73 has pH dependent solubility, with increased solubility observed as pH decreases, most likely due to the presence of ionizable functional groups and multiple H-bond acceptors. This suggested that the best EE would most likely be obtained by increasing the pH of the aqueous phase and keeping the chemical entrapped in the NE droplets. Solubility in organic solvents revealed that methanol is the best solvent for GL-II-73, as expected given its greater polarity index compared to isopropanol, which is why it was chosen for future characterization. Based on the solubility study, NE of the following composition was prepared: oil phase - medium chain tryglicerides (20%, w/w), soybean lecithin (2%, w/w), buthylhidroxytoluen (0.05%, w/w) and aqueous phase polysorbate 80 (2%, w/w), glycerol (2.25%, w/w), sodium oleate (0.03%, w/w), GL-II-73 (0.2%, w/w) and highly purified water to 100. The values of physicochemical parameters (Z-ave, PDI, ZP, pH, conductivity, drug content and encapsulation efficacy), measured both initially and after one month of storage, indicate suitability for parenteral administration. Conclusion Preliminary studies suggested that NEs are good prospective carriers for GL-II-73, but further research is needed for stability optimization.",
publisher = "Macedonian Pharmaceutical Association, Ss. Cyril and Methodius University in Skopje, Faculty of Pharmacy",
journal = "14th Central European Symposium on Pharmaceutical Technology, 28th - 30th September, Ohrid, N. Macedonia",
title = "Preformulation and development of preliminary nanoemulsion carrier for patent protected compound GL-II-73",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_5049"
}
Đoković, J., Marković, B., Sharmin, D., Cook, J. M., Savić, M.,& Savić, S.. (2023). Preformulation and development of preliminary nanoemulsion carrier for patent protected compound GL-II-73. in 14th Central European Symposium on Pharmaceutical Technology, 28th - 30th September, Ohrid, N. Macedonia
Macedonian Pharmaceutical Association..
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_5049
Đoković J, Marković B, Sharmin D, Cook JM, Savić M, Savić S. Preformulation and development of preliminary nanoemulsion carrier for patent protected compound GL-II-73. in 14th Central European Symposium on Pharmaceutical Technology, 28th - 30th September, Ohrid, N. Macedonia. 2023;.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_5049 .
Đoković, Jelena, Marković, Bojan, Sharmin, Dishary, Cook, James M., Savić, Miroslav, Savić, Snežana, "Preformulation and development of preliminary nanoemulsion carrier for patent protected compound GL-II-73" in 14th Central European Symposium on Pharmaceutical Technology, 28th - 30th September, Ohrid, N. Macedonia (2023),
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_5049 .

Freeze-dried nanocrystal dispersion of novel deuterated pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (DK-I-56-1): Process parameters and lyoprotectant selection through the stability study

Mitrović, Jelena; Bjelošević Žiberna, Maja; Vukadinović, Aleksandar; Knutson, Daniel E.; Sharmin, Dishary; Kremenović, Aleksandar; Ahlin Grabnar, Pegi; Planinšek, Odon; Lunter, Dominique; Cook, James M; Savić, Miroslav; Savić, Snežana

(Elsevier B.V., 2023)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Mitrović, Jelena
AU  - Bjelošević Žiberna, Maja
AU  - Vukadinović, Aleksandar
AU  - Knutson, Daniel E.
AU  - Sharmin, Dishary
AU  - Kremenović, Aleksandar
AU  - Ahlin Grabnar, Pegi
AU  - Planinšek, Odon
AU  - Lunter, Dominique
AU  - Cook, James M
AU  - Savić, Miroslav
AU  - Savić, Snežana
PY  - 2023
UR  - https://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4982
AB  - Recently, nanocrystal dispersions have been considered as a promising formulation strategy to improve the bioavailability of the deuterated pyrazoloquinolinone ligand DK-I-56-1 (7‑methoxy-2-(4‑methoxy-d3-phenyl)-2,5-dihydro-3H-pyrazolo[4,3-c]quinolin-3-one). In the current study, the freeze-drying process (formulation and process parameters) was investigated to improve the storage stability of the previously developed formulation. Different combinations of lyoprotectant (sucrose or trehalose) and bulking agent (mannitol) were varied while formulations were freeze-dried under two conditions (primary drying at -10 or -45 °C). The obtained lyophilizates were characterized in terms of particle size, solid state properties and morphology, while the interactions within the samples were analyzed by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. In the preliminary study, three formulations were selected based on the high redispersibility index values (around 95%). The temperature of primary drying had no significant effect on particle size, but stability during storage was impaired for samples dried at -10 °C. Samples dried at lower temperature were more homogeneous and remained stable for three months. It was found that the optimal ratio of sucrose or trehalose to mannitol was 3:2 at a total concentration of 10% to achieve the best stability (particle size < 1.0 μm, polydispersity index < 0.250). The amorphous state of lyoprotectants probably provided a high degree of interaction with nanocrystals, while the crystalline mannitol provided an elegant cake structure. Sucrose was superior to trehalose in maintaining particle size during freeze-drying, while trehalose was more effective in keeping particle size within limits during storage. In conclusion, results demonstrated that the appropriate combination of sucrose/trehalose and mannitol together with the appropriate selection of lyophilization process parameters could yield nanocrystals with satisfactory stability.
PB  - Elsevier B.V.
T2  - European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences
T1  - Freeze-dried nanocrystal dispersion of novel deuterated pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (DK-I-56-1): Process parameters and lyoprotectant selection through the stability study
VL  - 189
DO  - 10.1016/j.ejps.2023.106557
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Mitrović, Jelena and Bjelošević Žiberna, Maja and Vukadinović, Aleksandar and Knutson, Daniel E. and Sharmin, Dishary and Kremenović, Aleksandar and Ahlin Grabnar, Pegi and Planinšek, Odon and Lunter, Dominique and Cook, James M and Savić, Miroslav and Savić, Snežana",
year = "2023",
abstract = "Recently, nanocrystal dispersions have been considered as a promising formulation strategy to improve the bioavailability of the deuterated pyrazoloquinolinone ligand DK-I-56-1 (7‑methoxy-2-(4‑methoxy-d3-phenyl)-2,5-dihydro-3H-pyrazolo[4,3-c]quinolin-3-one). In the current study, the freeze-drying process (formulation and process parameters) was investigated to improve the storage stability of the previously developed formulation. Different combinations of lyoprotectant (sucrose or trehalose) and bulking agent (mannitol) were varied while formulations were freeze-dried under two conditions (primary drying at -10 or -45 °C). The obtained lyophilizates were characterized in terms of particle size, solid state properties and morphology, while the interactions within the samples were analyzed by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. In the preliminary study, three formulations were selected based on the high redispersibility index values (around 95%). The temperature of primary drying had no significant effect on particle size, but stability during storage was impaired for samples dried at -10 °C. Samples dried at lower temperature were more homogeneous and remained stable for three months. It was found that the optimal ratio of sucrose or trehalose to mannitol was 3:2 at a total concentration of 10% to achieve the best stability (particle size < 1.0 μm, polydispersity index < 0.250). The amorphous state of lyoprotectants probably provided a high degree of interaction with nanocrystals, while the crystalline mannitol provided an elegant cake structure. Sucrose was superior to trehalose in maintaining particle size during freeze-drying, while trehalose was more effective in keeping particle size within limits during storage. In conclusion, results demonstrated that the appropriate combination of sucrose/trehalose and mannitol together with the appropriate selection of lyophilization process parameters could yield nanocrystals with satisfactory stability.",
publisher = "Elsevier B.V.",
journal = "European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences",
title = "Freeze-dried nanocrystal dispersion of novel deuterated pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (DK-I-56-1): Process parameters and lyoprotectant selection through the stability study",
volume = "189",
doi = "10.1016/j.ejps.2023.106557"
}
Mitrović, J., Bjelošević Žiberna, M., Vukadinović, A., Knutson, D. E., Sharmin, D., Kremenović, A., Ahlin Grabnar, P., Planinšek, O., Lunter, D., Cook, J. M., Savić, M.,& Savić, S.. (2023). Freeze-dried nanocrystal dispersion of novel deuterated pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (DK-I-56-1): Process parameters and lyoprotectant selection through the stability study. in European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences
Elsevier B.V.., 189.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejps.2023.106557
Mitrović J, Bjelošević Žiberna M, Vukadinović A, Knutson DE, Sharmin D, Kremenović A, Ahlin Grabnar P, Planinšek O, Lunter D, Cook JM, Savić M, Savić S. Freeze-dried nanocrystal dispersion of novel deuterated pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (DK-I-56-1): Process parameters and lyoprotectant selection through the stability study. in European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences. 2023;189.
doi:10.1016/j.ejps.2023.106557 .
Mitrović, Jelena, Bjelošević Žiberna, Maja, Vukadinović, Aleksandar, Knutson, Daniel E., Sharmin, Dishary, Kremenović, Aleksandar, Ahlin Grabnar, Pegi, Planinšek, Odon, Lunter, Dominique, Cook, James M, Savić, Miroslav, Savić, Snežana, "Freeze-dried nanocrystal dispersion of novel deuterated pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (DK-I-56-1): Process parameters and lyoprotectant selection through the stability study" in European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, 189 (2023),
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejps.2023.106557 . .

High amount of lecithin facilitates oral delivery of a poorly soluble pyrazoloquinolinone ligand formulated in lipid nanoparticles: Physicochemical, structural and pharmacokinetic performances

Mitrović, Jelena; Divović-Matović, Branka; Knutson, Daniel E.; Petković, Miloš; Đorović, Đorđe; Ranđelović, Danijela V.; Dobričić, Vladimir; Đoković, Jelena; Lunter, Dominique J.; Cook, James M.; Savić, Miroslav; Savić, Snežana

(Elsevier B.V., 2023)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Mitrović, Jelena
AU  - Divović-Matović, Branka
AU  - Knutson, Daniel E.
AU  - Petković, Miloš
AU  - Đorović, Đorđe
AU  - Ranđelović, Danijela V.
AU  - Dobričić, Vladimir
AU  - Đoković, Jelena
AU  - Lunter, Dominique J.
AU  - Cook, James M.
AU  - Savić, Miroslav
AU  - Savić, Snežana
PY  - 2023
UR  - https://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4434
AB  - Preclinical development of deuterated pyrazoloquinolinone ligands, promising drug candidates for various neuropsychiatric disorders, was hindered by unusually low solubility in water and oils. DK-I-60-3 (7-methoxy-d3- 2-(4-methoxy-d3-phenyl)-2,5-dihydro-3Hpyrazolo[4,3-c]quinolin-3-one) is one of such pyrazoloquinolinones, and we recently reported about increased oral bioavailability of its nanocrystal formulation (NC). Lipid nano- particles (LNP) with a high concentration of lecithin, which enhances loading capacity of the lipid matrix, may give rise to further improvement. After preformulation studies by differential scanning calorimetry and polarized light microscopy, LNP were prepared by the hot high pressure homogenization, and characterized in terms of particle size, morphology, and encapsulation efficacy. The layered structure visible on atomic force micrographs was confirmed by nuclear magnetic resonance. Obtained formulations were desirably stable, with small particle size (<100 nm), and high encapsulation efficacy (>99 %). Lecithin was partially fluid and most probably located in the outer shell of the particle, together with DK-I-60-3. While the hydrophobic part of polysorbate 80 was completely immobilized, its hydrophilic part was free in the aqueous phase. In oral neuropharmacokinetic study in rats, an around 1.5-fold increase of area under the curve with LNP compared to NC was noticed both in brain and plasma. In bioavailability study, F value of LNP (34.7 ± 12.4 %) was 1.4-fold higher than of NC (24.5 ± 7.8 %); however, this difference did not reach statistical significance. Therefore, employment of LNP platform in preclinical formulation of DK-I-60-3 imparted an incremental improvement of its physicochemical as well as pharmacokinetic behavior.
PB  - Elsevier B.V.
T2  - International Journal of Pharmaceutics
T1  - High amount of lecithin facilitates oral delivery of a poorly soluble pyrazoloquinolinone ligand formulated in lipid nanoparticles: Physicochemical, structural and pharmacokinetic performances
VL  - 633
DO  - 10.1016/j.ijpharm.2023.122613
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Mitrović, Jelena and Divović-Matović, Branka and Knutson, Daniel E. and Petković, Miloš and Đorović, Đorđe and Ranđelović, Danijela V. and Dobričić, Vladimir and Đoković, Jelena and Lunter, Dominique J. and Cook, James M. and Savić, Miroslav and Savić, Snežana",
year = "2023",
abstract = "Preclinical development of deuterated pyrazoloquinolinone ligands, promising drug candidates for various neuropsychiatric disorders, was hindered by unusually low solubility in water and oils. DK-I-60-3 (7-methoxy-d3- 2-(4-methoxy-d3-phenyl)-2,5-dihydro-3Hpyrazolo[4,3-c]quinolin-3-one) is one of such pyrazoloquinolinones, and we recently reported about increased oral bioavailability of its nanocrystal formulation (NC). Lipid nano- particles (LNP) with a high concentration of lecithin, which enhances loading capacity of the lipid matrix, may give rise to further improvement. After preformulation studies by differential scanning calorimetry and polarized light microscopy, LNP were prepared by the hot high pressure homogenization, and characterized in terms of particle size, morphology, and encapsulation efficacy. The layered structure visible on atomic force micrographs was confirmed by nuclear magnetic resonance. Obtained formulations were desirably stable, with small particle size (<100 nm), and high encapsulation efficacy (>99 %). Lecithin was partially fluid and most probably located in the outer shell of the particle, together with DK-I-60-3. While the hydrophobic part of polysorbate 80 was completely immobilized, its hydrophilic part was free in the aqueous phase. In oral neuropharmacokinetic study in rats, an around 1.5-fold increase of area under the curve with LNP compared to NC was noticed both in brain and plasma. In bioavailability study, F value of LNP (34.7 ± 12.4 %) was 1.4-fold higher than of NC (24.5 ± 7.8 %); however, this difference did not reach statistical significance. Therefore, employment of LNP platform in preclinical formulation of DK-I-60-3 imparted an incremental improvement of its physicochemical as well as pharmacokinetic behavior.",
publisher = "Elsevier B.V.",
journal = "International Journal of Pharmaceutics",
title = "High amount of lecithin facilitates oral delivery of a poorly soluble pyrazoloquinolinone ligand formulated in lipid nanoparticles: Physicochemical, structural and pharmacokinetic performances",
volume = "633",
doi = "10.1016/j.ijpharm.2023.122613"
}
Mitrović, J., Divović-Matović, B., Knutson, D. E., Petković, M., Đorović, Đ., Ranđelović, D. V., Dobričić, V., Đoković, J., Lunter, D. J., Cook, J. M., Savić, M.,& Savić, S.. (2023). High amount of lecithin facilitates oral delivery of a poorly soluble pyrazoloquinolinone ligand formulated in lipid nanoparticles: Physicochemical, structural and pharmacokinetic performances. in International Journal of Pharmaceutics
Elsevier B.V.., 633.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpharm.2023.122613
Mitrović J, Divović-Matović B, Knutson DE, Petković M, Đorović Đ, Ranđelović DV, Dobričić V, Đoković J, Lunter DJ, Cook JM, Savić M, Savić S. High amount of lecithin facilitates oral delivery of a poorly soluble pyrazoloquinolinone ligand formulated in lipid nanoparticles: Physicochemical, structural and pharmacokinetic performances. in International Journal of Pharmaceutics. 2023;633.
doi:10.1016/j.ijpharm.2023.122613 .
Mitrović, Jelena, Divović-Matović, Branka, Knutson, Daniel E., Petković, Miloš, Đorović, Đorđe, Ranđelović, Danijela V., Dobričić, Vladimir, Đoković, Jelena, Lunter, Dominique J., Cook, James M., Savić, Miroslav, Savić, Snežana, "High amount of lecithin facilitates oral delivery of a poorly soluble pyrazoloquinolinone ligand formulated in lipid nanoparticles: Physicochemical, structural and pharmacokinetic performances" in International Journal of Pharmaceutics, 633 (2023),
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpharm.2023.122613 . .
3
2

Preformulation and development of preliminary nanoemulsion carrier for patent protected compound GL-II-73

Đoković, Jelena; Marković, Bojan; Sharmin, Dishary; Cook, James M.; Savić, Miroslav; Savić, Snežana

(Macedonian Pharmaceutical Association, 2023)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Đoković, Jelena
AU  - Marković, Bojan
AU  - Sharmin, Dishary
AU  - Cook, James M.
AU  - Savić, Miroslav
AU  - Savić, Snežana
PY  - 2023
UR  - https://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5050
AB  - Nanopharmaceuticals offer a good option to avoid
some of the difficulties that novel drug candidates
confront. They can be tailored to adjust their water
solubility, half-life, biodistribution, and govern the release
of the integrated medication. Because of the excipients
utilized, lipid nanocarriers (liposomes, nanoemulsions
(NEs), nanoparticles) have been used to increase brain
targeting (Bisso et al., 2020; Ilić et al., 2023).
The investigated compound (GL-II-73) - (4R)-8-
ethynyl-6-(2-fluorophenyl)-N,N,4-trimethyl-4H-
benzo[f]imidazo[1,5-a] [1,4]diazepine-3-carboxamide is
imidazobenzodiazepine (IBZD) ligand that acts as positive
allosteric modulator on α-GABAA receptors and was
shown to possess combined antidepressant and pro-
cognitive effects, making it a promising candidate for
further research (Prevot et al., 2019).
This work aims to investigate the physicochemical
features of GL-II-73 to pick the best parenteral
nanodelivery system for prospective research to assess its
parameters.
PB  - Macedonian Pharmaceutical Association
PB  - Ss. Cyril and Methodius University in Skopje, Faculty of Pharmacy
C3  - Macedonian Pharmaceutical Bulletin
T1  - Preformulation and development of preliminary nanoemulsion carrier for patent protected compound GL-II-73
VL  - 69
IS  - Suppl 1
SP  - 53
EP  - 54
DO  - 10.33320/maced.pharm.bull.2023.69.03.026
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Đoković, Jelena and Marković, Bojan and Sharmin, Dishary and Cook, James M. and Savić, Miroslav and Savić, Snežana",
year = "2023",
abstract = "Nanopharmaceuticals offer a good option to avoid
some of the difficulties that novel drug candidates
confront. They can be tailored to adjust their water
solubility, half-life, biodistribution, and govern the release
of the integrated medication. Because of the excipients
utilized, lipid nanocarriers (liposomes, nanoemulsions
(NEs), nanoparticles) have been used to increase brain
targeting (Bisso et al., 2020; Ilić et al., 2023).
The investigated compound (GL-II-73) - (4R)-8-
ethynyl-6-(2-fluorophenyl)-N,N,4-trimethyl-4H-
benzo[f]imidazo[1,5-a] [1,4]diazepine-3-carboxamide is
imidazobenzodiazepine (IBZD) ligand that acts as positive
allosteric modulator on α-GABAA receptors and was
shown to possess combined antidepressant and pro-
cognitive effects, making it a promising candidate for
further research (Prevot et al., 2019).
This work aims to investigate the physicochemical
features of GL-II-73 to pick the best parenteral
nanodelivery system for prospective research to assess its
parameters.",
publisher = "Macedonian Pharmaceutical Association, Ss. Cyril and Methodius University in Skopje, Faculty of Pharmacy",
journal = "Macedonian Pharmaceutical Bulletin",
title = "Preformulation and development of preliminary nanoemulsion carrier for patent protected compound GL-II-73",
volume = "69",
number = "Suppl 1",
pages = "53-54",
doi = "10.33320/maced.pharm.bull.2023.69.03.026"
}
Đoković, J., Marković, B., Sharmin, D., Cook, J. M., Savić, M.,& Savić, S.. (2023). Preformulation and development of preliminary nanoemulsion carrier for patent protected compound GL-II-73. in Macedonian Pharmaceutical Bulletin
Macedonian Pharmaceutical Association., 69(Suppl 1), 53-54.
https://doi.org/10.33320/maced.pharm.bull.2023.69.03.026
Đoković J, Marković B, Sharmin D, Cook JM, Savić M, Savić S. Preformulation and development of preliminary nanoemulsion carrier for patent protected compound GL-II-73. in Macedonian Pharmaceutical Bulletin. 2023;69(Suppl 1):53-54.
doi:10.33320/maced.pharm.bull.2023.69.03.026 .
Đoković, Jelena, Marković, Bojan, Sharmin, Dishary, Cook, James M., Savić, Miroslav, Savić, Snežana, "Preformulation and development of preliminary nanoemulsion carrier for patent protected compound GL-II-73" in Macedonian Pharmaceutical Bulletin, 69, no. Suppl 1 (2023):53-54,
https://doi.org/10.33320/maced.pharm.bull.2023.69.03.026 . .

Design of tailor-made biocompatible nanocarrier for novel pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (CW-02-79) based on comprehensive evaluation of critical physicochemical descriptors

Stanković, Tijana; Ilić, Tanja; Pantelić, Ivana; Tošić, Anđela; Mitrović, Jelena; Cook, James M.; Savić, Miroslav; Savić, Snežana

(International Association of Physical Chemists, 2023)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Stanković, Tijana
AU  - Ilić, Tanja
AU  - Pantelić, Ivana
AU  - Tošić, Anđela
AU  - Mitrović, Jelena
AU  - Cook, James M.
AU  - Savić, Miroslav
AU  - Savić, Snežana
PY  - 2023
UR  - https://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5000
AB  - Design of tailor-made biocompatible nanocarrier for novel pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (CW-02-79) based on comprehensive evaluation of critical physicochemical descriptors 

Tijana Stanković1, Tanja Ilić1, Ivana Pantelić1, Anđela Tošić1, Jelena Mitrović1, James M. Cook2, Miroslav Savić3, Snežana Savić1

1 University of Belgrade-Faculty of Pharmacy, Department of Pharmaceutical Technology and Cosmetology, Vojvode Stepe 450, Belgrade, Serbia,
2 University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Milwaukee Institute for Drug Discovery, 3210 N. Cramer St. Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States,
3 University of Belgrade-Faculty of Pharmacy, Department of Pharmacology, Vojvode Stepe 450, Belgrade, Serbia.

The poor water solubility of novel patent-protected ligand of the pyrazoloquinolinone chemotype (CW-02-79), with significant binding affinity for sigma-2 receptors in the brain, restricts the development of conventional parenteral formulations and consequently, extensive pharmacological studies during the preclinical investigation. Therefore, we aimed to develop a biocompatible nanocarrier tailored to specific physicochemical properties of CW-02-79, to improve its transport across the blood-brain barrier and achieve the optimal brain disposition. In this context, a detailed analysis of lipophilicity (via log P and log D determination), solubility in various solvents/excipients (using shake-flask method) and crystalline state of CW-02-07 (using X-ray powder diffraction (XRPD), differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) with melt quenching approach and polarization microsocopy) was performed. After the analysis of key “input” physicochemical descriptors, based on the developed decision tree, nanoemulsions were selected as promising carriers for CW-02-79. The nanoemulsions were prepared using the high pressure homogenization method, varying the process (number of cycles, temperature and pressure) and formulation parameters (the content of the oil phase, the stabilizer mixture composition). Additionally, the influence of the sterilization process (thermal sterilization/aseptic filtration) on the nanoemulsion physicochemical properties was investigated, including droplet size and size distribution, zeta potential, pH, electrical conductivity and osmolality. The obtained results showed that it was possible to formulate CW-02-79-loaded nanoemulsions with 20% oil phase (medium chain triglycerides:castor oil at ratio 1:1), stabilized with the biocompatible emulsifiers (lecithin/polysorbate 80), exhibiting the nano-sized droplets (<200 nm) with narrow size distribution (polydispersity index < 0.2), zeta potential (> ǀ-30ǀ mV), pH (~ 5.7) and osmolality (295 mOsm/kg). The sterilization process did not remarkably affect the physiochemical properties of nanoemulsions, making them suitable for the parenteral administration. Owing to sastifying solubilization capacity for CW-02-79, physicochemical properties and preliminary stability, the nanoemulsions are the promising carriers worth exploring further to support the preclinical evalution of CW-02-79.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT. This research was supported by the Science Fund of the Republic of Serbia, Grant No. 7749108, Neuroimmune aspects of mood, anxiety and cognitive effects of leads/drug candidates acting at GABAA and/or sigma-2 receptors: In vitro/in vivo delineation by nano- and hiPSC-based platform — NanoCellEmoCog
PB  - International Association of Physical Chemists
C3  - 10th IAPC Meeting Tenth World Conference on Physico-Chemical Methods in Drug Discovery & Sixth World Conference on ADMET and DMPK Belgrade, Serbia, September 4-6
T1  - Design of tailor-made biocompatible nanocarrier for novel pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (CW-02-79) based on comprehensive evaluation of critical physicochemical descriptors
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_5000
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Stanković, Tijana and Ilić, Tanja and Pantelić, Ivana and Tošić, Anđela and Mitrović, Jelena and Cook, James M. and Savić, Miroslav and Savić, Snežana",
year = "2023",
abstract = "Design of tailor-made biocompatible nanocarrier for novel pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (CW-02-79) based on comprehensive evaluation of critical physicochemical descriptors 

Tijana Stanković1, Tanja Ilić1, Ivana Pantelić1, Anđela Tošić1, Jelena Mitrović1, James M. Cook2, Miroslav Savić3, Snežana Savić1

1 University of Belgrade-Faculty of Pharmacy, Department of Pharmaceutical Technology and Cosmetology, Vojvode Stepe 450, Belgrade, Serbia,
2 University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Milwaukee Institute for Drug Discovery, 3210 N. Cramer St. Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States,
3 University of Belgrade-Faculty of Pharmacy, Department of Pharmacology, Vojvode Stepe 450, Belgrade, Serbia.

The poor water solubility of novel patent-protected ligand of the pyrazoloquinolinone chemotype (CW-02-79), with significant binding affinity for sigma-2 receptors in the brain, restricts the development of conventional parenteral formulations and consequently, extensive pharmacological studies during the preclinical investigation. Therefore, we aimed to develop a biocompatible nanocarrier tailored to specific physicochemical properties of CW-02-79, to improve its transport across the blood-brain barrier and achieve the optimal brain disposition. In this context, a detailed analysis of lipophilicity (via log P and log D determination), solubility in various solvents/excipients (using shake-flask method) and crystalline state of CW-02-07 (using X-ray powder diffraction (XRPD), differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) with melt quenching approach and polarization microsocopy) was performed. After the analysis of key “input” physicochemical descriptors, based on the developed decision tree, nanoemulsions were selected as promising carriers for CW-02-79. The nanoemulsions were prepared using the high pressure homogenization method, varying the process (number of cycles, temperature and pressure) and formulation parameters (the content of the oil phase, the stabilizer mixture composition). Additionally, the influence of the sterilization process (thermal sterilization/aseptic filtration) on the nanoemulsion physicochemical properties was investigated, including droplet size and size distribution, zeta potential, pH, electrical conductivity and osmolality. The obtained results showed that it was possible to formulate CW-02-79-loaded nanoemulsions with 20% oil phase (medium chain triglycerides:castor oil at ratio 1:1), stabilized with the biocompatible emulsifiers (lecithin/polysorbate 80), exhibiting the nano-sized droplets (<200 nm) with narrow size distribution (polydispersity index < 0.2), zeta potential (> ǀ-30ǀ mV), pH (~ 5.7) and osmolality (295 mOsm/kg). The sterilization process did not remarkably affect the physiochemical properties of nanoemulsions, making them suitable for the parenteral administration. Owing to sastifying solubilization capacity for CW-02-79, physicochemical properties and preliminary stability, the nanoemulsions are the promising carriers worth exploring further to support the preclinical evalution of CW-02-79.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT. This research was supported by the Science Fund of the Republic of Serbia, Grant No. 7749108, Neuroimmune aspects of mood, anxiety and cognitive effects of leads/drug candidates acting at GABAA and/or sigma-2 receptors: In vitro/in vivo delineation by nano- and hiPSC-based platform — NanoCellEmoCog",
publisher = "International Association of Physical Chemists",
journal = "10th IAPC Meeting Tenth World Conference on Physico-Chemical Methods in Drug Discovery & Sixth World Conference on ADMET and DMPK Belgrade, Serbia, September 4-6",
title = "Design of tailor-made biocompatible nanocarrier for novel pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (CW-02-79) based on comprehensive evaluation of critical physicochemical descriptors",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_5000"
}
Stanković, T., Ilić, T., Pantelić, I., Tošić, A., Mitrović, J., Cook, J. M., Savić, M.,& Savić, S.. (2023). Design of tailor-made biocompatible nanocarrier for novel pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (CW-02-79) based on comprehensive evaluation of critical physicochemical descriptors. in 10th IAPC Meeting Tenth World Conference on Physico-Chemical Methods in Drug Discovery & Sixth World Conference on ADMET and DMPK Belgrade, Serbia, September 4-6
International Association of Physical Chemists..
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_5000
Stanković T, Ilić T, Pantelić I, Tošić A, Mitrović J, Cook JM, Savić M, Savić S. Design of tailor-made biocompatible nanocarrier for novel pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (CW-02-79) based on comprehensive evaluation of critical physicochemical descriptors. in 10th IAPC Meeting Tenth World Conference on Physico-Chemical Methods in Drug Discovery & Sixth World Conference on ADMET and DMPK Belgrade, Serbia, September 4-6. 2023;.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_5000 .
Stanković, Tijana, Ilić, Tanja, Pantelić, Ivana, Tošić, Anđela, Mitrović, Jelena, Cook, James M., Savić, Miroslav, Savić, Snežana, "Design of tailor-made biocompatible nanocarrier for novel pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (CW-02-79) based on comprehensive evaluation of critical physicochemical descriptors" in 10th IAPC Meeting Tenth World Conference on Physico-Chemical Methods in Drug Discovery & Sixth World Conference on ADMET and DMPK Belgrade, Serbia, September 4-6 (2023),
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_5000 .

Searching for the best way to incorporate the proprietary compound GL-II -73 into the nanoemulsion carrier for prospective parenteral application

Đoković, Jelena; Marković, Bojan; Sharmin, Dishary; Cook, James M.; Savić, Miroslav; Savić, Snežana

(International Association of Physical Chemists, 2023)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Đoković, Jelena
AU  - Marković, Bojan
AU  - Sharmin, Dishary
AU  - Cook, James M.
AU  - Savić, Miroslav
AU  - Savić, Snežana
PY  - 2023
UR  - https://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4999
AB  - Searching for the best way to incorporate the proprietary compound GL-II -73 into the nanoemulsion carrier for prospective parenteral application
Jelena Đoković1, Bojan Marković2, Dishary Sharmin3, James M Cook3, Miroslav Savić4, Snežana Savić1
1University of pharmacy - Faculty of pharmacy, Department of pharmaceutical technology and cosmetology, 11221 Belgrade, Serbia
2University of pharmacy - Faculty of pharmacy, Department of pharmaceutical chemistry, 11221 Belgrade, Serbia
3Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry and the Milwaukee Institute for Drug Discovery, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Milwaukee, WI, 53201, USA
4University of pharmacy - Faculty of pharmacy, Department of pharmacology, 11221 Belgrade, Serbia
The maximum amount of drug that can be incorporated into lipid nanoemulsions (NE) is usually judged by their solubility in the internal phase of the formulation. This can lead to various problems, such as precipitation of the drug after processing the formulation or, depending on the preparation technique used, the use of a large amount of the drug. To this end, it is useful to consider other drug loading methods, especially in the early stages of formulation development. In this study, we aimed to find the best way to achieve the highest loading of GL-II -73 in NEs for future parenteral applications for in vivo animal studies. This ligand acts as a positive allosteric modulator at α-GABAA receptors with combined antidepressant and cognition enhancing effects. NEs were prepared using the high pressure homogenization technique, a standard technique for parenteral NE preparation. The oil phase (medium-chain triglycerides, soy lecithin, and butylated hydroxytoluene) and the aqueous phase (glycerol, polysorbate 80, and 0.01 M phosphate buffer, pH 8) were separately heated to 50 ˚C and mixed until all components were dissolved. The aqueous phase was added to the oil phase and processed first on a rotor-stator homogenizer at 11000 rpm for 1 minute and then on a high-pressure homogenizer at 800 bar for 10 cycles. This resulted in a droplet size of 117.1 ± 1.5 nm, a PDI of 0.060 ± 0.008, a zeta potential of - 43.3 ± 1.3 mV, a pH of 7.89 ± 0.02, and a conductivity of 1061.67 ± 5.51 S/cm, indicating initial suitability for parenteral use. Using the empirical method for drug loading, we were able to dissolve GL-II -73 in the oil phase and achieve a drug concentration of 1.5 mg/ml in NE. For our experimental setup, this required the use of 120 mg of GL-II -73 per experiment. For the passive drug loading procedure, we incubated 1 ml of the placebo NE in the eppendorf tube (in duplicate) with the excess drug (approximately 10 mg per tube) for 72 h. The drug was then added to the eppendorf tube. The excess of the undissolved drug was removed after centrifugation. The drug content in the supernatant was 3.10 ± 0.25 mg/ml, indicating above-average loading of the drug and possibly suggesting localization of the drug in the droplet-stabilising layer, but this needs to be further demonstrated. This approach could contribute to more rational formulation development in the selection of formulation factors.
Acknowledgments
This research was funded by the Science Fund of the Republic of Serbia, GRANT No 7749108, Neuroimmune aspects of mood, anxiety and cognitive effects of leads/drug candidates acting at GABAA and/or sigma-2 receptors: In vitro/in vivo delineation by nano- and hiPSC-based platform - NanoCellEmоCog.
PB  - International Association of Physical Chemists
C3  - 10th IAPC Meeting Tenth World Conference on Physico-Chemical Methods in Drug Discovery & Sixth World Conference on ADMET and DMPK Belgrade, Serbia, September 4-6
T1  - Searching for the best way to incorporate the proprietary compound GL-II -73 into the nanoemulsion carrier for prospective parenteral application
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_4999
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Đoković, Jelena and Marković, Bojan and Sharmin, Dishary and Cook, James M. and Savić, Miroslav and Savić, Snežana",
year = "2023",
abstract = "Searching for the best way to incorporate the proprietary compound GL-II -73 into the nanoemulsion carrier for prospective parenteral application
Jelena Đoković1, Bojan Marković2, Dishary Sharmin3, James M Cook3, Miroslav Savić4, Snežana Savić1
1University of pharmacy - Faculty of pharmacy, Department of pharmaceutical technology and cosmetology, 11221 Belgrade, Serbia
2University of pharmacy - Faculty of pharmacy, Department of pharmaceutical chemistry, 11221 Belgrade, Serbia
3Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry and the Milwaukee Institute for Drug Discovery, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Milwaukee, WI, 53201, USA
4University of pharmacy - Faculty of pharmacy, Department of pharmacology, 11221 Belgrade, Serbia
The maximum amount of drug that can be incorporated into lipid nanoemulsions (NE) is usually judged by their solubility in the internal phase of the formulation. This can lead to various problems, such as precipitation of the drug after processing the formulation or, depending on the preparation technique used, the use of a large amount of the drug. To this end, it is useful to consider other drug loading methods, especially in the early stages of formulation development. In this study, we aimed to find the best way to achieve the highest loading of GL-II -73 in NEs for future parenteral applications for in vivo animal studies. This ligand acts as a positive allosteric modulator at α-GABAA receptors with combined antidepressant and cognition enhancing effects. NEs were prepared using the high pressure homogenization technique, a standard technique for parenteral NE preparation. The oil phase (medium-chain triglycerides, soy lecithin, and butylated hydroxytoluene) and the aqueous phase (glycerol, polysorbate 80, and 0.01 M phosphate buffer, pH 8) were separately heated to 50 ˚C and mixed until all components were dissolved. The aqueous phase was added to the oil phase and processed first on a rotor-stator homogenizer at 11000 rpm for 1 minute and then on a high-pressure homogenizer at 800 bar for 10 cycles. This resulted in a droplet size of 117.1 ± 1.5 nm, a PDI of 0.060 ± 0.008, a zeta potential of - 43.3 ± 1.3 mV, a pH of 7.89 ± 0.02, and a conductivity of 1061.67 ± 5.51 S/cm, indicating initial suitability for parenteral use. Using the empirical method for drug loading, we were able to dissolve GL-II -73 in the oil phase and achieve a drug concentration of 1.5 mg/ml in NE. For our experimental setup, this required the use of 120 mg of GL-II -73 per experiment. For the passive drug loading procedure, we incubated 1 ml of the placebo NE in the eppendorf tube (in duplicate) with the excess drug (approximately 10 mg per tube) for 72 h. The drug was then added to the eppendorf tube. The excess of the undissolved drug was removed after centrifugation. The drug content in the supernatant was 3.10 ± 0.25 mg/ml, indicating above-average loading of the drug and possibly suggesting localization of the drug in the droplet-stabilising layer, but this needs to be further demonstrated. This approach could contribute to more rational formulation development in the selection of formulation factors.
Acknowledgments
This research was funded by the Science Fund of the Republic of Serbia, GRANT No 7749108, Neuroimmune aspects of mood, anxiety and cognitive effects of leads/drug candidates acting at GABAA and/or sigma-2 receptors: In vitro/in vivo delineation by nano- and hiPSC-based platform - NanoCellEmоCog.",
publisher = "International Association of Physical Chemists",
journal = "10th IAPC Meeting Tenth World Conference on Physico-Chemical Methods in Drug Discovery & Sixth World Conference on ADMET and DMPK Belgrade, Serbia, September 4-6",
title = "Searching for the best way to incorporate the proprietary compound GL-II -73 into the nanoemulsion carrier for prospective parenteral application",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_4999"
}
Đoković, J., Marković, B., Sharmin, D., Cook, J. M., Savić, M.,& Savić, S.. (2023). Searching for the best way to incorporate the proprietary compound GL-II -73 into the nanoemulsion carrier for prospective parenteral application. in 10th IAPC Meeting Tenth World Conference on Physico-Chemical Methods in Drug Discovery & Sixth World Conference on ADMET and DMPK Belgrade, Serbia, September 4-6
International Association of Physical Chemists..
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_4999
Đoković J, Marković B, Sharmin D, Cook JM, Savić M, Savić S. Searching for the best way to incorporate the proprietary compound GL-II -73 into the nanoemulsion carrier for prospective parenteral application. in 10th IAPC Meeting Tenth World Conference on Physico-Chemical Methods in Drug Discovery & Sixth World Conference on ADMET and DMPK Belgrade, Serbia, September 4-6. 2023;.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_4999 .
Đoković, Jelena, Marković, Bojan, Sharmin, Dishary, Cook, James M., Savić, Miroslav, Savić, Snežana, "Searching for the best way to incorporate the proprietary compound GL-II -73 into the nanoemulsion carrier for prospective parenteral application" in 10th IAPC Meeting Tenth World Conference on Physico-Chemical Methods in Drug Discovery & Sixth World Conference on ADMET and DMPK Belgrade, Serbia, September 4-6 (2023),
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_4999 .

Biocompatible nanoemulsions as a tool for preclinical testing of CW-02-79, a pyrazoloquinolinone modulator of sigma-2 receptors: preformulation and formulation studies

Ilić, Tanja; Stanković, Tijana; Mitrović, Jelena; Pantelić, Ivana; Dobričić, Vladimir; Cook, James M.; Savić, Miroslav; Savić, Snežana

(2023)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Ilić, Tanja
AU  - Stanković, Tijana
AU  - Mitrović, Jelena
AU  - Pantelić, Ivana
AU  - Dobričić, Vladimir
AU  - Cook, James M.
AU  - Savić, Miroslav
AU  - Savić, Snežana
PY  - 2023
UR  - https://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4583
AB  - INTRODUCTION
Recently, the modulation of sigma-2 receptors localized in the brain is proposed to be linked with regulation of mood, anxiety, and cognition [1]. Hence, we hypothesized that novel patent-protected ligand of the pyrazoloquinolinone chemotype (CW-02-79) with a substantial binding affinity for sigma-2 receptors may have a distinct pharmacological profile useful for the treatment of mood, anxiety, and/or cognitive symptoms that usually accompany numerous psychiatric and neurodegenerative disorders. Having in mind that the neuroimmune mechanisms play an important role in pathogenesis of various emotional and cognitive impairments, we aim to test whether modulation of sigma-2 receptors with CW-02-79 results in substantial improvements in neuroimmune and/or behavioral outputs in in vitro cell platforms consisting of human induced pluripotent stem cells and in vivo animal models made to mimic a compromised neuroimmune status. However, very low water solubility of CW-02-79 hinders its administration and reliable efficacy and safety in vitro/in vivo evaluation. In order to avoid usage of non-physiological solvents/vehicles such as dimethyl sulfoxide and consequently, vehicle-related safety issues, nanoemulsions based on biocompatible excipients could be a promising tool for effective preclinical testing of the selected drug candidate. Therefore, firstly, this study aimed to develop biocompatible nanoemulsions (NEs), as carrier for CW-02-79, tailored for the described preclinical studies, using high pressure homogenization (HPH) method. As a first step, preformulation studies were performed to obtain insight into the key properties of CW-02-79 required for further stages of formulation development. Afterward, during NE preparation, the influence of formulation and process parameters on particle size was investigated to obtain NEs with small and uniform particle size suitable for parenteral administration.
EXPERIMENTAL METHODS
Materials
For the preparation of NEs the following ingredients were used: CW-02-79 (synthesized at the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Wisconsin—Milwaukee, WI, USA), medium-chain triglycerides (MCT) (Fagron GmbH & KG, Germany), castor oil, polysorbate 80, butylhydroxytoluene, glycerol (Sigma-Aldrich GmbH, Germany), soybean lecithin (Lipoid S75; Lipoid GmbH, Germany) and ultrapure water.
Preformulation Studies
The solubility of CW-02-79 in different oils and oil mixtures, distilled water, 0.1 M hydrochloride acid, phosphate buffer (pH 7.4), commonly used organic solvents (isopropanol, methanol and dimethyl sulfoxide) at 25 °C was investigated by the shake flask method. CW-02-79 concentration in the obtained supernatants was measured by LC-MS/MS. To gain certain insight into the physical state of CW-02-79, polarization microscopy and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC 1, Mettler–Toledo AG, Switzerland) were used.
Preparation and Characterization of NEs
Blank and CW-02-79-loaded NEs were prepared by varying the content of the oil phase (20%/30%, w/w) and process parameters (number of homogenization cycles), using hot HPH (EmulsiFlex-C3, Avestin Inc., Canada) at 800 bar and 50°C. The oil to surfactant ratio was kept constant (5:1, w/w) in all tested formulations. Droplet size (Z-ave), polydispersity index (PDI) and zeta potential (ZP) of corresponding NEs, after proper dilution, were determined using Zetasizer Nano ZS90 (Malvern Instruments Ltd., UK). Conductivity and pH value were measured by the conductometer (CDM230 Radiometer, Denmark) and pH meter (HI 9321, Hanna Instruments Inc, USA), respectively.
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Substance CW-02-79 appeared as a yellow powder, with broad particle size distribution. Results of the solubility study showed that, among the tested oils, the highest solubility of CW-02-79 was achieved in MCT-castor oil mixture (1:1, w/w) which was chosen as the oil phase for NE development. Elevated temperature (50°C) and presence of soybean lecithin as a solubilizer contributed to the loading of the target 2 mg/ml concentration, without precipitation during the storage.
After the oil phase selection, blank and CW-02-79-loaded NEs were prepared by varying the content of oil phase, 20% and 30%, w/w (increasing the oil content would reduce the volume to be injected). Polysorbate 80 was added as an additional stabilizer and functional excipient due to its tendency to enhance brain uptake of drugs by acting as P-glycoprotein inhibitor, stealth agent or promoter of receptor-mediated endocytosis [2]. Simultaneously, the impact of the number of homogenization cycles on critical quality attributes of NEs (Z-ave and PDI) was tested.
The observed increase in droplet size distribution (Figure 1) with increasing the number of homogenization cycles (> 8 cycles) could be attributed to over-processing (probably caused by increased droplet collision and re-coalescence rates or by insufficient emulsifier concentration in relation to the increasing interfacial area). Interestingly, although larger oil volume fractions generally lead to increased droplet collisions and hence larger droplet size [3], no statistically significant difference regarding droplet size was observed between formulations prepared with 20 and 30% of the oil phase (at 7 HPH cycles, 800 bar, 50°C). Likewise, a relatively narrow particle size distribution (PDI < 0.15) was observed, suggesting that the developed NEs were suitable for parenteral application. Moreover, satisfactory values were observed for all other tested physicochemical parameters (Table 2). Absolute ZP values were above 30 mV, indicating good stability of the system. Furthermore, the incorporation of CW-02-79 did not exert any influence on NE physicochemical properties, irrespective of the oil content.
In conclusion, although the formulation prepared with 30% of the oil phase had satisfying physicochemical properties, its relatively high viscosity can restrict syringeability and injectability. On the other hand, owing to satisfying solubilization capacity for CW-02-79 as well as small and uniform droplet size and low viscosity, NE prepared with 20% of the oil phase represents a promising carrier worth exploring further to support the preclinical progress of CW-02-79.
C3  - 4th European Conference on Pharmaceutics, 20 - 21 March 2023, Marseille, France
T1  - Biocompatible nanoemulsions as a tool for preclinical testing of CW-02-79, a pyrazoloquinolinone modulator of sigma-2 receptors: preformulation and formulation studies
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_4583
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Ilić, Tanja and Stanković, Tijana and Mitrović, Jelena and Pantelić, Ivana and Dobričić, Vladimir and Cook, James M. and Savić, Miroslav and Savić, Snežana",
year = "2023",
abstract = "INTRODUCTION
Recently, the modulation of sigma-2 receptors localized in the brain is proposed to be linked with regulation of mood, anxiety, and cognition [1]. Hence, we hypothesized that novel patent-protected ligand of the pyrazoloquinolinone chemotype (CW-02-79) with a substantial binding affinity for sigma-2 receptors may have a distinct pharmacological profile useful for the treatment of mood, anxiety, and/or cognitive symptoms that usually accompany numerous psychiatric and neurodegenerative disorders. Having in mind that the neuroimmune mechanisms play an important role in pathogenesis of various emotional and cognitive impairments, we aim to test whether modulation of sigma-2 receptors with CW-02-79 results in substantial improvements in neuroimmune and/or behavioral outputs in in vitro cell platforms consisting of human induced pluripotent stem cells and in vivo animal models made to mimic a compromised neuroimmune status. However, very low water solubility of CW-02-79 hinders its administration and reliable efficacy and safety in vitro/in vivo evaluation. In order to avoid usage of non-physiological solvents/vehicles such as dimethyl sulfoxide and consequently, vehicle-related safety issues, nanoemulsions based on biocompatible excipients could be a promising tool for effective preclinical testing of the selected drug candidate. Therefore, firstly, this study aimed to develop biocompatible nanoemulsions (NEs), as carrier for CW-02-79, tailored for the described preclinical studies, using high pressure homogenization (HPH) method. As a first step, preformulation studies were performed to obtain insight into the key properties of CW-02-79 required for further stages of formulation development. Afterward, during NE preparation, the influence of formulation and process parameters on particle size was investigated to obtain NEs with small and uniform particle size suitable for parenteral administration.
EXPERIMENTAL METHODS
Materials
For the preparation of NEs the following ingredients were used: CW-02-79 (synthesized at the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Wisconsin—Milwaukee, WI, USA), medium-chain triglycerides (MCT) (Fagron GmbH & KG, Germany), castor oil, polysorbate 80, butylhydroxytoluene, glycerol (Sigma-Aldrich GmbH, Germany), soybean lecithin (Lipoid S75; Lipoid GmbH, Germany) and ultrapure water.
Preformulation Studies
The solubility of CW-02-79 in different oils and oil mixtures, distilled water, 0.1 M hydrochloride acid, phosphate buffer (pH 7.4), commonly used organic solvents (isopropanol, methanol and dimethyl sulfoxide) at 25 °C was investigated by the shake flask method. CW-02-79 concentration in the obtained supernatants was measured by LC-MS/MS. To gain certain insight into the physical state of CW-02-79, polarization microscopy and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC 1, Mettler–Toledo AG, Switzerland) were used.
Preparation and Characterization of NEs
Blank and CW-02-79-loaded NEs were prepared by varying the content of the oil phase (20%/30%, w/w) and process parameters (number of homogenization cycles), using hot HPH (EmulsiFlex-C3, Avestin Inc., Canada) at 800 bar and 50°C. The oil to surfactant ratio was kept constant (5:1, w/w) in all tested formulations. Droplet size (Z-ave), polydispersity index (PDI) and zeta potential (ZP) of corresponding NEs, after proper dilution, were determined using Zetasizer Nano ZS90 (Malvern Instruments Ltd., UK). Conductivity and pH value were measured by the conductometer (CDM230 Radiometer, Denmark) and pH meter (HI 9321, Hanna Instruments Inc, USA), respectively.
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Substance CW-02-79 appeared as a yellow powder, with broad particle size distribution. Results of the solubility study showed that, among the tested oils, the highest solubility of CW-02-79 was achieved in MCT-castor oil mixture (1:1, w/w) which was chosen as the oil phase for NE development. Elevated temperature (50°C) and presence of soybean lecithin as a solubilizer contributed to the loading of the target 2 mg/ml concentration, without precipitation during the storage.
After the oil phase selection, blank and CW-02-79-loaded NEs were prepared by varying the content of oil phase, 20% and 30%, w/w (increasing the oil content would reduce the volume to be injected). Polysorbate 80 was added as an additional stabilizer and functional excipient due to its tendency to enhance brain uptake of drugs by acting as P-glycoprotein inhibitor, stealth agent or promoter of receptor-mediated endocytosis [2]. Simultaneously, the impact of the number of homogenization cycles on critical quality attributes of NEs (Z-ave and PDI) was tested.
The observed increase in droplet size distribution (Figure 1) with increasing the number of homogenization cycles (> 8 cycles) could be attributed to over-processing (probably caused by increased droplet collision and re-coalescence rates or by insufficient emulsifier concentration in relation to the increasing interfacial area). Interestingly, although larger oil volume fractions generally lead to increased droplet collisions and hence larger droplet size [3], no statistically significant difference regarding droplet size was observed between formulations prepared with 20 and 30% of the oil phase (at 7 HPH cycles, 800 bar, 50°C). Likewise, a relatively narrow particle size distribution (PDI < 0.15) was observed, suggesting that the developed NEs were suitable for parenteral application. Moreover, satisfactory values were observed for all other tested physicochemical parameters (Table 2). Absolute ZP values were above 30 mV, indicating good stability of the system. Furthermore, the incorporation of CW-02-79 did not exert any influence on NE physicochemical properties, irrespective of the oil content.
In conclusion, although the formulation prepared with 30% of the oil phase had satisfying physicochemical properties, its relatively high viscosity can restrict syringeability and injectability. On the other hand, owing to satisfying solubilization capacity for CW-02-79 as well as small and uniform droplet size and low viscosity, NE prepared with 20% of the oil phase represents a promising carrier worth exploring further to support the preclinical progress of CW-02-79.",
journal = "4th European Conference on Pharmaceutics, 20 - 21 March 2023, Marseille, France",
title = "Biocompatible nanoemulsions as a tool for preclinical testing of CW-02-79, a pyrazoloquinolinone modulator of sigma-2 receptors: preformulation and formulation studies",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_4583"
}
Ilić, T., Stanković, T., Mitrović, J., Pantelić, I., Dobričić, V., Cook, J. M., Savić, M.,& Savić, S.. (2023). Biocompatible nanoemulsions as a tool for preclinical testing of CW-02-79, a pyrazoloquinolinone modulator of sigma-2 receptors: preformulation and formulation studies. in 4th European Conference on Pharmaceutics, 20 - 21 March 2023, Marseille, France.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_4583
Ilić T, Stanković T, Mitrović J, Pantelić I, Dobričić V, Cook JM, Savić M, Savić S. Biocompatible nanoemulsions as a tool for preclinical testing of CW-02-79, a pyrazoloquinolinone modulator of sigma-2 receptors: preformulation and formulation studies. in 4th European Conference on Pharmaceutics, 20 - 21 March 2023, Marseille, France. 2023;.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_4583 .
Ilić, Tanja, Stanković, Tijana, Mitrović, Jelena, Pantelić, Ivana, Dobričić, Vladimir, Cook, James M., Savić, Miroslav, Savić, Snežana, "Biocompatible nanoemulsions as a tool for preclinical testing of CW-02-79, a pyrazoloquinolinone modulator of sigma-2 receptors: preformulation and formulation studies" in 4th European Conference on Pharmaceutics, 20 - 21 March 2023, Marseille, France (2023),
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_4583 .

Comparative anticonvulsant activity of the GABAkine KRM-II-81 and a deuterated analog

Ping, Xingjie; Meyer, Michelle J.; Zahn, Nicolas M.; Golani, Lalit K.; Sharmin, Dishary; Pandey, Kamal P.; Revanian, Sepideh; Mondal, Prithu; Jin, Xiaoming; Arnold, Leggy A.; Cerne, Rok; Cook, James M.; Divović, Branka; Savić, Miroslav; Lippa, Arnold; Smith, Jodi L.; Witkin, Jeffrey M.

(John Wiley and Sons Inc, 2023)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Ping, Xingjie
AU  - Meyer, Michelle J.
AU  - Zahn, Nicolas M.
AU  - Golani, Lalit K.
AU  - Sharmin, Dishary
AU  - Pandey, Kamal P.
AU  - Revanian, Sepideh
AU  - Mondal, Prithu
AU  - Jin, Xiaoming
AU  - Arnold, Leggy A.
AU  - Cerne, Rok
AU  - Cook, James M.
AU  - Divović, Branka
AU  - Savić, Miroslav
AU  - Lippa, Arnold
AU  - Smith, Jodi L.
AU  - Witkin, Jeffrey M.
PY  - 2023
UR  - https://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4427
AB  - A series of imidazodiazepines has been developed that possess reduced sedative liabilities but retain efficacy in anticonvulsant screening models. The latest of these compounds, (5-(8-ethynyl-6-(pyridin-2-yl)-4H-benzo[f]imidazole[1,5-α][1,4]diazepin-3-yl) oxazole known as KRM-II-81) is currently awaiting advancement into the clinic. A deuterated structural analog (D5-KRM-II-81) was made as a potential backup compound and studied here in comparison to KRM-II-81. In the present study, both compounds significantly prevented seizures in mice induced by 6 Hz (44 mA) electrical stimulation without significantly altering motoric function on a rotarod after intraperitoneal administration. Both compounds also significantly prevented clonic seizures, tonic seizures, and lethality induced by pentylenetetrazol in mice when given orally. D5-KRM-II-81 had a slightly longer duration of action against clonic and tonic seizures than KRM-II-81. Oral administration of 100 mg/kg of either KRM-II-81 or D5-KRM-II-81 was significantly less disruptive of sensorimotor function in mice than diazepam (5 mg/kg, p.o.). The present report documents that D5-KRM-II-81 represents another in this series of imidazodiazepines with anticonvulsant activity at doses that do not impair sensorimotor function.
PB  - John Wiley and Sons Inc
T2  - Drug Development Research
T1  - Comparative anticonvulsant activity of the GABAkine KRM-II-81 and a deuterated analog
VL  - 84
IS  - 3
DO  - 10.1002/ddr.22042
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Ping, Xingjie and Meyer, Michelle J. and Zahn, Nicolas M. and Golani, Lalit K. and Sharmin, Dishary and Pandey, Kamal P. and Revanian, Sepideh and Mondal, Prithu and Jin, Xiaoming and Arnold, Leggy A. and Cerne, Rok and Cook, James M. and Divović, Branka and Savić, Miroslav and Lippa, Arnold and Smith, Jodi L. and Witkin, Jeffrey M.",
year = "2023",
abstract = "A series of imidazodiazepines has been developed that possess reduced sedative liabilities but retain efficacy in anticonvulsant screening models. The latest of these compounds, (5-(8-ethynyl-6-(pyridin-2-yl)-4H-benzo[f]imidazole[1,5-α][1,4]diazepin-3-yl) oxazole known as KRM-II-81) is currently awaiting advancement into the clinic. A deuterated structural analog (D5-KRM-II-81) was made as a potential backup compound and studied here in comparison to KRM-II-81. In the present study, both compounds significantly prevented seizures in mice induced by 6 Hz (44 mA) electrical stimulation without significantly altering motoric function on a rotarod after intraperitoneal administration. Both compounds also significantly prevented clonic seizures, tonic seizures, and lethality induced by pentylenetetrazol in mice when given orally. D5-KRM-II-81 had a slightly longer duration of action against clonic and tonic seizures than KRM-II-81. Oral administration of 100 mg/kg of either KRM-II-81 or D5-KRM-II-81 was significantly less disruptive of sensorimotor function in mice than diazepam (5 mg/kg, p.o.). The present report documents that D5-KRM-II-81 represents another in this series of imidazodiazepines with anticonvulsant activity at doses that do not impair sensorimotor function.",
publisher = "John Wiley and Sons Inc",
journal = "Drug Development Research",
title = "Comparative anticonvulsant activity of the GABAkine KRM-II-81 and a deuterated analog",
volume = "84",
number = "3",
doi = "10.1002/ddr.22042"
}
Ping, X., Meyer, M. J., Zahn, N. M., Golani, L. K., Sharmin, D., Pandey, K. P., Revanian, S., Mondal, P., Jin, X., Arnold, L. A., Cerne, R., Cook, J. M., Divović, B., Savić, M., Lippa, A., Smith, J. L.,& Witkin, J. M.. (2023). Comparative anticonvulsant activity of the GABAkine KRM-II-81 and a deuterated analog. in Drug Development Research
John Wiley and Sons Inc., 84(3).
https://doi.org/10.1002/ddr.22042
Ping X, Meyer MJ, Zahn NM, Golani LK, Sharmin D, Pandey KP, Revanian S, Mondal P, Jin X, Arnold LA, Cerne R, Cook JM, Divović B, Savić M, Lippa A, Smith JL, Witkin JM. Comparative anticonvulsant activity of the GABAkine KRM-II-81 and a deuterated analog. in Drug Development Research. 2023;84(3).
doi:10.1002/ddr.22042 .
Ping, Xingjie, Meyer, Michelle J., Zahn, Nicolas M., Golani, Lalit K., Sharmin, Dishary, Pandey, Kamal P., Revanian, Sepideh, Mondal, Prithu, Jin, Xiaoming, Arnold, Leggy A., Cerne, Rok, Cook, James M., Divović, Branka, Savić, Miroslav, Lippa, Arnold, Smith, Jodi L., Witkin, Jeffrey M., "Comparative anticonvulsant activity of the GABAkine KRM-II-81 and a deuterated analog" in Drug Development Research, 84, no. 3 (2023),
https://doi.org/10.1002/ddr.22042 . .
204
1
1

Symptomatic and neurotrophic effects of GABAA receptor positive allosteric modulation in a mouse model of chronic stress

Bernardo, Ashley; Lee, Philip; Marcotte, Michael; Mian, Md Yeunus; Rezvanian, Sepideh; Sharmin, Dishary; Kovačević, Aleksandra; Savić, Miroslav; Cook, James M.; Sibille, Etienne; Prevot, Thomas D.

(Springer Nature, 2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Bernardo, Ashley
AU  - Lee, Philip
AU  - Marcotte, Michael
AU  - Mian, Md Yeunus
AU  - Rezvanian, Sepideh
AU  - Sharmin, Dishary
AU  - Kovačević, Aleksandra
AU  - Savić, Miroslav
AU  - Cook, James M.
AU  - Sibille, Etienne
AU  - Prevot, Thomas D.
PY  - 2022
UR  - https://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5540
AB  - Chronic stress is a risk factor for Major Depressive Disorder (MDD), and in rodents, it recapitulates human behavioral, cellular and molecular changes. In MDD and after chronic stress, neuronal dysfunctions and deficits in GABAergic signaling are observed and responsible for symptom severity. GABA signals predominantly through GABAA receptors (GABAA-R) composed of various subunit types that relate to downstream outcomes. Activity at α2-GABAA-Rs contributes to anxiolytic properties, α5-GABAA-Rs to cognitive functions, and α1-GABAA-Rs to sedation. Therefore, a therapy aiming at increasing α2- and α5-GABAA-Rs activity, but devoid of α1-GABAA-R activity, has potential to address several symptomologies of depression while avoiding side-effects. This study investigated the activity profiles and behavioral efficacy of two enantiomers of each other (GL-II-73 and GL-I-54), separately and as a racemic mixture (GL-RM), and potential disease-modifying effects on neuronal morphology. Results confirm GL-I-54 and GL-II-73 exert positive allosteric modulation at the α2-, α3-, α5-GABAA-Rs and α5-containing GABAA-Rs, respectively, and separately reduces immobility in the forced swim test and improves stress-induced spatial working memory deficits. Using unpredictable chronic mild stress (UCMS), we show that acute and chronic administration of GL-RM provide pro-cognitive effects, with mild efficacy on mood symptoms, although at lower doses avoiding sedation. Morphology studies showed reversal of spine density loss caused by UCMS after chronic GL-RM treatment at apical and basal dendrites of the PFC and CA1. Together, these results support using a racemic mixture with combined α2-, α3-, α5-GABAA-R profile to reverse chronic stress-induced mood symptoms, cognitive deficits, and with anti-stress neurotrophic effects.
PB  - Springer Nature
T2  - Neuropsychopharmacology
T1  - Symptomatic and neurotrophic effects of GABAA receptor positive allosteric modulation in a mouse model of chronic stress
VL  - 47
IS  - 9
SP  - 1608
EP  - 1619
DO  - 10.1038/s41386-022-01360-y
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Bernardo, Ashley and Lee, Philip and Marcotte, Michael and Mian, Md Yeunus and Rezvanian, Sepideh and Sharmin, Dishary and Kovačević, Aleksandra and Savić, Miroslav and Cook, James M. and Sibille, Etienne and Prevot, Thomas D.",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Chronic stress is a risk factor for Major Depressive Disorder (MDD), and in rodents, it recapitulates human behavioral, cellular and molecular changes. In MDD and after chronic stress, neuronal dysfunctions and deficits in GABAergic signaling are observed and responsible for symptom severity. GABA signals predominantly through GABAA receptors (GABAA-R) composed of various subunit types that relate to downstream outcomes. Activity at α2-GABAA-Rs contributes to anxiolytic properties, α5-GABAA-Rs to cognitive functions, and α1-GABAA-Rs to sedation. Therefore, a therapy aiming at increasing α2- and α5-GABAA-Rs activity, but devoid of α1-GABAA-R activity, has potential to address several symptomologies of depression while avoiding side-effects. This study investigated the activity profiles and behavioral efficacy of two enantiomers of each other (GL-II-73 and GL-I-54), separately and as a racemic mixture (GL-RM), and potential disease-modifying effects on neuronal morphology. Results confirm GL-I-54 and GL-II-73 exert positive allosteric modulation at the α2-, α3-, α5-GABAA-Rs and α5-containing GABAA-Rs, respectively, and separately reduces immobility in the forced swim test and improves stress-induced spatial working memory deficits. Using unpredictable chronic mild stress (UCMS), we show that acute and chronic administration of GL-RM provide pro-cognitive effects, with mild efficacy on mood symptoms, although at lower doses avoiding sedation. Morphology studies showed reversal of spine density loss caused by UCMS after chronic GL-RM treatment at apical and basal dendrites of the PFC and CA1. Together, these results support using a racemic mixture with combined α2-, α3-, α5-GABAA-R profile to reverse chronic stress-induced mood symptoms, cognitive deficits, and with anti-stress neurotrophic effects.",
publisher = "Springer Nature",
journal = "Neuropsychopharmacology",
title = "Symptomatic and neurotrophic effects of GABAA receptor positive allosteric modulation in a mouse model of chronic stress",
volume = "47",
number = "9",
pages = "1608-1619",
doi = "10.1038/s41386-022-01360-y"
}
Bernardo, A., Lee, P., Marcotte, M., Mian, M. Y., Rezvanian, S., Sharmin, D., Kovačević, A., Savić, M., Cook, J. M., Sibille, E.,& Prevot, T. D.. (2022). Symptomatic and neurotrophic effects of GABAA receptor positive allosteric modulation in a mouse model of chronic stress. in Neuropsychopharmacology
Springer Nature., 47(9), 1608-1619.
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41386-022-01360-y
Bernardo A, Lee P, Marcotte M, Mian MY, Rezvanian S, Sharmin D, Kovačević A, Savić M, Cook JM, Sibille E, Prevot TD. Symptomatic and neurotrophic effects of GABAA receptor positive allosteric modulation in a mouse model of chronic stress. in Neuropsychopharmacology. 2022;47(9):1608-1619.
doi:10.1038/s41386-022-01360-y .
Bernardo, Ashley, Lee, Philip, Marcotte, Michael, Mian, Md Yeunus, Rezvanian, Sepideh, Sharmin, Dishary, Kovačević, Aleksandra, Savić, Miroslav, Cook, James M., Sibille, Etienne, Prevot, Thomas D., "Symptomatic and neurotrophic effects of GABAA receptor positive allosteric modulation in a mouse model of chronic stress" in Neuropsychopharmacology, 47, no. 9 (2022):1608-1619,
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41386-022-01360-y . .
7
10
9

Hydrochloride Salt of the GABAkine KRM-II-81

Mian, Md Yeunus; Divović, Branka; Sharmin, Dishary; Pandey, Kamal P.; Golani, Lalit K.; Tiruveedhula, V. V. N. Phani Babu; Cerne, Rok; Smith, Jodi L.; Ping, Xingjie; Jin, Xiaoming; Imler, Gregory H.; Deschamps, Jeffrey R.; Lippa, Arnold; Cook, James M.; Savić, Miroslav; Rowlett, James; Witkin, Jeffrey M.

(ACS Publications, 2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Mian, Md Yeunus
AU  - Divović, Branka
AU  - Sharmin, Dishary
AU  - Pandey, Kamal P.
AU  - Golani, Lalit K.
AU  - Tiruveedhula, V. V. N. Phani Babu
AU  - Cerne, Rok
AU  - Smith, Jodi L.
AU  - Ping, Xingjie
AU  - Jin, Xiaoming
AU  - Imler, Gregory H.
AU  - Deschamps, Jeffrey R.
AU  - Lippa, Arnold
AU  - Cook, James M.
AU  - Savić, Miroslav
AU  - Rowlett, James
AU  - Witkin, Jeffrey M.
PY  - 2022
UR  - https://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4363
AB  - Imidazodiazepine (5-(8-ethynyl-6-(pyridin-2-yl)-4H-benzo[f]imidazole[1,5-α][1,4]diazepin-3-yl) oxazole or KRM-II-81) is a potentiator of GABAA receptors (a GABAkine) undergoing preparation for clinical development. KRM-II-81 is active against many seizure and pain models in rodents, where it exhibits improved pharmacological properties over standard-of-care agents. Since salts can be utilized to create opportunities for increased solubility, enhanced absorption, and distribution, as well as for efficient methods of bulk synthesis, a hydrochloride salt of KRM-II-81 was prepared. KRM-II-81·HCl was produced from the free base with anhydrous hydrochloric acid. The formation of the monohydrochloride salt was confirmed by X-ray crystallography, as well as 1H NMR and 13C NMR analyses. High water solubility and a lower partition coefficient (octanol/water) were exhibited by KRM-II-81·HCl as compared to the free base. Oral administration of either KRM-II-81·HCl or the free base resulted in high concentrations in the brain and plasma of rats. Oral dosing in mice significantly increased the latency to both clonic and tonic convulsions and decreased pentylenetetrazol-induced lethality. The increased water solubility of the HCl salt enables intravenous dosing and the potential for higher concentration formulations compared with the free base without impacting anticonvulsant potency. Thus, KRM-II-81·HCl adds an important new compound to facilitate the development of these imidazodiazepines for clinical evaluation.
PB  - ACS Publications
T2  - ACS Omega
T1  - Hydrochloride Salt of the GABAkine KRM-II-81
VL  - 7
IS  - 31
SP  - 27550
EP  - 27559
DO  - 10.1021/acsomega.2c03029
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Mian, Md Yeunus and Divović, Branka and Sharmin, Dishary and Pandey, Kamal P. and Golani, Lalit K. and Tiruveedhula, V. V. N. Phani Babu and Cerne, Rok and Smith, Jodi L. and Ping, Xingjie and Jin, Xiaoming and Imler, Gregory H. and Deschamps, Jeffrey R. and Lippa, Arnold and Cook, James M. and Savić, Miroslav and Rowlett, James and Witkin, Jeffrey M.",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Imidazodiazepine (5-(8-ethynyl-6-(pyridin-2-yl)-4H-benzo[f]imidazole[1,5-α][1,4]diazepin-3-yl) oxazole or KRM-II-81) is a potentiator of GABAA receptors (a GABAkine) undergoing preparation for clinical development. KRM-II-81 is active against many seizure and pain models in rodents, where it exhibits improved pharmacological properties over standard-of-care agents. Since salts can be utilized to create opportunities for increased solubility, enhanced absorption, and distribution, as well as for efficient methods of bulk synthesis, a hydrochloride salt of KRM-II-81 was prepared. KRM-II-81·HCl was produced from the free base with anhydrous hydrochloric acid. The formation of the monohydrochloride salt was confirmed by X-ray crystallography, as well as 1H NMR and 13C NMR analyses. High water solubility and a lower partition coefficient (octanol/water) were exhibited by KRM-II-81·HCl as compared to the free base. Oral administration of either KRM-II-81·HCl or the free base resulted in high concentrations in the brain and plasma of rats. Oral dosing in mice significantly increased the latency to both clonic and tonic convulsions and decreased pentylenetetrazol-induced lethality. The increased water solubility of the HCl salt enables intravenous dosing and the potential for higher concentration formulations compared with the free base without impacting anticonvulsant potency. Thus, KRM-II-81·HCl adds an important new compound to facilitate the development of these imidazodiazepines for clinical evaluation.",
publisher = "ACS Publications",
journal = "ACS Omega",
title = "Hydrochloride Salt of the GABAkine KRM-II-81",
volume = "7",
number = "31",
pages = "27550-27559",
doi = "10.1021/acsomega.2c03029"
}
Mian, M. Y., Divović, B., Sharmin, D., Pandey, K. P., Golani, L. K., Tiruveedhula, V. V. N. P. B., Cerne, R., Smith, J. L., Ping, X., Jin, X., Imler, G. H., Deschamps, J. R., Lippa, A., Cook, J. M., Savić, M., Rowlett, J.,& Witkin, J. M.. (2022). Hydrochloride Salt of the GABAkine KRM-II-81. in ACS Omega
ACS Publications., 7(31), 27550-27559.
https://doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.2c03029
Mian MY, Divović B, Sharmin D, Pandey KP, Golani LK, Tiruveedhula VVNPB, Cerne R, Smith JL, Ping X, Jin X, Imler GH, Deschamps JR, Lippa A, Cook JM, Savić M, Rowlett J, Witkin JM. Hydrochloride Salt of the GABAkine KRM-II-81. in ACS Omega. 2022;7(31):27550-27559.
doi:10.1021/acsomega.2c03029 .
Mian, Md Yeunus, Divović, Branka, Sharmin, Dishary, Pandey, Kamal P., Golani, Lalit K., Tiruveedhula, V. V. N. Phani Babu, Cerne, Rok, Smith, Jodi L., Ping, Xingjie, Jin, Xiaoming, Imler, Gregory H., Deschamps, Jeffrey R., Lippa, Arnold, Cook, James M., Savić, Miroslav, Rowlett, James, Witkin, Jeffrey M., "Hydrochloride Salt of the GABAkine KRM-II-81" in ACS Omega, 7, no. 31 (2022):27550-27559,
https://doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.2c03029 . .
3
1

Metabolism, pharmacokinetics, and anticonvulsant activity of a deuterated analog of the α2/3-selective GABAkine KRM-II-81

Golani, Lalit; Divović, Branka; Sharmin, Dishary; Pandey, Kamal; Mian, Md Yeunus; Cerne, Rok; Zahn, Nicolas; Meyer, Michelle; Tiruveedhula, Veera; Smith, Jodi; Ping, Xingjie; Jin, Xiaoming; Lippa, Arnold; Schkeryantz, Jeffrey; Arnold, Leggy; Cook, James; Savić, Miroslav; Witkin, Jeffrey

(John Wiley and Sons Ltd, 2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Golani, Lalit
AU  - Divović, Branka
AU  - Sharmin, Dishary
AU  - Pandey, Kamal
AU  - Mian, Md Yeunus
AU  - Cerne, Rok
AU  - Zahn, Nicolas
AU  - Meyer, Michelle
AU  - Tiruveedhula, Veera
AU  - Smith, Jodi
AU  - Ping, Xingjie
AU  - Jin, Xiaoming
AU  - Lippa, Arnold
AU  - Schkeryantz, Jeffrey
AU  - Arnold, Leggy
AU  - Cook, James
AU  - Savić, Miroslav
AU  - Witkin, Jeffrey
PY  - 2022
UR  - https://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4108
AB  - The imidazodiazepine, (5‐(8‐ethynyl‐6‐(pyridin‐2‐yl)‐4H‐benzo [f]imidazole[1,5‐α] [1,4]diazepin‐3‐yl) oxazole or KRM‐II‐81) is a new α2/3‐selective GABAkine (gamma aminobutyric acid A receptor potentiator) with anticonvulsant, anxiolytic, and antinociceptive activity in preclinical models. Reducing metabolism was utilized as a means of potentially extending the half‐life of KRM‐II‐81. In vitro and in vivo studies were conducted to evaluate metabolic liabilities. Incubation of KRM‐II‐81 in hepatocytes revealed sites of potential metabolism on the oxazole and the diazepine rings. These sites were targeted in the design of a deuterated analog (D5‐KRM‐II‐ 81) that could be evaluated as a potentially longer‐acting analog. In contrast to computer predictions, peak plasma concentrations of D5‐KRM‐II‐81 in rats were not significantly greater than those produced by KRM‐II‐81 after oral administra- tion. Furthermore, brain disposition of KRM‐II‐81 was higher than that of D5‐KRM‐ II‐81. The half‐life of the two compounds in either plasma or brain did not statis- tically differ from one another but the tmax for D5‐KRM‐II‐81 occurred slightly earlier than for KRM‐II‐81. Non‐metabolic considerations might be relevant to the lack of increases in exposure by D5‐KRM‐II‐81. Alternative sites of metabolism on KRM‐II‐81, not targeted by the current deuteration process, are also possible. Despite its lack of augmented exposure, D5‐KRM‐II‐81, like KRM‐II‐81, significantly prevented seizures induced by pentylenetetrazol when given orally. The present findings introduce a new orally active anticonvulsant GABAkine, D5‐KRM‐II‐81.
PB  - John Wiley and Sons Ltd
T2  - Biopharmaceutics and Drug Disposition
T1  - Metabolism, pharmacokinetics, and anticonvulsant activity of a deuterated analog of the α2/3-selective GABAkine KRM-II-81
VL  - 43
IS  - 2
SP  - 66
EP  - 75
DO  - 10.1002/bdd.2313
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Golani, Lalit and Divović, Branka and Sharmin, Dishary and Pandey, Kamal and Mian, Md Yeunus and Cerne, Rok and Zahn, Nicolas and Meyer, Michelle and Tiruveedhula, Veera and Smith, Jodi and Ping, Xingjie and Jin, Xiaoming and Lippa, Arnold and Schkeryantz, Jeffrey and Arnold, Leggy and Cook, James and Savić, Miroslav and Witkin, Jeffrey",
year = "2022",
abstract = "The imidazodiazepine, (5‐(8‐ethynyl‐6‐(pyridin‐2‐yl)‐4H‐benzo [f]imidazole[1,5‐α] [1,4]diazepin‐3‐yl) oxazole or KRM‐II‐81) is a new α2/3‐selective GABAkine (gamma aminobutyric acid A receptor potentiator) with anticonvulsant, anxiolytic, and antinociceptive activity in preclinical models. Reducing metabolism was utilized as a means of potentially extending the half‐life of KRM‐II‐81. In vitro and in vivo studies were conducted to evaluate metabolic liabilities. Incubation of KRM‐II‐81 in hepatocytes revealed sites of potential metabolism on the oxazole and the diazepine rings. These sites were targeted in the design of a deuterated analog (D5‐KRM‐II‐ 81) that could be evaluated as a potentially longer‐acting analog. In contrast to computer predictions, peak plasma concentrations of D5‐KRM‐II‐81 in rats were not significantly greater than those produced by KRM‐II‐81 after oral administra- tion. Furthermore, brain disposition of KRM‐II‐81 was higher than that of D5‐KRM‐ II‐81. The half‐life of the two compounds in either plasma or brain did not statis- tically differ from one another but the tmax for D5‐KRM‐II‐81 occurred slightly earlier than for KRM‐II‐81. Non‐metabolic considerations might be relevant to the lack of increases in exposure by D5‐KRM‐II‐81. Alternative sites of metabolism on KRM‐II‐81, not targeted by the current deuteration process, are also possible. Despite its lack of augmented exposure, D5‐KRM‐II‐81, like KRM‐II‐81, significantly prevented seizures induced by pentylenetetrazol when given orally. The present findings introduce a new orally active anticonvulsant GABAkine, D5‐KRM‐II‐81.",
publisher = "John Wiley and Sons Ltd",
journal = "Biopharmaceutics and Drug Disposition",
title = "Metabolism, pharmacokinetics, and anticonvulsant activity of a deuterated analog of the α2/3-selective GABAkine KRM-II-81",
volume = "43",
number = "2",
pages = "66-75",
doi = "10.1002/bdd.2313"
}
Golani, L., Divović, B., Sharmin, D., Pandey, K., Mian, M. Y., Cerne, R., Zahn, N., Meyer, M., Tiruveedhula, V., Smith, J., Ping, X., Jin, X., Lippa, A., Schkeryantz, J., Arnold, L., Cook, J., Savić, M.,& Witkin, J.. (2022). Metabolism, pharmacokinetics, and anticonvulsant activity of a deuterated analog of the α2/3-selective GABAkine KRM-II-81. in Biopharmaceutics and Drug Disposition
John Wiley and Sons Ltd., 43(2), 66-75.
https://doi.org/10.1002/bdd.2313
Golani L, Divović B, Sharmin D, Pandey K, Mian MY, Cerne R, Zahn N, Meyer M, Tiruveedhula V, Smith J, Ping X, Jin X, Lippa A, Schkeryantz J, Arnold L, Cook J, Savić M, Witkin J. Metabolism, pharmacokinetics, and anticonvulsant activity of a deuterated analog of the α2/3-selective GABAkine KRM-II-81. in Biopharmaceutics and Drug Disposition. 2022;43(2):66-75.
doi:10.1002/bdd.2313 .
Golani, Lalit, Divović, Branka, Sharmin, Dishary, Pandey, Kamal, Mian, Md Yeunus, Cerne, Rok, Zahn, Nicolas, Meyer, Michelle, Tiruveedhula, Veera, Smith, Jodi, Ping, Xingjie, Jin, Xiaoming, Lippa, Arnold, Schkeryantz, Jeffrey, Arnold, Leggy, Cook, James, Savić, Miroslav, Witkin, Jeffrey, "Metabolism, pharmacokinetics, and anticonvulsant activity of a deuterated analog of the α2/3-selective GABAkine KRM-II-81" in Biopharmaceutics and Drug Disposition, 43, no. 2 (2022):66-75,
https://doi.org/10.1002/bdd.2313 . .
75
4
4

Freeze-dried nanocrystal dispersion of novel deuterated pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (DK-I-56-1): process parameters and cryoprotectant selection through stability study

Mitrović, Jelena; Bjelošević, Maja; Knutson, Daniel E.; Kremenović, Aleksandar; Lunter, Dominique; Ahlin Grabnar, Pegi; Cook, James M.; Savić, Miroslav; Savić, Snežana

(2022)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Mitrović, Jelena
AU  - Bjelošević, Maja
AU  - Knutson, Daniel E.
AU  - Kremenović, Aleksandar
AU  - Lunter, Dominique
AU  - Ahlin Grabnar, Pegi
AU  - Cook, James M.
AU  - Savić, Miroslav
AU  - Savić, Snežana
PY  - 2022
UR  - https://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4270
AB  - 1.	INTRODUCTION 
Nanocrystal dispersions are considered as the universal formulation strategy for brick dust substances. However, the stability of these systems to aggregation represents a big issue. To overcome this, nanocrystal dispersions are usually solidified by freeze-drying (lyophilization). During this process the risk of aggregation is considered to be high, due to ice formation and/or water loss. To prevent the aggregation, For the particle size preservation, therefore, it is necessary to add cryoprotectants/lyoprotectants, among which sugars are most commonly used. To ensure good structure of the cake, bulking agents are often included in formulations, as well [1,2], although in nanocrystalline dispersions the combination of cryoprotectants and bulking agents is not frequent nor much investigated.
Nanocrystals of DK-I-56-1 (7‑methoxy‑2-(4‑methoxy‑d3-phenyl)-2,5-dihydro-3H-pyrazolo[4,3-c]quinolin-3-one), patent protected pyrazoloquinolinone ligand, have been developed recently, and characterized in terms of physicochemical properties and pharmacokinetics after intraperitoneal administration in mice. These formulations were stable for three weeks [3]. Our aim in this study was to improve the stability by freeze-drying, and investigate the influence of different concentrations and physical form of cryoprotectants (sucrose, trehalose) and bulking agent (mannitol) as well as different primary drying conditions on the aggregation prevention.

2. MATERIALS AND METHODS
2.1. Materials 
DK-I-56-1 was synthesized at the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Wisconsin—Milwaukee, USA. The following other materials were used: polysorbate 80, poloxamer 407, sucrose, mannitol (Sigma-Aldrich Laborchemikalien GmbH, Germany) and trehalose (Carl Roth GmbH, Germany). 
2.2. Lyophilization 
Nanocrystal dispersions stabilized by polysorbate 80 and poloxamer 407 were prepared by wet ball milling [3]. After addition of mannitol (M), sucrose (S), or trehalose (T) alone or in combination samples were freeze- dried. Two processes were applied: (1) freezing at -80 °C (3 h), primary drying at -10 °C, 0.340 mbar, secondary drying at 25 °C (24 h) or (2) freezing at -50 °C (3 h), primary drying at -45 °C, 0.2 mbar (21 h), secondary drying at 20 °C (30 h). Samples were stored in crimped vials at 25 °C (lyophilization 1) or 2-8 ºC (lyophilization 2) for three months.
2.3. Physicochemical characterization
Particle size (z-ave) was measured by Zetasizer Nano ZS (Malvern Instruments, UK) and Mastersizer (Malvern Mastersizer 2000 Malvern, UK). Redispersibility index (RDI) was calculated as z-ave (before)/z-ave (after) and expressed in percentages. Physical state of samples was determined by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC1; Mettler Toledo, Switzerland),powder X-ray diffraction (Rigaku Smartlab X-ray Diffractometer) and polarized light microscopy (PLM) (Carl Zeiss ApoTome Imager Z1 microscope Zeiss, Germany). 
3. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Right after preparation, nanocrystal dispersions were with submicron particle size around 160 nm, and PDI below 0.2, suggesting narrow size distribution. In the cryoprotectant screening phase, sucrose and/or mannitol were added in different concentrations. It was shown that 10% of the total stabilizer concentration was needed for the particle size preservation: the achieved RDI was above 95%, while cakes with sucrose alone or in combination with mannitol in ratio 1:1 or 3:2 were also with satisfied appearance (Figure 1).  
Lyophilization was conducted above or below the glass transition temperature of the maximally freeze-concentrated solution (Tg’) (around -39 ºC). When primary drying was performed at -10 °C, no aggregation was noticed right after lyophilization, but particle size increased significantly, lowering down the RDI to < 50%, after one month storage at 25 °C. This was confirmed by laser diffraction. In lyophilization 2, with primary drying at temperature below Tg’, trehalose was also used in the same concentration as sucrose and in combination with mannitol. Interestingly, in this process parameters setup, sucrose or trehalose alone did not prevent aggregation during freeze-drying. Particle size remained almost unchanged in formulation S+M 3+2 (RDI 95%) or slightly higher in T+M 3+2 (RDI 90%), after three months storage, suggesting it was most probably the optimal combination for the stabilization. 
Physical state analysis revealed that sucrose and mannitol in samples lyophilized by process 1 were in crystalline state, as well as sucrose when used alone in lyophilization 2. Trehalose, on the other hand was amorphous in all samples containing it. Amorphous state of lyoprotectants allows maximal hydrogen bonding due to higher molecule flexibility and availability of hydroxyl groups [3]. Surprisingly, mannitol as a substance with high crystallization tendency was with low crystallinity in lyophilizates. These observations were confirmed by PLM. It is possible that it formed interactions with sucrose or nanocrystal stabilizers [4]. 
4. CONCLUSION
Results from this study demonstrated freeze- drying as an important technique for the improvement of nanocrystals stability. However, the selection of cryoprotectant and bulking agent ratio beside process parameters (primary drying at -45 ºC) was crucial to get freeze-dried samples with good stability. Sucrose or trehalose in combination with mannitol (ratio 3+2) in total concentration 10% successfully hindered aggregation, thus prolonging the stability to 3 months at 2-8 ºC.
5. REFERENCES
1.	Van Eerdenbrugh, B., et al. Top-down production of drug nanocrystals: nanosuspension stabilization, miniaturization and transformation into solid products. International journal of pharmaceutics, 2008. 364(1): 64-75.
2.	Trenkenschuh, E., and Friess, W. Freeze-drying of nanoparticles: How to overcome colloidal instability by formulation and process optimization. European Journal of Pharmaceutics and Biopharmaceutics, 2021.165: 345-360.
3.	Mitrović, J.R., et al. Overcoming the low oral bioavailability of deuterated pyrazoloquinolinone ligand DK-I-60-3 by nanonization: A knowledge-based approach. Pharmaceutics, 2021. 13(8): 1188.
4.	Kumar, S., et al. Sugars as bulking agents to prevent nano-crystal aggregation during spray or freeze-drying. International journal of pharmaceutics, 2014. 471(1-2): 303-311.
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
This research was supported by the Science Fund of the Republic of Serbia, grant No. 7749108, project Neuroimmune aspects of mood, anxiety and cognitive effects of leads/drug candidates acting at GABAA and/or sigma-2 receptors: In vitro/in vivo delineation by nano- and hiPSC-based platforms-NanoCellEmoCog.
C3  - 9th BBBB International conference on pharmaceutical sciences; 15th - 17th September, Ljubljana, Slovenia
T1  - Freeze-dried nanocrystal dispersion of novel deuterated pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (DK-I-56-1): process parameters and cryoprotectant selection through stability study
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_4270
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Mitrović, Jelena and Bjelošević, Maja and Knutson, Daniel E. and Kremenović, Aleksandar and Lunter, Dominique and Ahlin Grabnar, Pegi and Cook, James M. and Savić, Miroslav and Savić, Snežana",
year = "2022",
abstract = "1.	INTRODUCTION 
Nanocrystal dispersions are considered as the universal formulation strategy for brick dust substances. However, the stability of these systems to aggregation represents a big issue. To overcome this, nanocrystal dispersions are usually solidified by freeze-drying (lyophilization). During this process the risk of aggregation is considered to be high, due to ice formation and/or water loss. To prevent the aggregation, For the particle size preservation, therefore, it is necessary to add cryoprotectants/lyoprotectants, among which sugars are most commonly used. To ensure good structure of the cake, bulking agents are often included in formulations, as well [1,2], although in nanocrystalline dispersions the combination of cryoprotectants and bulking agents is not frequent nor much investigated.
Nanocrystals of DK-I-56-1 (7‑methoxy‑2-(4‑methoxy‑d3-phenyl)-2,5-dihydro-3H-pyrazolo[4,3-c]quinolin-3-one), patent protected pyrazoloquinolinone ligand, have been developed recently, and characterized in terms of physicochemical properties and pharmacokinetics after intraperitoneal administration in mice. These formulations were stable for three weeks [3]. Our aim in this study was to improve the stability by freeze-drying, and investigate the influence of different concentrations and physical form of cryoprotectants (sucrose, trehalose) and bulking agent (mannitol) as well as different primary drying conditions on the aggregation prevention.

2. MATERIALS AND METHODS
2.1. Materials 
DK-I-56-1 was synthesized at the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Wisconsin—Milwaukee, USA. The following other materials were used: polysorbate 80, poloxamer 407, sucrose, mannitol (Sigma-Aldrich Laborchemikalien GmbH, Germany) and trehalose (Carl Roth GmbH, Germany). 
2.2. Lyophilization 
Nanocrystal dispersions stabilized by polysorbate 80 and poloxamer 407 were prepared by wet ball milling [3]. After addition of mannitol (M), sucrose (S), or trehalose (T) alone or in combination samples were freeze- dried. Two processes were applied: (1) freezing at -80 °C (3 h), primary drying at -10 °C, 0.340 mbar, secondary drying at 25 °C (24 h) or (2) freezing at -50 °C (3 h), primary drying at -45 °C, 0.2 mbar (21 h), secondary drying at 20 °C (30 h). Samples were stored in crimped vials at 25 °C (lyophilization 1) or 2-8 ºC (lyophilization 2) for three months.
2.3. Physicochemical characterization
Particle size (z-ave) was measured by Zetasizer Nano ZS (Malvern Instruments, UK) and Mastersizer (Malvern Mastersizer 2000 Malvern, UK). Redispersibility index (RDI) was calculated as z-ave (before)/z-ave (after) and expressed in percentages. Physical state of samples was determined by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC1; Mettler Toledo, Switzerland),powder X-ray diffraction (Rigaku Smartlab X-ray Diffractometer) and polarized light microscopy (PLM) (Carl Zeiss ApoTome Imager Z1 microscope Zeiss, Germany). 
3. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Right after preparation, nanocrystal dispersions were with submicron particle size around 160 nm, and PDI below 0.2, suggesting narrow size distribution. In the cryoprotectant screening phase, sucrose and/or mannitol were added in different concentrations. It was shown that 10% of the total stabilizer concentration was needed for the particle size preservation: the achieved RDI was above 95%, while cakes with sucrose alone or in combination with mannitol in ratio 1:1 or 3:2 were also with satisfied appearance (Figure 1).  
Lyophilization was conducted above or below the glass transition temperature of the maximally freeze-concentrated solution (Tg’) (around -39 ºC). When primary drying was performed at -10 °C, no aggregation was noticed right after lyophilization, but particle size increased significantly, lowering down the RDI to < 50%, after one month storage at 25 °C. This was confirmed by laser diffraction. In lyophilization 2, with primary drying at temperature below Tg’, trehalose was also used in the same concentration as sucrose and in combination with mannitol. Interestingly, in this process parameters setup, sucrose or trehalose alone did not prevent aggregation during freeze-drying. Particle size remained almost unchanged in formulation S+M 3+2 (RDI 95%) or slightly higher in T+M 3+2 (RDI 90%), after three months storage, suggesting it was most probably the optimal combination for the stabilization. 
Physical state analysis revealed that sucrose and mannitol in samples lyophilized by process 1 were in crystalline state, as well as sucrose when used alone in lyophilization 2. Trehalose, on the other hand was amorphous in all samples containing it. Amorphous state of lyoprotectants allows maximal hydrogen bonding due to higher molecule flexibility and availability of hydroxyl groups [3]. Surprisingly, mannitol as a substance with high crystallization tendency was with low crystallinity in lyophilizates. These observations were confirmed by PLM. It is possible that it formed interactions with sucrose or nanocrystal stabilizers [4]. 
4. CONCLUSION
Results from this study demonstrated freeze- drying as an important technique for the improvement of nanocrystals stability. However, the selection of cryoprotectant and bulking agent ratio beside process parameters (primary drying at -45 ºC) was crucial to get freeze-dried samples with good stability. Sucrose or trehalose in combination with mannitol (ratio 3+2) in total concentration 10% successfully hindered aggregation, thus prolonging the stability to 3 months at 2-8 ºC.
5. REFERENCES
1.	Van Eerdenbrugh, B., et al. Top-down production of drug nanocrystals: nanosuspension stabilization, miniaturization and transformation into solid products. International journal of pharmaceutics, 2008. 364(1): 64-75.
2.	Trenkenschuh, E., and Friess, W. Freeze-drying of nanoparticles: How to overcome colloidal instability by formulation and process optimization. European Journal of Pharmaceutics and Biopharmaceutics, 2021.165: 345-360.
3.	Mitrović, J.R., et al. Overcoming the low oral bioavailability of deuterated pyrazoloquinolinone ligand DK-I-60-3 by nanonization: A knowledge-based approach. Pharmaceutics, 2021. 13(8): 1188.
4.	Kumar, S., et al. Sugars as bulking agents to prevent nano-crystal aggregation during spray or freeze-drying. International journal of pharmaceutics, 2014. 471(1-2): 303-311.
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
This research was supported by the Science Fund of the Republic of Serbia, grant No. 7749108, project Neuroimmune aspects of mood, anxiety and cognitive effects of leads/drug candidates acting at GABAA and/or sigma-2 receptors: In vitro/in vivo delineation by nano- and hiPSC-based platforms-NanoCellEmoCog.",
journal = "9th BBBB International conference on pharmaceutical sciences; 15th - 17th September, Ljubljana, Slovenia",
title = "Freeze-dried nanocrystal dispersion of novel deuterated pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (DK-I-56-1): process parameters and cryoprotectant selection through stability study",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_4270"
}
Mitrović, J., Bjelošević, M., Knutson, D. E., Kremenović, A., Lunter, D., Ahlin Grabnar, P., Cook, J. M., Savić, M.,& Savić, S.. (2022). Freeze-dried nanocrystal dispersion of novel deuterated pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (DK-I-56-1): process parameters and cryoprotectant selection through stability study. in 9th BBBB International conference on pharmaceutical sciences; 15th - 17th September, Ljubljana, Slovenia.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_4270
Mitrović J, Bjelošević M, Knutson DE, Kremenović A, Lunter D, Ahlin Grabnar P, Cook JM, Savić M, Savić S. Freeze-dried nanocrystal dispersion of novel deuterated pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (DK-I-56-1): process parameters and cryoprotectant selection through stability study. in 9th BBBB International conference on pharmaceutical sciences; 15th - 17th September, Ljubljana, Slovenia. 2022;.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_4270 .
Mitrović, Jelena, Bjelošević, Maja, Knutson, Daniel E., Kremenović, Aleksandar, Lunter, Dominique, Ahlin Grabnar, Pegi, Cook, James M., Savić, Miroslav, Savić, Snežana, "Freeze-dried nanocrystal dispersion of novel deuterated pyrazoloquinolinone ligand (DK-I-56-1): process parameters and cryoprotectant selection through stability study" in 9th BBBB International conference on pharmaceutical sciences; 15th - 17th September, Ljubljana, Slovenia (2022),
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_4270 .

Behavioural interaction of pyrazoloquinolinone positive allosteric modulators at α6GABAA receptors and diazepam in rats: Anti-diazepam-induced ataxia action as a structure-dependent feature

Divović-Matović, Branka; Knutson, Dan; Mitrović, Jelena; Stevanović, Vladimir; Stanojević, Boban; Savić, Snežana; Cook, James; Savić, Miroslav

(John Wiley and Sons Inc, 2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Divović-Matović, Branka
AU  - Knutson, Dan
AU  - Mitrović, Jelena
AU  - Stevanović, Vladimir
AU  - Stanojević, Boban
AU  - Savić, Snežana
AU  - Cook, James
AU  - Savić, Miroslav
PY  - 2022
UR  - https://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4289
AB  - Several pyrazoloquinolinone (PQ) ligands were recently discovered as func-tionally selective positive modulators at the PQ site ofα6-containing GABAAreceptors. PQs are also neutral modulators at the benzodiazepine site. Weassessed the influence of PQ compounds from three structural groups (PZ-II-029 and related deuterated analogues DK-I-56-1, RV-I-029, DK-I-60-3 and DK-I-86-1; LAU 463 and related analogues DK-I-58-1 and DK-II-58-1; and DK-I-87-1), alone and in combination with diazepam, on the behaviour of maleSprague–Dawley rats. An excellent behavioural safety profile of all tested PQswas demonstrated in the spontaneous locomotor activity, rotarod, loss of right-ing reflex and pentylenetetrazol tests. In interaction studies, only PZ-II-029and its analogues prevented the ataxic effects of the benzodiazepine, asassessed in the rotarod test and during monitoring of rat locomotor activityafter awakening from the loss of righting reflex. Published electrophysiologicalprofiles of PQ ligands imply that positive modulation elicited atα6-GABAAreceptors that contain theγ2 andδsubunit, rather than their neutral modula-tory action at the benzodiazepine site, may prevent the ataxic action of diaze-pam. Thus, PZ-II-029 and its deuterated analogues are not prone to untowardinteractions with benzodiazepines and may indeed completely abolish theirataxic action, seen at therapeutic, and especially toxic concentrations.
PB  - John Wiley and Sons Inc
T2  - Basic and Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology
T1  - Behavioural interaction of pyrazoloquinolinone positive allosteric modulators at α6GABAA receptors and diazepam in rats: Anti-diazepam-induced ataxia action as a structure-dependent feature
VL  - 131
IS  - 6
SP  - 514
EP  - 524
DO  - 10.1111/bcpt.13801
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Divović-Matović, Branka and Knutson, Dan and Mitrović, Jelena and Stevanović, Vladimir and Stanojević, Boban and Savić, Snežana and Cook, James and Savić, Miroslav",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Several pyrazoloquinolinone (PQ) ligands were recently discovered as func-tionally selective positive modulators at the PQ site ofα6-containing GABAAreceptors. PQs are also neutral modulators at the benzodiazepine site. Weassessed the influence of PQ compounds from three structural groups (PZ-II-029 and related deuterated analogues DK-I-56-1, RV-I-029, DK-I-60-3 and DK-I-86-1; LAU 463 and related analogues DK-I-58-1 and DK-II-58-1; and DK-I-87-1), alone and in combination with diazepam, on the behaviour of maleSprague–Dawley rats. An excellent behavioural safety profile of all tested PQswas demonstrated in the spontaneous locomotor activity, rotarod, loss of right-ing reflex and pentylenetetrazol tests. In interaction studies, only PZ-II-029and its analogues prevented the ataxic effects of the benzodiazepine, asassessed in the rotarod test and during monitoring of rat locomotor activityafter awakening from the loss of righting reflex. Published electrophysiologicalprofiles of PQ ligands imply that positive modulation elicited atα6-GABAAreceptors that contain theγ2 andδsubunit, rather than their neutral modula-tory action at the benzodiazepine site, may prevent the ataxic action of diaze-pam. Thus, PZ-II-029 and its deuterated analogues are not prone to untowardinteractions with benzodiazepines and may indeed completely abolish theirataxic action, seen at therapeutic, and especially toxic concentrations.",
publisher = "John Wiley and Sons Inc",
journal = "Basic and Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology",
title = "Behavioural interaction of pyrazoloquinolinone positive allosteric modulators at α6GABAA receptors and diazepam in rats: Anti-diazepam-induced ataxia action as a structure-dependent feature",
volume = "131",
number = "6",
pages = "514-524",
doi = "10.1111/bcpt.13801"
}
Divović-Matović, B., Knutson, D., Mitrović, J., Stevanović, V., Stanojević, B., Savić, S., Cook, J.,& Savić, M.. (2022). Behavioural interaction of pyrazoloquinolinone positive allosteric modulators at α6GABAA receptors and diazepam in rats: Anti-diazepam-induced ataxia action as a structure-dependent feature. in Basic and Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology
John Wiley and Sons Inc., 131(6), 514-524.
https://doi.org/10.1111/bcpt.13801
Divović-Matović B, Knutson D, Mitrović J, Stevanović V, Stanojević B, Savić S, Cook J, Savić M. Behavioural interaction of pyrazoloquinolinone positive allosteric modulators at α6GABAA receptors and diazepam in rats: Anti-diazepam-induced ataxia action as a structure-dependent feature. in Basic and Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology. 2022;131(6):514-524.
doi:10.1111/bcpt.13801 .
Divović-Matović, Branka, Knutson, Dan, Mitrović, Jelena, Stevanović, Vladimir, Stanojević, Boban, Savić, Snežana, Cook, James, Savić, Miroslav, "Behavioural interaction of pyrazoloquinolinone positive allosteric modulators at α6GABAA receptors and diazepam in rats: Anti-diazepam-induced ataxia action as a structure-dependent feature" in Basic and Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology, 131, no. 6 (2022):514-524,
https://doi.org/10.1111/bcpt.13801 . .
3
3

Investigation of albumin adsorption on DK-I-56-1 nanocrystals by dynamic light scattering

Mitrović, Jelena; Knutson, Daniel; Nikolić, Ines; Cook, James; Savić, Miroslav; Savić, Snežana

(2022)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Mitrović, Jelena
AU  - Knutson, Daniel
AU  - Nikolić, Ines
AU  - Cook, James
AU  - Savić, Miroslav
AU  - Savić, Snežana
PY  - 2022
UR  - https://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4285
AB  - After parenteral administration, nanoparticles interact with different proteins,
forming a shell called corona, which further influence nanoparticles’ biodistribution. Protein
adsorption is affected by particle size and shape, but also by molecular interactions of
chemical groups from the particle surface and amino-acid residues of the proteins. In human
plasma, albumin is the most abundant protein so it is frequently used for the investigation of
protein-nanoparticle interactions (1). In this study we investigated the attachment of bovine
serum albumin (BSA) to recently developed nanocrystals (2) of DK-I-56-1 (7-methoxy-2-
(4-methoxy-d3-phenyl)-2,5-dihydro-3H-pyrazolo[4,3-c]quinolin-3-one), stabilized by
polysorbate 80 (NS2) or the combination of polysorbate 80 and poloxamer 407 (NS4).
Nanocrystal dispersion was incubated in medium containing 0.1% or 1% BSA in phosphate
buffer saline (pH 7,4) at 37 °C for 1 h. Particle size analysis was conducted by dynamic light
scattering in 10 min interval, at 37 °C on Zetasizer ZS90 (Malvern Instruments Ltd.,
Worcestershire, UK). It was shown that albumin adsorption was influenced by the
nanocrystal formulation and albumin concentration, but not incubation time. In a medium
with 0.1% BSA, no particle size difference was noticed in either formulation. However, in
case of NS2, after the addition of 1% albumin, particle size and particle size distribution
increased, which indicated albumin binding. On the other hand, in formulation NS4, with
higher albumin concentration two peaks were visible, one from the free albumin, and one
from nanocrystal particles. Therefore, it could be concluded that the affinity of albumin was
influenced mainly by the interaction with the nanocrystal stabilizers.
C3  - 8. Kongres farmaceuta Srbije; 12.-15. oktobar, Beograd, Srbija
T1  - Investigation of albumin adsorption on DK-I-56-1 nanocrystals by dynamic light scattering
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_4285
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Mitrović, Jelena and Knutson, Daniel and Nikolić, Ines and Cook, James and Savić, Miroslav and Savić, Snežana",
year = "2022",
abstract = "After parenteral administration, nanoparticles interact with different proteins,
forming a shell called corona, which further influence nanoparticles’ biodistribution. Protein
adsorption is affected by particle size and shape, but also by molecular interactions of
chemical groups from the particle surface and amino-acid residues of the proteins. In human
plasma, albumin is the most abundant protein so it is frequently used for the investigation of
protein-nanoparticle interactions (1). In this study we investigated the attachment of bovine
serum albumin (BSA) to recently developed nanocrystals (2) of DK-I-56-1 (7-methoxy-2-
(4-methoxy-d3-phenyl)-2,5-dihydro-3H-pyrazolo[4,3-c]quinolin-3-one), stabilized by
polysorbate 80 (NS2) or the combination of polysorbate 80 and poloxamer 407 (NS4).
Nanocrystal dispersion was incubated in medium containing 0.1% or 1% BSA in phosphate
buffer saline (pH 7,4) at 37 °C for 1 h. Particle size analysis was conducted by dynamic light
scattering in 10 min interval, at 37 °C on Zetasizer ZS90 (Malvern Instruments Ltd.,
Worcestershire, UK). It was shown that albumin adsorption was influenced by the
nanocrystal formulation and albumin concentration, but not incubation time. In a medium
with 0.1% BSA, no particle size difference was noticed in either formulation. However, in
case of NS2, after the addition of 1% albumin, particle size and particle size distribution
increased, which indicated albumin binding. On the other hand, in formulation NS4, with
higher albumin concentration two peaks were visible, one from the free albumin, and one
from nanocrystal particles. Therefore, it could be concluded that the affinity of albumin was
influenced mainly by the interaction with the nanocrystal stabilizers.",
journal = "8. Kongres farmaceuta Srbije; 12.-15. oktobar, Beograd, Srbija",
title = "Investigation of albumin adsorption on DK-I-56-1 nanocrystals by dynamic light scattering",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_4285"
}
Mitrović, J., Knutson, D., Nikolić, I., Cook, J., Savić, M.,& Savić, S.. (2022). Investigation of albumin adsorption on DK-I-56-1 nanocrystals by dynamic light scattering. in 8. Kongres farmaceuta Srbije; 12.-15. oktobar, Beograd, Srbija.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_4285
Mitrović J, Knutson D, Nikolić I, Cook J, Savić M, Savić S. Investigation of albumin adsorption on DK-I-56-1 nanocrystals by dynamic light scattering. in 8. Kongres farmaceuta Srbije; 12.-15. oktobar, Beograd, Srbija. 2022;.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_4285 .
Mitrović, Jelena, Knutson, Daniel, Nikolić, Ines, Cook, James, Savić, Miroslav, Savić, Snežana, "Investigation of albumin adsorption on DK-I-56-1 nanocrystals by dynamic light scattering" in 8. Kongres farmaceuta Srbije; 12.-15. oktobar, Beograd, Srbija (2022),
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_4285 .

Effects of α5 GABAA receptor modulation on social interaction, memory, and neuroinflammation in a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease

Aranđelović, Jovana; Santrač, Anja; Batinić, Bojan; Todorović, Lidija; Stevanović, Vladimir; Tiruveedhula, Veera Venkata Naga Phani Babu; Sharmin, Dishary; Rashid, Farjana; Stanojević, Boban; Cook, James; Savić, Miroslav

(John Wiley and Sons Inc, 2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Aranđelović, Jovana
AU  - Santrač, Anja
AU  - Batinić, Bojan
AU  - Todorović, Lidija
AU  - Stevanović, Vladimir
AU  - Tiruveedhula, Veera Venkata Naga Phani Babu
AU  - Sharmin, Dishary
AU  - Rashid, Farjana
AU  - Stanojević, Boban
AU  - Cook, James
AU  - Savić, Miroslav
PY  - 2022
UR  - https://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4203
AB  - Aims: GABAergic modulation involved in cognitive processing appears to be substan- tially changed in Alzheimer's disease (AD). In a widely used 5xFAD model of AD, we aimed to assess if negative and positive allosteric modulators of α5 GABA A receptors (NAM and PAM, respectively) would affect social interaction, social, object and spatial memory, and neuroinflammation. Methods: After 10-day treatment with PAM, NAM, or solvent, 6-month-old trans- genic and non-transgenic 5xFAD mice underwent testing in a behavioral battery. Gene expressions of IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α, GFAP, and IBA-1 were determined in hippocampus and prefrontal cortex by qPCR. Results: PAM treatment impaired spatial learning in transgenic females compared to solvent-treated transgenic females, and social recognition in transgenic and non- transgenic males. NAM treatment declined social interaction in transgenic and non- transgenic males, while had beneficial effect on cognitive flexibility in non-transgenic males compared to solvent-treated non-transgenic males. Transgenic animals have not fully displayed cognitive symptoms, but neuroinflammation was confirmed. NAM reduced proinflammatory gene expressions in transgenic females and astrogliosis in transgenic males compared to pathological controls. Conclusion: PAM and NAM failed to exert favorable behavioral effects in transgenic animals. Suppression of neuroinflammation obtained with NAM calls for more studies with GABAergic ligands in amyloid beta- and/or tau-dependent models with promi- nent neuroinflammation.
PB  - John Wiley and Sons Inc
T2  - CNS Neuroscience & Therapeutics
T1  - Effects of α5 GABAA receptor modulation on social interaction, memory, and neuroinflammation in a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease
VL  - 28
IS  - 11
SP  - 1767
EP  - 1778
DO  - 10.1111/cns.13914
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Aranđelović, Jovana and Santrač, Anja and Batinić, Bojan and Todorović, Lidija and Stevanović, Vladimir and Tiruveedhula, Veera Venkata Naga Phani Babu and Sharmin, Dishary and Rashid, Farjana and Stanojević, Boban and Cook, James and Savić, Miroslav",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Aims: GABAergic modulation involved in cognitive processing appears to be substan- tially changed in Alzheimer's disease (AD). In a widely used 5xFAD model of AD, we aimed to assess if negative and positive allosteric modulators of α5 GABA A receptors (NAM and PAM, respectively) would affect social interaction, social, object and spatial memory, and neuroinflammation. Methods: After 10-day treatment with PAM, NAM, or solvent, 6-month-old trans- genic and non-transgenic 5xFAD mice underwent testing in a behavioral battery. Gene expressions of IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α, GFAP, and IBA-1 were determined in hippocampus and prefrontal cortex by qPCR. Results: PAM treatment impaired spatial learning in transgenic females compared to solvent-treated transgenic females, and social recognition in transgenic and non- transgenic males. NAM treatment declined social interaction in transgenic and non- transgenic males, while had beneficial effect on cognitive flexibility in non-transgenic males compared to solvent-treated non-transgenic males. Transgenic animals have not fully displayed cognitive symptoms, but neuroinflammation was confirmed. NAM reduced proinflammatory gene expressions in transgenic females and astrogliosis in transgenic males compared to pathological controls. Conclusion: PAM and NAM failed to exert favorable behavioral effects in transgenic animals. Suppression of neuroinflammation obtained with NAM calls for more studies with GABAergic ligands in amyloid beta- and/or tau-dependent models with promi- nent neuroinflammation.",
publisher = "John Wiley and Sons Inc",
journal = "CNS Neuroscience & Therapeutics",
title = "Effects of α5 GABAA receptor modulation on social interaction, memory, and neuroinflammation in a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease",
volume = "28",
number = "11",
pages = "1767-1778",
doi = "10.1111/cns.13914"
}
Aranđelović, J., Santrač, A., Batinić, B., Todorović, L., Stevanović, V., Tiruveedhula, V. V. N. P. B., Sharmin, D., Rashid, F., Stanojević, B., Cook, J.,& Savić, M.. (2022). Effects of α5 GABAA receptor modulation on social interaction, memory, and neuroinflammation in a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease. in CNS Neuroscience & Therapeutics
John Wiley and Sons Inc., 28(11), 1767-1778.
https://doi.org/10.1111/cns.13914
Aranđelović J, Santrač A, Batinić B, Todorović L, Stevanović V, Tiruveedhula VVNPB, Sharmin D, Rashid F, Stanojević B, Cook J, Savić M. Effects of α5 GABAA receptor modulation on social interaction, memory, and neuroinflammation in a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease. in CNS Neuroscience & Therapeutics. 2022;28(11):1767-1778.
doi:10.1111/cns.13914 .
Aranđelović, Jovana, Santrač, Anja, Batinić, Bojan, Todorović, Lidija, Stevanović, Vladimir, Tiruveedhula, Veera Venkata Naga Phani Babu, Sharmin, Dishary, Rashid, Farjana, Stanojević, Boban, Cook, James, Savić, Miroslav, "Effects of α5 GABAA receptor modulation on social interaction, memory, and neuroinflammation in a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease" in CNS Neuroscience & Therapeutics, 28, no. 11 (2022):1767-1778,
https://doi.org/10.1111/cns.13914 . .
10
3
3

Physicochemical/structural investigation of lipid nanoparticles with high lecithin amounts loaded with patent protected pyrazoloquinolinone ligand DK-I-60-3

Mitrović, Jelena; Petković, Miloš; Ranđelović, Danijela; Đoković, Jelena; Knutson, Daniel; Cook, James; Savić, Vladimir; Savić, Miroslav; Savić, Snežana

(2022)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Mitrović, Jelena
AU  - Petković, Miloš
AU  - Ranđelović, Danijela
AU  - Đoković, Jelena
AU  - Knutson, Daniel
AU  - Cook, James
AU  - Savić, Vladimir
AU  - Savić, Miroslav
AU  - Savić, Snežana
PY  - 2022
UR  - https://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4097
AB  - Lipid nanoparticles are being intensively investigated for
the formulation of the drugs with poor solubility substances
(1). They represent colloid dispersions of the particles with
lipid matrix that is solid at room and body temperature.
Because of the low capacity of triglycerides for the drug
substances incorporation, alternatively, high amounts of
lecithin could be added to increase the solubilization (2).
This was used for the incorporation of DK-I-60-3 (7-
methoxy-d3-2-(4-methoxyd3-phenyl)-2,5-dihydro-
3Hpyrazolo[4,3-c]quinolin-3-one), novel deuterated
pyrazoloquinolinone ligand, with very low solubility in
water as well as in oils (3,4). However, because of
amphiphilic nature of lecithin, its localization within
nanoparticles should be analyzed, especially with respect
to stability, drug loading capacity and drug localization,
because it may additionally influence the drug release
mechanism (2).
C3  - 13th World meeting on pharmaceutics, biopharmaceutics and pharmaceutical technology, 28-31 March 2022, Rotterdam, Netherlands
T1  - Physicochemical/structural investigation of lipid nanoparticles with high lecithin amounts loaded with patent protected pyrazoloquinolinone ligand DK-I-60-3
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_4097
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Mitrović, Jelena and Petković, Miloš and Ranđelović, Danijela and Đoković, Jelena and Knutson, Daniel and Cook, James and Savić, Vladimir and Savić, Miroslav and Savić, Snežana",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Lipid nanoparticles are being intensively investigated for
the formulation of the drugs with poor solubility substances
(1). They represent colloid dispersions of the particles with
lipid matrix that is solid at room and body temperature.
Because of the low capacity of triglycerides for the drug
substances incorporation, alternatively, high amounts of
lecithin could be added to increase the solubilization (2).
This was used for the incorporation of DK-I-60-3 (7-
methoxy-d3-2-(4-methoxyd3-phenyl)-2,5-dihydro-
3Hpyrazolo[4,3-c]quinolin-3-one), novel deuterated
pyrazoloquinolinone ligand, with very low solubility in
water as well as in oils (3,4). However, because of
amphiphilic nature of lecithin, its localization within
nanoparticles should be analyzed, especially with respect
to stability, drug loading capacity and drug localization,
because it may additionally influence the drug release
mechanism (2).",
journal = "13th World meeting on pharmaceutics, biopharmaceutics and pharmaceutical technology, 28-31 March 2022, Rotterdam, Netherlands",
title = "Physicochemical/structural investigation of lipid nanoparticles with high lecithin amounts loaded with patent protected pyrazoloquinolinone ligand DK-I-60-3",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_4097"
}
Mitrović, J., Petković, M., Ranđelović, D., Đoković, J., Knutson, D., Cook, J., Savić, V., Savić, M.,& Savić, S.. (2022). Physicochemical/structural investigation of lipid nanoparticles with high lecithin amounts loaded with patent protected pyrazoloquinolinone ligand DK-I-60-3. in 13th World meeting on pharmaceutics, biopharmaceutics and pharmaceutical technology, 28-31 March 2022, Rotterdam, Netherlands.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_4097
Mitrović J, Petković M, Ranđelović D, Đoković J, Knutson D, Cook J, Savić V, Savić M, Savić S. Physicochemical/structural investigation of lipid nanoparticles with high lecithin amounts loaded with patent protected pyrazoloquinolinone ligand DK-I-60-3. in 13th World meeting on pharmaceutics, biopharmaceutics and pharmaceutical technology, 28-31 March 2022, Rotterdam, Netherlands. 2022;.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_4097 .
Mitrović, Jelena, Petković, Miloš, Ranđelović, Danijela, Đoković, Jelena, Knutson, Daniel, Cook, James, Savić, Vladimir, Savić, Miroslav, Savić, Snežana, "Physicochemical/structural investigation of lipid nanoparticles with high lecithin amounts loaded with patent protected pyrazoloquinolinone ligand DK-I-60-3" in 13th World meeting on pharmaceutics, biopharmaceutics and pharmaceutical technology, 28-31 March 2022, Rotterdam, Netherlands (2022),
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_farfar_4097 .

Postweaning positive modulation of α5GABAA receptors improves autism-like features in prenatal valproate rat model in a sex-specific manner

Santrač, Anja; Bijelić, Dunja; Stevanović, Vladimir; Banićević, Marija; Aranđelović, Jovana; Batinić, Bojan; Sharmin, Dishary; Cook, James; Savić, Miroslav

(John Wiley and Sons Inc, 2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Santrač, Anja
AU  - Bijelić, Dunja
AU  - Stevanović, Vladimir
AU  - Banićević, Marija
AU  - Aranđelović, Jovana
AU  - Batinić, Bojan
AU  - Sharmin, Dishary
AU  - Cook, James
AU  - Savić, Miroslav
PY  - 2022
UR  - https://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4071
AB  - Autism spectrum disorder (ASD), as a common neurodevelopmental disorder that encompasses impairments in social communication and interaction, as well as repetitive and restrictive behavior, still awaits an effective treatment strategy. The involvement of GABAergic neurotransmission, and especially a deficit of GABA A receptors that contain the α5 subunits, were implicated in pathogenesis of ASD. Therefore, we tested MP-III-022, a positive allosteric modulator (PAM) selective for α5GABAA receptors, in Wistar rats prenatally exposed to valproic acid, as an animal model useful for studying ASD. Postweaning rats of both sexes were treated for 7 days with vehicle or MP-III-022 at two doses pharmacokinetically determined as selective, and thereafter tested in a behavioral battery (social interaction test, elevated plus maze, spontaneous locomotor activ- ity, and standard and reverse Morris water maze). Additional rats were used for establishing a primary neuronal culture and performing calcium imaging, and determination of hippocampal mRNA levels of GABRA5, NKCC1, and KCC2. MP-III-022 prevented impairments in many parameters connected with social, repetitive and restrictive behavioral domains. The lower and higher dose was more effective in males and females, respectively. Intriguingly, MP-III-022 elicited certain changes in control animals similar to those manifested in valproate ani- mals themselves. Behavioral results were mirrored in GABA switch and spontane- ous neuronal activity, assessed with calcium imaging, and also in expression changes of three genes analyzed. Our data support a role of α5GABAA receptors in pathophysiology of ASD, and suggest a potential application of selective PAMs in its treatment, that needs to be researched in a sex-specific manner.
PB  - John Wiley and Sons Inc
T2  - Autism Research
T1  - Postweaning positive modulation of α5GABAA receptors improves autism-like features in prenatal valproate rat model in a sex-specific manner
DO  - 10.1002/aur.2699
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Santrač, Anja and Bijelić, Dunja and Stevanović, Vladimir and Banićević, Marija and Aranđelović, Jovana and Batinić, Bojan and Sharmin, Dishary and Cook, James and Savić, Miroslav",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Autism spectrum disorder (ASD), as a common neurodevelopmental disorder that encompasses impairments in social communication and interaction, as well as repetitive and restrictive behavior, still awaits an effective treatment strategy. The involvement of GABAergic neurotransmission, and especially a deficit of GABA A receptors that contain the α5 subunits, were implicated in pathogenesis of ASD. Therefore, we tested MP-III-022, a positive allosteric modulator (PAM) selective for α5GABAA receptors, in Wistar rats prenatally exposed to valproic acid, as an animal model useful for studying ASD. Postweaning rats of both sexes were treated for 7 days with vehicle or MP-III-022 at two doses pharmacokinetically determined as selective, and thereafter tested in a behavioral battery (social interaction test, elevated plus maze, spontaneous locomotor activ- ity, and standard and reverse Morris water maze). Additional rats were used for establishing a primary neuronal culture and performing calcium imaging, and determination of hippocampal mRNA levels of GABRA5, NKCC1, and KCC2. MP-III-022 prevented impairments in many parameters connected with social, repetitive and restrictive behavioral domains. The lower and higher dose was more effective in males and females, respectively. Intriguingly, MP-III-022 elicited certain changes in control animals similar to those manifested in valproate ani- mals themselves. Behavioral results were mirrored in GABA switch and spontane- ous neuronal activity, assessed with calcium imaging, and also in expression changes of three genes analyzed. Our data support a role of α5GABAA receptors in pathophysiology of ASD, and suggest a potential application of selective PAMs in its treatment, that needs to be researched in a sex-specific manner.",
publisher = "John Wiley and Sons Inc",
journal = "Autism Research",
title = "Postweaning positive modulation of α5GABAA receptors improves autism-like features in prenatal valproate rat model in a sex-specific manner",
doi = "10.1002/aur.2699"
}
Santrač, A., Bijelić, D., Stevanović, V., Banićević, M., Aranđelović, J., Batinić, B., Sharmin, D., Cook, J.,& Savić, M.. (2022). Postweaning positive modulation of α5GABAA receptors improves autism-like features in prenatal valproate rat model in a sex-specific manner. in Autism Research
John Wiley and Sons Inc..
https://doi.org/10.1002/aur.2699
Santrač A, Bijelić D, Stevanović V, Banićević M, Aranđelović J, Batinić B, Sharmin D, Cook J, Savić M. Postweaning positive modulation of α5GABAA receptors improves autism-like features in prenatal valproate rat model in a sex-specific manner. in Autism Research. 2022;.
doi:10.1002/aur.2699 .
Santrač, Anja, Bijelić, Dunja, Stevanović, Vladimir, Banićević, Marija, Aranđelović, Jovana, Batinić, Bojan, Sharmin, Dishary, Cook, James, Savić, Miroslav, "Postweaning positive modulation of α5GABAA receptors improves autism-like features in prenatal valproate rat model in a sex-specific manner" in Autism Research (2022),
https://doi.org/10.1002/aur.2699 . .
1
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4

Positive modulation of α5GABAA receptors leads to dichotomous effects in rats on memory pattern and GABRA5 expression in prefrontal cortex and hippocampus

Santrač, Anja; Batinić, Bojan; Timić-Stamenić, Tamara; Aranđelović, Jovana; Sharmin, Dishary; Knutson, Daniel E.; Cook, James; Savić, Miroslav

(Elsevier B.V., 2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Santrač, Anja
AU  - Batinić, Bojan
AU  - Timić-Stamenić, Tamara
AU  - Aranđelović, Jovana
AU  - Sharmin, Dishary
AU  - Knutson, Daniel E.
AU  - Cook, James
AU  - Savić, Miroslav
PY  - 2022
UR  - https://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3968
AB  - Positive allosteric modulators (PAMs) of α5GABAA receptors (α5GABAARs) are emerging as potential therapeutics for a range of neuropsychiatric disorders. However, their role in memory processing of healthy animals is not sufficiently examined. We tested the effects of MP-III-022 (1 mg/kg, 2.5 mg/kg and 10 mg/kg), a PAM known to be selective for α5GABAARs and devoid of prominent side-effects, in different behavioral paradigms (Morris water maze, novel object recognition test and social novelty discrimination) and on GABRA5 expression in Wistar rats, 30 min and 24 h after intraperitoneal treatment administration. The lowest dose tested worsened short-term object memory. The same dose, administered two times in a span of 24 h, improved spatial and impaired object and, at a trend level, social memory. The highest dose had a detrimental effect on all types of long-term memory (object memory at a trend level) and short-term spatial memory, but improved short-term object and social memory. Distinct sets of expression changes were detected in both prefrontal cortex and two regions of the hippocampus, but the latter ones could be assessed as more consequential. An increase of GABRA5 mRNA in CA2 occurred in parallel with improvement of object and social, but impairment of spatial memory, while the opposite happened with a trend level change in CA1. Our study demonstrates the variability of the roles of the α5GABAAR based on its level of expression and localization, in dependence on the type and protocol of cognitive tasks, as well as the respective timing of pharmacological modulation and testing.
PB  - Elsevier B.V.
T2  - Behavioural Brain Research
T1  - Positive modulation of α5GABAA receptors leads to dichotomous effects in rats on memory pattern and GABRA5 expression in prefrontal cortex and hippocampus
VL  - 416
DO  - 10.1016/j.bbr.2021.113578
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Santrač, Anja and Batinić, Bojan and Timić-Stamenić, Tamara and Aranđelović, Jovana and Sharmin, Dishary and Knutson, Daniel E. and Cook, James and Savić, Miroslav",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Positive allosteric modulators (PAMs) of α5GABAA receptors (α5GABAARs) are emerging as potential therapeutics for a range of neuropsychiatric disorders. However, their role in memory processing of healthy animals is not sufficiently examined. We tested the effects of MP-III-022 (1 mg/kg, 2.5 mg/kg and 10 mg/kg), a PAM known to be selective for α5GABAARs and devoid of prominent side-effects, in different behavioral paradigms (Morris water maze, novel object recognition test and social novelty discrimination) and on GABRA5 expression in Wistar rats, 30 min and 24 h after intraperitoneal treatment administration. The lowest dose tested worsened short-term object memory. The same dose, administered two times in a span of 24 h, improved spatial and impaired object and, at a trend level, social memory. The highest dose had a detrimental effect on all types of long-term memory (object memory at a trend level) and short-term spatial memory, but improved short-term object and social memory. Distinct sets of expression changes were detected in both prefrontal cortex and two regions of the hippocampus, but the latter ones could be assessed as more consequential. An increase of GABRA5 mRNA in CA2 occurred in parallel with improvement of object and social, but impairment of spatial memory, while the opposite happened with a trend level change in CA1. Our study demonstrates the variability of the roles of the α5GABAAR based on its level of expression and localization, in dependence on the type and protocol of cognitive tasks, as well as the respective timing of pharmacological modulation and testing.",
publisher = "Elsevier B.V.",
journal = "Behavioural Brain Research",
title = "Positive modulation of α5GABAA receptors leads to dichotomous effects in rats on memory pattern and GABRA5 expression in prefrontal cortex and hippocampus",
volume = "416",
doi = "10.1016/j.bbr.2021.113578"
}
Santrač, A., Batinić, B., Timić-Stamenić, T., Aranđelović, J., Sharmin, D., Knutson, D. E., Cook, J.,& Savić, M.. (2022). Positive modulation of α5GABAA receptors leads to dichotomous effects in rats on memory pattern and GABRA5 expression in prefrontal cortex and hippocampus. in Behavioural Brain Research
Elsevier B.V.., 416.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbr.2021.113578
Santrač A, Batinić B, Timić-Stamenić T, Aranđelović J, Sharmin D, Knutson DE, Cook J, Savić M. Positive modulation of α5GABAA receptors leads to dichotomous effects in rats on memory pattern and GABRA5 expression in prefrontal cortex and hippocampus. in Behavioural Brain Research. 2022;416.
doi:10.1016/j.bbr.2021.113578 .
Santrač, Anja, Batinić, Bojan, Timić-Stamenić, Tamara, Aranđelović, Jovana, Sharmin, Dishary, Knutson, Daniel E., Cook, James, Savić, Miroslav, "Positive modulation of α5GABAA receptors leads to dichotomous effects in rats on memory pattern and GABRA5 expression in prefrontal cortex and hippocampus" in Behavioural Brain Research, 416 (2022),
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbr.2021.113578 . .
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Vasodilatory effects of a variety of positive allosteric modulators of GABAA receptors on rat thoracic aorta

Gajić Bojić, Milica; Todorović, Lidija; Santrač, Anja; Mian, Md Yeunus; Sharmin, Dishary; Cook, James M.; Savić, Miroslav

(Elsevier B.V., 2021)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Gajić Bojić, Milica
AU  - Todorović, Lidija
AU  - Santrač, Anja
AU  - Mian, Md Yeunus
AU  - Sharmin, Dishary
AU  - Cook, James M.
AU  - Savić, Miroslav
PY  - 2021
UR  - https://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3812
AB  - Different subtypes of GABAA (gamma-aminobutyric acid A) receptors, through their specific regional and cellular localization, are involved in the manifestation of various functions, both at the central and peripheral levels. We hypothesized that various non-neuronal GABAA receptors are expressed on blood vessels, through which positive allosteric modulators of GABAA receptors exhibit vasodilatory effects.  This study involved two parts: one to determine the presence of α1-6 subunit GABAA receptor mRNAs in the rat thoracic aorta, and the other to determine the vasoactivity of the various selective and non-selective positive GABAA receptor modulators: zolpidem (α1-selective), XHe–III–074 (α4-selective), MP–III–022 (α5-selective), DK-I-56-1 (α6-selective), SH-I-048A and diazepam (non-selective).  Reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) analysis data demonstrated for the first time the expression of α1, α2, α3, α4 and α5 subunits in the rat thoracic aorta tissue. Tissue bath assays on isolated rat aortic rings revealed significant vasodilatory effects of diazepam, SH-I-048A, XHe–III–074, MP–III–022 and DK-I-56-1, all in terms of achieved relaxations (over 50% of relative tension decrease), as well as in terms of preventive effects on phenylephrine (PE) contraction. Diazepam was the most efficient ligand in the present study, while zolpidem showed the weakest vascular effects. In addition, diazepam-induced relaxations in the presence of antagonists PK11195 or bicuculline were significantly reduced (P < 0.001 and P < 0.05, respectively) at lower concentrations of diazepam (10−7 M and 3 × 10−7 M).  The present work suggests that the observed vasoactivity is due to modulation of “vascular” GABAA receptors, which after further detailed research may provide a therapeutic target.
PB  - Elsevier B.V.
T2  - European Journal of Pharmacology
T1  - Vasodilatory effects of a variety of positive allosteric modulators of GABAA receptors on rat thoracic aorta
VL  - 899
DO  - 10.1016/j.ejphar.2021.174023
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Gajić Bojić, Milica and Todorović, Lidija and Santrač, Anja and Mian, Md Yeunus and Sharmin, Dishary and Cook, James M. and Savić, Miroslav",
year = "2021",
abstract = "Different subtypes of GABAA (gamma-aminobutyric acid A) receptors, through their specific regional and cellular localization, are involved in the manifestation of various functions, both at the central and peripheral levels. We hypothesized that various non-neuronal GABAA receptors are expressed on blood vessels, through which positive allosteric modulators of GABAA receptors exhibit vasodilatory effects.  This study involved two parts: one to determine the presence of α1-6 subunit GABAA receptor mRNAs in the rat thoracic aorta, and the other to determine the vasoactivity of the various selective and non-selective positive GABAA receptor modulators: zolpidem (α1-selective), XHe–III–074 (α4-selective), MP–III–022 (α5-selective), DK-I-56-1 (α6-selective), SH-I-048A and diazepam (non-selective).  Reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) analysis data demonstrated for the first time the expression of α1, α2, α3, α4 and α5 subunits in the rat thoracic aorta tissue. Tissue bath assays on isolated rat aortic rings revealed significant vasodilatory effects of diazepam, SH-I-048A, XHe–III–074, MP–III–022 and DK-I-56-1, all in terms of achieved relaxations (over 50% of relative tension decrease), as well as in terms of preventive effects on phenylephrine (PE) contraction. Diazepam was the most efficient ligand in the present study, while zolpidem showed the weakest vascular effects. In addition, diazepam-induced relaxations in the presence of antagonists PK11195 or bicuculline were significantly reduced (P < 0.001 and P < 0.05, respectively) at lower concentrations of diazepam (10−7 M and 3 × 10−7 M).  The present work suggests that the observed vasoactivity is due to modulation of “vascular” GABAA receptors, which after further detailed research may provide a therapeutic target.",
publisher = "Elsevier B.V.",
journal = "European Journal of Pharmacology",
title = "Vasodilatory effects of a variety of positive allosteric modulators of GABAA receptors on rat thoracic aorta",
volume = "899",
doi = "10.1016/j.ejphar.2021.174023"
}
Gajić Bojić, M., Todorović, L., Santrač, A., Mian, M. Y., Sharmin, D., Cook, J. M.,& Savić, M.. (2021). Vasodilatory effects of a variety of positive allosteric modulators of GABAA receptors on rat thoracic aorta. in European Journal of Pharmacology
Elsevier B.V.., 899.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejphar.2021.174023
Gajić Bojić M, Todorović L, Santrač A, Mian MY, Sharmin D, Cook JM, Savić M. Vasodilatory effects of a variety of positive allosteric modulators of GABAA receptors on rat thoracic aorta. in European Journal of Pharmacology. 2021;899.
doi:10.1016/j.ejphar.2021.174023 .
Gajić Bojić, Milica, Todorović, Lidija, Santrač, Anja, Mian, Md Yeunus, Sharmin, Dishary, Cook, James M., Savić, Miroslav, "Vasodilatory effects of a variety of positive allosteric modulators of GABAA receptors on rat thoracic aorta" in European Journal of Pharmacology, 899 (2021),
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejphar.2021.174023 . .
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