Jennifer Oler
Eli Lilly and Company
3 Papers
70 Citations
Jennifer Oler is an academic researcher from Eli Lilly and Company. The author has contributed to research in topics: Drug repositioning & Classical pharmacology. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 3 publications.
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Papers
Open Innovation for Phenotypic Drug Discovery The PD2 Assay Panel
Jonathan A. Lee,Shaoyou Chu,Francis S. Willard,Karen Leigh Cox,Rachelle J. Sells Galvin,Robert B. Peery,Sarah E. Oliver,Jennifer Oler,Tamika D. Meredith,Steven A. Heidler,Wendy H. Gough,Saba Husain,Alan David Palkowitz,Christopher M. Moxham +13 more
TL;DR: Screening results for the first 4691 compounds submitted to PD2 have confirmed hit rates from 1.6% to 10%, with the majority of active compounds exhibiting acceptable potency and selectivity, indicating that chemical diversity from open source collaborations complements internal sources.
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Novel Phenotypic Outcomes Identified for a Public Collection of Approved Drugs from a Publicly Accessible Panel of Assays
Jonathan A. Lee,Paul Shinn,Susan Jaken,Sarah E. Oliver,Francis S. Willard,Steven A. Heidler,Robert B. Peery,Jennifer Oler,Shaoyou Chu,Noel Southall,Thomas S. Dexheimer,Jeffrey K. Smallwood,Ruili Huang,Rajarshi Guha,Ajit Jadhav,Karen Cox,Christopher P. Austin,Anton Simeonov,G. Sitta Sittampalam,Saba Husain,Natalie Franklin,David J. Wild,Jeremy J. Yang,Jeffrey J. Sutherland,Craig J. Thomas +24 more
TL;DR: Phenotypic outcomes for numerous drugs were confirmed, including sulfonylureas as insulin secretagogues and the anti-angiogenesis actions of multikinase inhibitors sorafenib, axitinib and pazopanib and several novel outcomes were also noted including the Wnt potentiating activities of rotenone and the antifolate class of drugs.
Niacin mediates lipolysis in adipose tissue through its G-protein coupled receptor HM74A.
Youyan Zhang,Robert J. Schmidt,Patricia S. Foxworthy,Renee Emkey,Jennifer Oler,Thomas H. Large,He Wang,Eric Wen Su,Marion K. Mosior,Patrick I. Eacho,Guoqing Cao +10 more
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that HM74A, but not HM74, binds niacin at high affinities and effectively mediates Gi signaling events in human embryonic kidney HEK293 cells as well as in 3T3L1 adipocytes expressingHM74A.