54 results on '"Sichen, Chang"'
Search Results
2. Discovery of VU6028418: A Highly Selective and Orally Bioavailable M4 Muscarinic Acetylcholine Receptor Antagonist
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Sichen Chang, Jonathan W. Dickerson, Baker Logan A, Thomas M. Bridges, Craig W. Lindsley, Darren W. Engers, Aidong Qi, Jerri M. Rook, Aaron M. Bender, P. Jeffrey Conn, Katrina A. Bollinger, Colleen M. Niswender, Changho Han, Alice L. Rodriguez, Trever R Carter, Li Peng, Julie L. Engers, Jordan C. O’Neill, Matthew Spock, and Katherine J. Watson
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Dystonia ,Movement disorders ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Antagonist ,Pharmacology ,medicine.disease ,Highly selective ,Biochemistry ,In vitro ,Bioavailability ,In vivo ,Drug Discovery ,Muscarinic acetylcholine receptor ,medicine ,medicine.symptom - Abstract
[Image: see text] Herein, we report the SAR leading to the discovery of VU6028418, a potent M(4) mAChR antagonist with high subtype-selectivity and attractive DMPK properties in vitro and in vivo across multiple species. VU6028418 was subsequently evaluated as a preclinical candidate for the treatment of dystonia and other movement disorders. During the characterization of VU6028418, a novel use of deuterium incorporation as a means to modulate CYP inhibition was also discovered.
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- 2021
- Full Text
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3. Discovery of the First Selective M4 Muscarinic Acetylcholine Receptor Antagonists with in Vivo Antiparkinsonian and Antidystonic Efficacy
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Jerri M. Rook, Aaron M. Bender, Colleen M. Niswender, Yuping Donsante, P. Jeffrey Conn, Hyekyung P. Cho, Li Peng, Julie L. Engers, Jonathan W. Dickerson, Thomas M. Bridges, Craig W. Lindsley, Ellen J. Hess, Sichen Chang, Aidong Qi, Weimin Peng, Mark S. Moehle, Jordan C. O’Neill, Daniel J. Foster, Alice L. Rodriguez, Zoey Bryant, Katherine J. Watson, and Kaylee J. Stillwell
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Pharmacology ,Dystonia ,Movement disorders ,business.industry ,Central nervous system ,medicine.disease ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Tolerability ,In vivo ,Muscarinic acetylcholine receptor ,Genetic model ,Medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Neurotransmitter - Abstract
Nonselective antagonists of muscarinic acetylcholine receptors (mAChRs) that broadly inhibit all five mAChR subtypes provide an efficacious treatment for some movement disorders, including Parkinson's disease and dystonia. Despite their efficacy in these and other central nervous system disorders, antimuscarinic therapy has limited utility due to severe adverse effects that often limit their tolerability by patients. Recent advances in understanding the roles that each mAChR subtype plays in disease pathology suggest that highly selective ligands for individual subtypes may underlie the antiparkinsonian and antidystonic efficacy observed with the use of nonselective antimuscarinic therapeutics. Our recent work has indicated that the M4 muscarinic acetylcholine receptor has several important roles in opposing aberrant neurotransmitter release, intracellular signaling pathways, and brain circuits associated with movement disorders. This raises the possibility that selective antagonists of M4 may recapitulate the efficacy of nonselective antimuscarinic therapeutics and may decrease or eliminate the adverse effects associated with these drugs. However, this has not been directly tested due to lack of selective antagonists of M4. Here, we utilize genetic mAChR knockout animals in combination with nonselective mAChR antagonists to confirm that the M4 receptor activation is required for the locomotor-stimulating and antiparkinsonian efficacy in rodent models. We also report the synthesis, discovery, and characterization of the first-in-class selective M4 antagonists VU6013720, VU6021302, and VU6021625 and confirm that these optimized compounds have antiparkinsonian and antidystonic efficacy in pharmacological and genetic models of movement disorders.
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- 2021
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- View/download PDF
4. Discovery of a potent M
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Douglas L, Orsi, Andrew S, Felts, Alice L, Rodriguez, Paige N, Vinson, Hyekyung P, Cho, Sichen, Chang, Anna L, Blobaum, Colleen M, Niswender, P Jeffrey, Conn, Carrie K, Jones, Craig W, Lindsley, and Changho, Han
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Kinetics ,Pyrrolidines ,Muscarinic Antagonists ,Amides - Abstract
This Letter describes our ongoing effort to improve the clearance of selective M
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- 2022
5. Development of
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Aaron T, Garrison, Douglas L, Orsi, Rory A, Capstick, David, Whomble, Jinming, Li, Trever R, Carter, Andrew S, Felts, Paige N, Vinson, Alice L, Rodriguez, Allie, Han, Krishma, Hajari, Hyekyung P, Cho, Laura B, Teal, Madeline G, Ragland, Masoud, Ghamari-Langroudi, Michael, Bubser, Sichen, Chang, Nathalie C, Schnetz-Boutaud, Olivier, Boutaud, Anna L, Blobaum, Daniel J, Foster, Colleen M, Niswender, P Jeffrey, Conn, Craig W, Lindsley, Carrie K, Jones, and Changho, Han
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Male ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Receptor, Muscarinic M5 ,Dopaminergic Neurons ,Receptor, Muscarinic M1 ,Animals ,Opioid-Related Disorders ,Receptors, Muscarinic ,Rats - Abstract
The muscarinic acetylcholine receptor (mAChR) subtype 5 (M
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- 2022
6. Development and profiling of mGlu
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Carson W, Reed, Alice L, Rodriguez, Jacob J, Kalbfleisch, Mabel, Seto, Matthew T, Jenkins, Anna L, Blobaum, Sichen, Chang, Craig W, Lindsley, and Colleen M, Niswender
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Allosteric Regulation ,Ligands - Abstract
We describe here a series of metabotropic glutamate receptor 7 (mGlu
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- 2022
7. Development and Profiling of mGlu 7 NAMs with a Range of in vitro Efficacies
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Carson W. Reed, Alice L. Rodriguez, Jacob J. Kalbfleisch, Mabel Seto, Matthew T. Jenkins, Anna L. Blobaum, Sichen Chang, Craig W. Lindsley, and Colleen M. Niswender
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- 2022
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8. Discovery of a potent M5 antagonist with improved clearance profile. Part 2: Pyrrolidine amide-based antagonists
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Douglas L. Orsi, Andrew S. Felts, Alice L. Rodriguez, Paige N. Vinson, Hyekyung P. Cho, Sichen Chang, Anna L. Blobaum, Colleen M. Niswender, P. Jeffrey Conn, Carrie K. Jones, Craig W. Lindsley, and Changho Han
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Organic Chemistry ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Drug Discovery ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Molecular Medicine ,Molecular Biology ,Biochemistry - Published
- 2022
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9. SAR inspired by aldehyde oxidase (AO) metabolism: Discovery of novel, CNS penetrant tricyclic M4 PAMs
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Changho Han, J. Scott Daniels, Alice L. Rodriguez, Colleen M. Niswender, Alison R. Gregro, P. Jeffrey Conn, Michael R. Wood, Craig W. Lindsley, Katrina A. Bollinger, Michael W. Wood, Mark E. Duggan, Sichen Chang, Darren W. Engers, Atin Lamsal, Ryan D. Morrison, Andrew S. Felts, Trevor C. Chopko, Nicholas J. Brandon, Nathalie Schnetz-Boutaud, Vincent B. Luscombe, Hyekyung P. Cho, Mike Poslusney, Carrie K. Jones, Donald F. Stec, Thomas M. Bridges, Michael Bubser, and Bruce J. Melancon
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,010405 organic chemistry ,Stereochemistry ,Metabolite ,Organic Chemistry ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Metabolism ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,0104 chemical sciences ,Cns penetration ,010404 medicinal & biomolecular chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,In vivo ,Drug Discovery ,Molecular Medicine ,Penetrant (biochemical) ,Molecular Biology ,Aldehyde oxidase ,Tricyclic - Abstract
This letter describes progress towards an M4 PAM preclinical candidate inspired by an unexpected aldehyde oxidase (AO) metabolite of a novel, CNS penetrant thieno[2,3-c]pyridine core to an equipotent, non-CNS penetrant thieno[2,3-c]pyrdin-7(6H)-one core. Medicinal chemistry design efforts yielded two novel tricyclic cores that enhanced M4 PAM potency, regained CNS penetration, displayed favorable DMPK properties and afforded robust in vivo efficacy in reversing amphetamine-induced hyperlocomotion in rats.
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- 2019
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10. Discovery of a potent M5 antagonist with improved clearance profile. Part 1: Piperidine amide-based antagonists
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Rory A. Capstick, David Whomble, Douglas L. Orsi, Andrew S. Felts, Alice L. Rodriguez, Paige N. Vinson, Sichen Chang, Anna L. Blobaum, Colleen M. Niswender, P. Jeffrey Conn, Carrie K. Jones, Craig W. Lindsley, and Changho Han
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Organic Chemistry ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Drug Discovery ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Molecular Medicine ,Molecular Biology ,Biochemistry - Published
- 2022
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11. Development and profiling of mGlu7 NAMs with a range of saturable inhibition of agonist responses in vitro
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Carson W. Reed, Alice L. Rodriguez, Jacob J. Kalbfleisch, Mabel Seto, Matthew T. Jenkins, Anna L. Blobaum, Sichen Chang, Craig W. Lindsley, and Colleen M. Niswender
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Organic Chemistry ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Drug Discovery ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Molecular Medicine ,Molecular Biology ,Biochemistry - Published
- 2022
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12. Synthesis and characterization of chiral 6-azaspiro[2.5]octanes as potent and selective antagonists of the M
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Aaron M, Bender, Trever R, Carter, Matthew, Spock, Alice L, Rodriguez, Jonathan W, Dickerson, Jerri M, Rook, Sichen, Chang, Aidong, Qi, Christopher C, Presley, Darren W, Engers, Joel M, Harp, Thomas M, Bridges, Colleen M, Niswender, P Jeffrey, Conn, and Craig W, Lindsley
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Structure-Activity Relationship ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Molecular Structure ,Receptor, Muscarinic M4 ,Humans ,Muscarinic Antagonists - Abstract
In this manuscript, we report a series of chiral 6-azaspiro[2.5]octanes and related spirocycles as highly potent and selective antagonists of the muscarinic acetylcholine receptor subtype 4 (mAChR
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- 2021
13. Discovery of structurally distinct tricyclic M
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Madeline F, Long, Rory A, Capstick, Paul K, Spearing, Julie L, Engers, Alison R, Gregro, Sean R, Bollinger, Sichen, Chang, Vincent B, Luscombe, Alice L, Rodriguez, Hyekyung P, Cho, Colleen M, Niswender, Thomas M, Bridges, P Jeffrey, Conn, Craig W, Lindsley, Darren W, Engers, and Kayla J, Temple
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Structure-Activity Relationship ,Pyrimidines ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Molecular Structure ,Receptor, Muscarinic M4 ,Drug Discovery ,Humans ,Article - Abstract
This Letter details our efforts to develop novel tricyclic M(4) PAM scaffolds with improved pharmacological properties. This endeavor involved a “tie-back” strategy to replace the 3-amino-4,6-dimethylthieno[2,3-b]pyridine-2-carboxamide core which lead to the discovery of two novel tricyclic cores: a 7,9-dimethylpyrido[3’,2’:4,5]thieno[3,2-d]pyrimidine core and 2,4-dimethylthieno[2,3-b:5,4-c’]dipyridine core. Both tricyclic cores displayed low nanomolar potency against the human M(4) receptor.
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- 2021
14. Lead optimization of the VU0486321 series of mGlu
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Dexter C, Davis, Joseph D, Bungard, Sichen, Chang, Alice L, Rodriguez, Annie L, Blobaum, Olivier, Boutaud, Bruce J, Melancon, Colleen M, Niswender, P, Jeffrey Conn, and Craig W, Lindsley
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Structure-Activity Relationship ,Allosteric Regulation ,Coumarins ,Receptor, Metabotropic Glutamate 5 ,Humans ,Furans ,Receptors, Metabotropic Glutamate - Abstract
Further optimization of the VU0486321 series of highly selective and CNS-penetrant mGlu
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- 2020
15. Discovery of the first selective M4muscarinic acetylcholine receptor antagonists within vivoanti-parkinsonian and anti-dystonic efficacy
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Sichen Chang, Ellen J. Hess, Jerri M. Rook, Jonathan W. Dickerson, Colleen M. Niswender, Yuping Donsante, Weimin Peng, Craig W. Lindsley, Li Peng, Julie L. Engers, Thomas M. Bridges, Mark S. Moehle, Daniel J. Foster, P. Jeffrey Conn, Aaron M. Bender, Alice L. Rodriguez, Zoey Bryant, Katherine J. Watson, and Jordan C. O’Neill
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Dystonia ,Movement disorders ,business.industry ,Central nervous system ,Pharmacology ,medicine.disease ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,In vivo ,Muscarinic acetylcholine receptor ,Genetic model ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,Receptor ,Neurotransmitter ,business - Abstract
Non-selective antagonists of muscarinic acetylcholine receptors (mAChRs) that broadly inhibit all five mAChR subtypes provide an efficacious treatment for some movement disorders, including Parkinson disease and dystonia. Despite their efficacy in these and other central nervous system disorders, anti-muscarinic therapy has limited utility due to severe adverse effects that often limit their tolerability by patients. Recent advances in understanding the roles that each mAChR subtype plays in disease pathology suggest that highly selective ligands for individual subtypes may underlie the anti-parkinsonian and anti-dystonic efficacy observed with the use of non-selective anti-muscarinic therapeutics. Our recent work has indicated that the M4muscarinic acetylcholine receptor has several important roles in opposing aberrant neurotransmitter release, intracellular signaling pathways, and brain circuits associated with movement disorders. This raises the possibility that selective antagonists of M4may recapitulate the efficacy of non-selective anti-muscarinic therapeutics and may decrease or eliminate the adverse effects associated with these drugs. However, this has not been directly tested due to lack of selective antagonists of M4. Here we utilize genetic mAChR knockout animals in combination with non-selective mAChR antagonists to confirm that the M4receptor underlies the locomotor-stimulating and anti-parkinsonian efficacy in rodent models. We also report the synthesis, discovery, and characterization of the first-in-class selective M4antagonists VU6013720, VU6021302, and VU6021625 and confirm that these optimized compounds have anti-parkinsonian and anti-dystonic efficacy in pharmacological and genetic models of movement disorders.
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- 2020
- Full Text
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16. Discovery of the First Selective M
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Mark S, Moehle, Aaron M, Bender, Jonathan W, Dickerson, Daniel J, Foster, Aidong, Qi, Hyekyung P, Cho, Yuping, Donsante, Weimin, Peng, Zoey, Bryant, Kaylee J, Stillwell, Thomas M, Bridges, Sichen, Chang, Katherine J, Watson, Jordan C, O'Neill, Julie L, Engers, Li, Peng, Alice L, Rodriguez, Colleen M, Niswender, Craig W, Lindsley, Ellen J, Hess, P Jeffrey, Conn, and Jerri M, Rook
- Abstract
[Image: see text] Nonselective antagonists of muscarinic acetylcholine receptors (mAChRs) that broadly inhibit all five mAChR subtypes provide an efficacious treatment for some movement disorders, including Parkinson’s disease and dystonia. Despite their efficacy in these and other central nervous system disorders, antimuscarinic therapy has limited utility due to severe adverse effects that often limit their tolerability by patients. Recent advances in understanding the roles that each mAChR subtype plays in disease pathology suggest that highly selective ligands for individual subtypes may underlie the antiparkinsonian and antidystonic efficacy observed with the use of nonselective antimuscarinic therapeutics. Our recent work has indicated that the M(4) muscarinic acetylcholine receptor has several important roles in opposing aberrant neurotransmitter release, intracellular signaling pathways, and brain circuits associated with movement disorders. This raises the possibility that selective antagonists of M(4) may recapitulate the efficacy of nonselective antimuscarinic therapeutics and may decrease or eliminate the adverse effects associated with these drugs. However, this has not been directly tested due to lack of selective antagonists of M(4). Here, we utilize genetic mAChR knockout animals in combination with nonselective mAChR antagonists to confirm that the M(4) receptor activation is required for the locomotor-stimulating and antiparkinsonian efficacy in rodent models. We also report the synthesis, discovery, and characterization of the first-in-class selective M(4) antagonists VU6013720, VU6021302, and VU6021625 and confirm that these optimized compounds have antiparkinsonian and antidystonic efficacy in pharmacological and genetic models of movement disorders.
- Published
- 2020
17. A Novel M1 PAM VU0486846 Exerts Efficacy in Cognition Models without Displaying Agonist Activity or Cholinergic Toxicity
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Jonathan W. Dickerson, Anna L. Blobaum, Jerri M. Rook, Kellie D. Nance, Colleen M. Niswender, Shaun R. Stauffer, Craig W. Lindsley, Joel M. Harp, Hyekyung P. Cho, Sean P. Moran, James Maksymetz, Pedro M. Garcia-Barrantes, P. Jeffrey Conn, Carrie K. Jones, Daniel H. Remke, Jeanette L. Bertron, and Sichen Chang
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0301 basic medicine ,Agonist ,Physiology ,medicine.drug_class ,Morpholines ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Allosteric regulation ,Prefrontal Cortex ,CHO Cells ,Biochemistry ,Article ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cognition ,Cricetulus ,0302 clinical medicine ,Allosteric Regulation ,Seizures ,Conditioning, Psychological ,Muscarinic acetylcholine receptor ,medicine ,Animals ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,Prefrontal cortex ,Receptor ,Chemistry ,Antagonist ,Fear ,Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,Risperidone ,Rats ,030104 developmental biology ,Exploratory Behavior ,Pyrazoles ,Cholinergic ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Acetylcholine ,Antipsychotic Agents ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Selective activation of the M(1) subtype of muscarinic acetylcholine receptor, via positive allosteric modulation (PAM), is an exciting strategy to improve cognition in schizophrenia and Alzheimer’s disease patients. However, highly potent M(1) ago-PAMs, such as MK-7622, PF-06764427, and PF-06827443, can engender excessive activation of M(1), leading to agonist actions in the prefrontal cortex (PFC) that impair cognitive function, induce behavioral convulsions, and result in other classic cholinergic adverse events (AEs). Here, we report a fundamentally new and highly selective M(1) PAM, VU0486846. VU0486846 possesses only weak agonist activity in M(1)-expressing cell lines with high receptor reserve and is devoid of agonist actions in the PFC, unlike previously reported ago-PAMs MK-7622, PF-06764427, and PF-06827443. Moreover, VU0486846 shows no interaction with antagonist binding at the orthosteric acetylcholine (ACh) site (e.g., neither bitopic nor displaying negative cooperativity with [(3)H]-NMS binding at the orthosteric site), no seizure liability at high brain exposures, and no cholinergic AEs. However, as opposed to ago-PAMs, VU0486846 produces robust efficacy in the novel object recognition model of cognitive function. Importantly, we show for the first time that an M(1) PAM can reverse the cognitive deficits induced by atypical antipsychotics, such as risperidone. These findings further strengthen the argument that compounds with modest in vitro M(1) PAM activity (EC(50) > 100 nM) and pure-PAM activity in native tissues display robust procognitive efficacy without AEs mediated by excessive activation of M(1). Overall, the combination of compound assessment with recombinant in vitro assays (mindful of receptor reserve), native tissue systems (PFC), and phenotypic screens (behavioral convulsions) is essential to fully understand and evaluate lead compounds and enhance success in clinical development.
- Published
- 2018
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18. Discovery and Optimization of Potent and CNS Penetrant M5-Preferring Positive Allosteric Modulators Derived from a Novel, Chiral N-(Indanyl)piperidine Amide Scaffold
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Kellie D. Nance, Colleen M. Niswender, Christopher J. Langmead, Aaron M. Bender, Hyekyung P. Cho, Karl R. Voigtritter, P. Jeffrey Conn, Carrie K. Jones, Thomas M. Bridges, Sichen Chang, Patrick R. Gentry, Vincent B. Luscombe, Kaelyn S. Lingenfelter, Alice E. Berizzi, Jordan C. O’Neill, Craig W. Lindsley, Arthur Christopoulos, Charles W. Locuson, Patrick M. Sexton, and Xiaoyan Zhan
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0301 basic medicine ,Allosteric modulator ,Physiology ,Stereochemistry ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Allosteric regulation ,Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,Biochemistry ,Small molecule ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,stomatognathic system ,chemistry ,Amide ,parasitic diseases ,Muscarinic acetylcholine receptor ,Piperidine ,Selectivity ,Penetrant (biochemical) ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
The pharmacology of the M5 muscarinic acetylcholine receptor (mAChR) is the least understood of the five mAChR subtypes due to a historic lack of selective small molecule tools. To address this shortcoming, we have continued the optimization effort around the prototypical M5 positive allosteric modulator (PAM) ML380 and have discovered and optimized a new series of M5 PAMs based on a chiral N-(indanyl)piperidine amide core with robust SAR, human and rat M5 PAM EC50 values
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- 2018
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19. Synthesis and characterization of chiral 6-azaspiro[2.5]octanes as potent and selective antagonists of the M4 muscarinic acetylcholine receptor
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Jerri M. Rook, P. Jeffrey Conn, Aidong Qi, Aaron M. Bender, Matthew Spock, Colleen M. Niswender, Thomas M. Bridges, Sichen Chang, Trever R Carter, Craig W. Lindsley, Joel M. Harp, Christopher C Presley, Alice L. Rodriguez, Darren W. Engers, and Jonathan W. Dickerson
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Early generation ,biology ,Chemistry ,Stereochemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Cytochrome P450 ,Multiple species ,Biochemistry ,Drug Discovery ,Aqueous solubility ,Muscarinic acetylcholine receptor ,biology.protein ,Molecular Medicine ,Potency ,Enantiomer ,Selectivity ,Molecular Biology - Abstract
In this manuscript, we report a series of chiral 6-azaspiro[2.5]octanes and related spirocycles as highly potent and selective antagonists of the muscarinic acetylcholine receptor subtype 4 (mAChR4). Chiral separation and subsequent X-ray crystallographic analysis of early generation analogs revealed the R enantiomer to possess excellent human and rat M4 potency, and further structure-activity relationship (SAR) studies on this chiral scaffold led to the discovery of VU6015241 (compound 19). Compound 19 is characterized by high M4 potency and selectivity across multiple species, excellent aqueous solubility, and moderate brain exposure in rodents after intraperitoneal administration.
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- 2022
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20. Discovery of structurally distinct tricyclic M4 positive allosteric modulator (PAM) chemotypes – Part 2
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Thomas M. Bridges, Rory A. Capstick, Alice L. Rodriguez, Paul K. Spearing, Madeline F. Long, Vincent B. Luscombe, P. Jeffrey Conn, Alison R. Gregro, Sichen Chang, Julie L. Engers, Hyekyung P. Cho, Sean R. Bollinger, Colleen M. Niswender, Darren W. Engers, Kayla J. Temple, and Craig W. Lindsley
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Allosteric modulator ,Pyrimidine ,Stereochemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Biochemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Drug Discovery ,Molecular Medicine ,Molecular Biology ,Tricyclic - Abstract
This Letter details our efforts to develop novel tricyclic M4 PAM scaffolds with improved pharmacological properties. This endeavor involved a "tie-back" strategy to replace the 3-amino-4,6-dimethylthieno[2,3-b]pyridine-2-carboxamide core which lead to the discovery of two novel tricyclic cores: a 7,9-dimethylpyrido[3',2':4,5]thieno[3,2-d]pyrimidine core and 2,4-dimethylthieno[2,3-b:5,4-c']dipyridine core. Both tricyclic cores displayed low nanomolar potency against the human M4 receptor.
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- 2021
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21. Discovery of VU6005649, a CNS Penetrant mGlu7/8 Receptor PAM Derived from a Series of Pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidines
- Author
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Vincent B. Luscombe, Sichen Chang, Michael Bubser, Craig W. Lindsley, Joel M. Harp, Eileen M. Engelberg, Colleen M. Niswender, Darren W. Engers, P. Jeffrey Conn, Carrie K. Jones, Katrina A. Bollinger, Alice L. Rodriguez, Mabel Seto, Anna L. Blobaum, Rocco G. Gogliotti, Matthew T. Loch, and Masahito Abe
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0301 basic medicine ,Pyrimidine ,Chemistry ,Stereochemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Contextual fear ,Biochemistry ,Cns penetration ,Receptor selectivity ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,In vivo ,Drug Discovery ,Receptor ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Herein, we report the structure–activity relationships within a series of mGlu7 PAMs based on a pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidine core with excellent CNS penetration (Kps > 1 and Kp,uus > 1). Analogues in this series proved to display a range of Group III mGlu receptor selectivity, but VU6005649 emerged as the first dual mGlu7/8 PAM, filling a void in the Group III mGlu receptor PAM toolbox and demonstrating in vivo efficacy in a mouse contextual fear conditioning model.
- Published
- 2017
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22. Discovery of a novel, CNS penetrant M4 PAM chemotype based on a 6-fluoro-4-(piperidin-1-yl)quinoline-3-carbonitrile core
- Author
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Sichen Chang, Blake R. Bewley, P. Jeffrey Conn, Xiaoyan Zhan, Rebecca L. Weiner, Paul K. Spearing, Hyekyung P. Cho, Darren W. Engers, Alice L. Rodriguez, Vincent B. Luscombe, Craig W. Lindsley, Colleen M. Niswender, and Thomas M. Bridges
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Chemotype ,Chemistry ,Stereochemistry ,Drug discovery ,Organic Chemistry ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Quinoline ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Rat brain ,Biochemistry ,Cns penetration ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Drug Discovery ,Molecular Medicine ,Structure–activity relationship ,Penetrant (biochemical) ,Molecular Biology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
This Letter details the discovery and subsequent optimization of a novel M4 PAM scaffold based on an 6-fluoro-4-(piperidin-1-yl)quinoline-3-carbonitrile core, which represents a distinct departure from the classical M4 PAM chemotypes. Optimized compounds in this series demonstrated improved M4 PAM potency on both human and rat M4 (4 to 5-fold relative to HTS hit), and displayed attractive physicochemical and DMPK profiles, including good CNS penetration (rat brain:plasma Kp=5.3, Kp,uu=2.4; MDCK-MDR1 (P-gp) ER=1.1).
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- 2017
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23. Design and Synthesis of mGlu2 NAMs with Improved Potency and CNS Penetration Based on a Truncated Picolinamide Core
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Rebecca L. Weiner, Katrina A. Bollinger, Christopher J. Brassard, Hyekyung P. Cho, Julie L. Engers, Kyle A. Emmitte, Andrew S. Felts, Carrie K. Jones, Alice L. Rodriguez, Anna L. Blobaum, Craig W. Lindsley, P. Jeffrey Conn, Michael Bubser, Sichen Chang, and Colleen M. Niswender
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0301 basic medicine ,Allosteric modulator ,Chemistry ,Stereochemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Penetration (firestop) ,Biochemistry ,Cns penetration ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Drug Discovery ,Potency ,Pet tracer ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Herein, we detail the optimization of the mGlu2 negative allosteric modulator (NAM), VU6001192, by a reductionist approach to afford a novel, simplified mGlu2 NAM scaffold. This new chemotype not only affords potent and selective mGlu2 inhibition, as exemplified by VU6001966 (mGlu2 IC50 = 78 nM, mGlu3 IC50 > 30 μM), but also excellent central nervous system (CNS) penetration (Kp = 1.9, Kp,uu = 0.78), a feature devoid in all previously disclosed mGlu2 NAMs (Kps ≈ 0.3, Kp,uus ≈ 0.1). Moreover, this series, based on overall properties, represents an exciting lead series for potential mGlu2 PET tracer development.
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- 2017
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24. Discovery and optimization of 3-(4-aryl/heteroarylsulfonyl)piperazin-1-yl)-6-(piperidin-1-yl)pyridazines as novel, CNS penetrant pan-muscarinic antagonists
- Author
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Vincent B. Luscombe, Hyekyung P. Cho, Aaron M. Bender, P. Jeffrey Conn, Colleen M. Niswender, Rebecca L. Weiner, Sichen Chang, Xiaoyan Zhan, Darren W. Engers, Sonia Ajmera, Alice L. Rodriguez, Thomas M. Bridges, and Craig W. Lindsley
- Subjects
Stereochemistry ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Pharmaceutical Science ,CHO Cells ,Muscarinic Antagonists ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Article ,Piperazines ,Pyridazine ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Cricetulus ,Drug Discovery ,Muscarinic acetylcholine receptor ,Functional selectivity ,Animals ,Humans ,Potency ,Moiety ,Structure–activity relationship ,Piperazine ,Molecular Biology ,Receptor, Muscarinic M4 ,010405 organic chemistry ,Aryl ,Organic Chemistry ,Antagonist ,Brain ,Rats ,0104 chemical sciences ,Pyridazines ,010404 medicinal & biomolecular chemistry ,chemistry ,Molecular Medicine - Abstract
This Letter describes the synthesis and structure activity relationship (SAR) studies of structurally novel M(4) antagonists, based on a 3-(4-aryl/heteroarylsulfonyl)piperazin-1-yl)-6-(piperidin-1-yl)pyridazine core, identified from a high-throughput screening campaign. A multidimensional optimization effort enhanced potency at human M(4) (hM(4) IC(50)s < 200 nM), with only moderate species differences noted, and with enantioselective inhibition. Moreover, CNS penetration proved attractive for this series (rat brain:plasma K(p) = 2.1, K(p,uu) = 1.1). Despite the absence of the prototypical mAChR antagonist basic or quaternary amine moiety, this series displayed pan-muscarinic antagonist activity across M(1-5) (with 9- to 16-fold functional selectivity at best). This series further expands the chemical diversity of mAChR antagonists.
- Published
- 2017
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25. Challenges in the development of an M 4 PAM preclinical candidate: The discovery, SAR, and in vivo characterization of a series of 3-aminoazetidine-derived amides
- Author
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Meredith J. Noetzel, Colleen M. Niswender, Jeanette L. Bertron, P. Jeffrey Conn, Alice L. Rodriguez, James C. Tarr, Michael W. Wood, Sichen Chang, Atin Lamsal, Thomas M. Bridges, Michael R. Wood, Rebecca L. Weiner, Carrie K. Jones, Mark E. Duggan, Hyekyung P. Cho, Craig W. Lindsley, Nicholas J. Brandon, and Frank W. Byers
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Stereochemistry ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Allosteric regulation ,Azetidine ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Subtype selectivity ,Biochemistry ,Article ,Pyridazine ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Allosteric Regulation ,In vivo ,Drug Discovery ,Animals ,Humans ,Moiety ,Molecular Biology ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Molecular Structure ,Receptor, Muscarinic M4 ,Organic Chemistry ,Amides ,Rats ,Disease Models, Animal ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,Azetidines ,Molecular Medicine ,Efflux ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
This letter details the continued chemical optimization of a novel series of M4 positive allosteric modulators (PAMs) based on a 5-amino-thieno[2,3-c]pyridazine core by incorporating a 3-amino azetidine amide moiety. The analogs described within this work represent the most potent M4 PAMs reported for this series to date. The SAR to address potency, clearance, subtype selectivity, CNS exposure, and P-gp efflux are described. This work culminated in the discovery of VU6000918, which demonstrated robust efficacy in a rat amphetamine-induced hyperlocomotion reversal model at a minimum efficacious dose of 0.3 mg/kg. 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2017
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26. Optimization of M 4 positive allosteric modulators (PAMs): The discovery of VU0476406, a non-human primate in vivo tool compound for translational pharmacology
- Author
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Changho Han, Eileen M. Engelberg, Michael R. Wood, Nicholas J. Brandon, Frank W. Byers, Darren W. Engers, Meredith J. Noetzel, Michael W. Wood, Hyekyung P. Cho, Sichen Chang, Craig W. Lindsley, Kellie D. Nance, Colleen M. Niswender, Atin Lamsal, Mark E. Duggan, Dedong Wu, Bruce J. Melancon, Carrie K. Jones, Thomas M. Bridges, Michael Bubser, and P. Jeffrey Conn
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Allosteric regulation ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Thiophenes ,Pharmacology ,Crystallography, X-Ray ,Biochemistry ,Article ,Translational Research, Biomedical ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Allosteric Regulation ,In vivo ,Drug Discovery ,Animals ,Molecular Biology ,Non human primate ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Hydrogen Bonding ,Rats ,Pyridazines ,030104 developmental biology ,Molecular Medicine ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
This letter describes the further chemical optimization of the 5-amino-thieno[2,3-c]pyridazine series (VU0467154/VU0467485) of M4 positive allosteric modulators (PAMs), developed via iterative parallel synthesis, culminating in the discovery of the non-human primate (NHP) in vivo tool compound, VU0476406 (8p). VU0476406 is an important in vivo tool compound to enable translation of pharmacodynamics from rodent to NHP, and while data related to a Parkinson’s disease model has been reported with 8p, this is the first disclosure of the optimization and discovery of VU0476406, as well as detailed pharmacology and DMPK properties.
- Published
- 2017
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- View/download PDF
27. Discovery of structurally distinct tricyclic M
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Kayla J, Temple, Madeline F, Long, Julie L, Engers, Katherine J, Watson, Sichen, Chang, Vincent B, Luscombe, Alice L, Rodriguez, Colleen M, Niswender, Thomas M, Bridges, P Jeffrey, Conn, Darren W, Engers, and Craig W, Lindsley
- Subjects
Pyridazines ,Inhibitory Concentration 50 ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,Allosteric Regulation ,Receptor, Muscarinic M4 ,Drug Design ,Quinazolines ,Animals ,Humans ,Triazoles ,Half-Life ,Rats - Abstract
This Letter details our efforts to develop new M
- Published
- 2019
28. Discovery of a novel 3,4-dimethylcinnoline carboxamide M
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Kayla J, Temple, Julie L, Engers, Madeline F, Long, Alison R, Gregro, Katherine J, Watson, Sichen, Chang, Matthew T, Jenkins, Vincent B, Luscombe, Alice L, Rodriguez, Colleen M, Niswender, Thomas M, Bridges, P Jeffrey, Conn, Darren W, Engers, and Craig W, Lindsley
- Subjects
Structure-Activity Relationship ,Pyrimidines ,Allosteric Regulation ,Molecular Structure ,Receptor, Muscarinic M4 ,Pyridines ,Pyrazines ,Azetidines ,Benzene ,Amides ,Protein Binding - Abstract
This Letter details our efforts to replace the 2,4-dimethylquinoline carboxamide core of our previous M
- Published
- 2019
29. SAR inspired by aldehyde oxidase (AO) metabolism: Discovery of novel, CNS penetrant tricyclic M
- Author
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Trevor C, Chopko, Changho, Han, Alison R, Gregro, Darren W, Engers, Andrew S, Felts, Mike S, Poslusney, Katrina A, Bollinger, Ryan D, Morrison, Michael, Bubser, Atin, Lamsal, Vincent B, Luscombe, Hyekyung P, Cho, Nathalie C, Schnetz-Boutaud, Alice L, Rodriguez, Sichen, Chang, J Scott, Daniels, Donald F, Stec, Colleen M, Niswender, Carrie K, Jones, Michael R, Wood, Michael W, Wood, Mark E, Duggan, Nicholas J, Brandon, P Jeffrey, Conn, Thomas M, Bridges, Craig W, Lindsley, and Bruce J, Melancon
- Subjects
Aldehyde Oxidase ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,Myotonia Congenita ,Receptor, Muscarinic M4 ,Drug Discovery ,Animals ,Humans ,Article ,Rats - Abstract
This letter describes progress towards an M(4) PAM preclinical candidate driven by an unexpected aldehyde oxidase (AO) metabolite of a novel, CNS penetrant thieno[2,3-c]pyridine core to an equipotent, non-CNS penetrant thieno[2,3-c]pyrdin-7(6H)-one core. Medicinal chemistry design efforts yielded two novel tricyclic cores that enhanced M(4) PAM potency, regained CNS penetration, displayed favorable DMPK properties and afforded robust in vivo efficacy in reversing amphetamine-induced hyperlocomotion in rats.
- Published
- 2019
30. Challenges in the development of an M 4 PAM in vivo tool compound: The discovery of VU0467154 and unexpected DMPK profiles of close analogs
- Author
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Michael R. Wood, Mark E. Duggan, Sichen Chang, Nicholas J. Brandon, Hyekyung P. Cho, James C. Tarr, Michael S. Poslusney, Michael Bubser, Atin Lamsal, Vincent B. Luscombe, Meredith J. Noetzel, Colleen M. Niswender, Rebecca L. Weiner, Craig W. Lindsley, P. Jeffrey Conn, Bruce J. Melancon, Darren W. Engers, Thomas M. Bridges, Carrie K. Jones, and Michael W. Wood
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0301 basic medicine ,Allosteric modulator ,Stereochemistry ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Allosteric regulation ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Nucleoside Transport Proteins ,Thiophenes ,Computational biology ,Ligands ,Biochemistry ,Article ,Cns penetration ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,In vivo ,Drug Discovery ,Animals ,Humans ,Molecular Biology ,Receptor, Muscarinic M4 ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Pyridazines ,030104 developmental biology ,Molecular Medicine ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
This letter describes the chemical optimization of a novel series of M4 positive allosteric modulators (PAMs) based on a 5-amino-thieno[2,3-c]pyridazine core, developed via iterative parallel synthesis, and culminating in the highly utilized rodent in vivo tool compound, VU0467154 (5). This is the first report of the optimization campaign (SAR and DMPK profiling) that led to the discovery of VU0467154, and details all of the challenges faced in allosteric modulator programs (steep SAR, species differences in PAM pharmacology and subtle structural changes affecting CNS penetration).
- Published
- 2017
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31. Discovery of VU0467485/AZ13713945: An M4 PAM Evaluated as a Preclinical Candidate for the Treatment of Schizophrenia
- Author
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Mark E. Duggan, Michael W. Wood, Michael R. Wood, Craig W. Lindsley, Vincent B. Luscombe, Miguel A. Hurtado, Bruce J. Melancon, Alice L. Rodriguez, Thomas M. Bridges, Atin Lamsal, Michael Bubser, Anna L. Blobaum, Carrie K. Jones, Meredith J. Noetzel, Darren W. Engers, Sichen Chang, Michael S. Poslusney, P. Jeffrey Conn, Rebecca L. Weiner, Nicholas J. Brandon, Kellie D. Nance, and Colleen M. Niswender
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Allosteric regulation ,Pharmacology ,medicine.disease ,Biochemistry ,In vitro ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,In vivo ,Schizophrenia ,Drug Discovery ,Muscarinic acetylcholine receptor ,medicine ,Potency ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Herein, we report the structure–activity relationships within a series of potent, selective, and orally bioavailable muscarinic acetylcholine receptor 4 (M4) positive allosteric modulators (PAMs). Compound 6c (VU0467485) possesses robust in vitro M4 PAM potency across species and in vivo efficacy in preclinical models of schizophrenia. Coupled with an attractive DMPK profile and suitable predicted human PK, 6c (VU0467485) was evaluated as a preclinical development candidate.
- Published
- 2016
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32. Lead optimization of the VU0486321 series of mGlu1 PAMs. Part 4: SAR reveals positive cooperativity across multiple mGlu receptor subtypes leading to subtype unselective PAMs
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Colleen M. Niswender, Annie L. Blobaum, Bruce J. Melancon, Alice L. Rodriguez, Dexter C. Davis, Sichen Chang, P. Jeffrey Conn, Craig W. Lindsley, Joseph D. Bungard, and Olivier Boutaud
- Subjects
010405 organic chemistry ,Chemistry ,Stereochemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Allosteric regulation ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Cooperative binding ,Subtype selectivity ,Cooperativity ,Subtype selective ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,0104 chemical sciences ,010404 medicinal & biomolecular chemistry ,Metabotropic glutamate receptor ,Drug Discovery ,Molecular Medicine ,Receptor ,Molecular Biology ,G protein-coupled receptor - Abstract
Further optimization of the VU0486321 series of highly selective and CNS-penetrant mGlu1 PAMs identified unique 'molecular switches' on the central aromatic ring that engendered positive cooperativity with multiple mGlu subtypes across the receptor family, resulting in compounds with comparable activity at Group I (mGlu1/5) and Group III (mGlu4/6/7/8) mGlu receptors, receptors. These exciting data suggests this PAM chemotype appears to bind to multiple mGlu receptors, and that subtype selectivity is dictated by the degree of cooperativity, not a subtype selective, unique allosteric binding site. Moreover, there is interesting therapeutic potential for mGlu1/4/7/8 PAMs, as well as the first report of a GPCR allosteric 'privileged structure'.
- Published
- 2021
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33. Evaluation of 1,2,3-Triazoles as Amide Bioisosteres In Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane Conductance Regulator Modulators VX-770 and VX-809
- Author
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Savannah J. Post, Liping Tang, Matthew J. Mulder, Christina A. Le, Mark Turlington, Stephen G. Aller, Steven M. Rowe, Gary W. Breton, Sichen Chang, Britton K. Ody, Jonathon B. Brace, Jake E. Doiron, Harrison M. Hill, Wei Wang, Nathan L. Thacker, and Thomas M. Bridges
- Subjects
Ussing chamber ,biology ,010405 organic chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Triazole ,Biological activity ,General Chemistry ,Potentiator ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Catalysis ,Cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator ,Article ,0104 chemical sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,biology.protein ,Biophysics ,Bioisostere ,Patch clamp ,Binding site - Abstract
The 1,2,3-triazole has been successfully utilized as an amide bioisostere in multiple therapeutic contexts. Based on this precedent, triazole analogues derived from VX-809 and VX-770, prominent amide-containing modulators of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR), were synthesized and evaluated for CFTR modulation. Triazole 11, derived from VX-809, displayed markedly reduced efficacy in F508del-CFTR correction in cellular TECC assays in comparison to VX-809. Surprisingly, triazole analogues derived from potentiator VX-770 displayed no potentiation of F508del, G551D, or WT-CFTR in cellular Ussing chamber assays. However, patch clamp analysis revealed that triazole 60 potentiates WT-CFTR similarly to VX-770. The efficacy of 60 in the cell-free patch clamp experiment suggests that the loss of activity in the cellular assay could be due to the inability of VX-770 triazole derivatives to reach the CFTR binding site. Moreover, in addition to the negative impact on biological activity, triazoles in both structural classes displayed decreased metabolic stability in human microsomes relative to the analogous amides. In contrast to the many studies that demonstrate the advantages of using the 1,2,3-triazole, these findings highlight the negative impacts that can arise from replacement of the amide with the triazole and suggest that caution is warranted when considering use of the 1,2,3-triazole as an amide bioisostere.
- Published
- 2018
34. Discovery and Optimization of Potent and CNS Penetrant M
- Author
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Aaron M, Bender, Hyekyung P, Cho, Kellie D, Nance, Kaelyn S, Lingenfelter, Vincent B, Luscombe, Patrick R, Gentry, Karl, Voigtritter, Alice E, Berizzi, Patrick M, Sexton, Christopher J, Langmead, Arthur, Christopoulos, Charles W, Locuson, Thomas M, Bridges, Sichen, Chang, Jordan C, O'Neill, Xiaoyan, Zhan, Colleen M, Niswender, Carrie K, Jones, P Jeffrey, Conn, and Craig W, Lindsley
- Subjects
Male ,Molecular Structure ,Cholinergic Agents ,Brain ,Amides ,Receptors, Muscarinic ,Article ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,Allosteric Regulation ,Piperidines ,Drug Discovery ,Microsomes, Liver ,Animals ,Humans - Abstract
[Image: see text] The pharmacology of the M(5) muscarinic acetylcholine receptor (mAChR) is the least understood of the five mAChR subtypes due to a historic lack of selective small molecule tools. To address this shortcoming, we have continued the optimization effort around the prototypical M(5) positive allosteric modulator (PAM) ML380 and have discovered and optimized a new series of M(5) PAMs based on a chiral N-(indanyl)piperidine amide core with robust SAR, human and rat M(5) PAM EC(50) values
- Published
- 2018
35. Discovery of a novel 2,4-dimethylquinoline-6-carboxamide M4 positive allosteric modulator (PAM) chemotype via scaffold hopping
- Author
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Alice L. Rodriguez, Julie L. Engers, Madeline F. Long, Darren W. Engers, Matthew T. Jenkins, Colleen M. Niswender, Thomas M. Bridges, Kayla J. Temple, Sichen Chang, Alison R. Gregro, Katherine J. Watson, Vincent B. Luscombe, P. Jeffrey Conn, and Craig W. Lindsley
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Allosteric modulator ,medicine.drug_class ,Stereochemistry ,Pyridines ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Allosteric regulation ,Drug Evaluation, Preclinical ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Carboxamide ,Plasma protein binding ,Biochemistry ,Article ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,03 medical and health sciences ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,0302 clinical medicine ,Allosteric Regulation ,Drug Discovery ,medicine ,Structure–activity relationship ,Moiety ,Animals ,Molecular Biology ,Receptor, Muscarinic M4 ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Photoredox catalysis ,Brain ,Amides ,Rats ,030104 developmental biology ,Molecular Medicine ,Pharmacophore ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Half-Life ,Protein Binding - Abstract
This Letter details our efforts to replace the 3-amino moiety, an essential pharmacophore for M4 PAM activity in most M4 PAMs to date, within the thieno[2,3-b]pyridine core, as the β-amino carboxamide motif has been shown to engender poor solubility, varying degrees of P-gp efflux and represents a structural alert. A scaffold hopping exercise identified a novel 2,4-dimethylquinoline carboxamide core that provided M4 PAM activity and good CNS penetration without an amino moiety. In addition, MacMillan photoredox catalysis chemistry was essential for construction of the 2,4-dimethylquinoline core.
- Published
- 2017
36. Design and Synthesis of N-Aryl Phenoxyethoxy Pyridinones as Highly Selective and CNS Penetrant mGlu3 NAMs
- Author
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Ryan D. Morrison, Sean R. Bollinger, P. Jeffrey Conn, Alice L. Rodriguez, Colleen M. Niswender, Michael Bubser, Craig W. Lindsley, Anna L. Blobaum, Julie L. Engers, Sichen Chang, Kyle A. Emmitte, Madeline F. Long, Rebecca L. Weiner, Katrina A. Bollinger, Megan M. Breiner, Carrie K. Jones, and Thomas M. Bridges
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Stereochemistry ,Aryl ,Organic Chemistry ,Penetration (firestop) ,Highly selective ,Rat brain ,Biochemistry ,Tail suspension test ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,chemistry ,In vivo ,Drug Discovery ,IC50 ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Herein, we detail the optimization of the mGlu3 NAM, VU0650786, via a reductionist approach to afford a novel, simplified mGlu3 NAM scaffold that engenders potent and selective mGlu3 inhibition (mGlu3 IC50 = 245 nM, mGlu2 IC50 > 30 μM) with excellent central nervous system penetration (rat brain/plasma Kp = 1.2, Kp,uu = 0.40). Moreover, this new chemotype, exemplified by VU6010572, requires only four synthetic steps and displays improved physiochemical properties and in vivo efficacy in a mouse tail suspension test (MED = 3 mg/kg i.p.).
- Published
- 2017
37. Discovery of VU6005649, a CNS Penetrant mGlu
- Author
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Masahito, Abe, Mabel, Seto, Rocco G, Gogliotti, Matthew T, Loch, Katrina A, Bollinger, Sichen, Chang, Eileen M, Engelberg, Vincent B, Luscombe, Joel M, Harp, Michael, Bubser, Darren W, Engers, Carrie K, Jones, Alice L, Rodriguez, Anna L, Blobaum, P Jeffrey, Conn, Colleen M, Niswender, and Craig W, Lindsley
- Abstract
Herein, we report the structure-activity relationships within a series of mGlu
- Published
- 2017
38. Discovery of a novel, CNS penetrant M
- Author
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Blake R, Bewley, Paul K, Spearing, Rebecca L, Weiner, Vincent B, Luscombe, Xiaoyan, Zhan, Sichen, Chang, Hyekyung P, Cho, Alice L, Rodriguez, Colleen M, Niswender, P Jeffrey, Conn, Thomas M, Bridges, Darren W, Engers, and Craig W, Lindsley
- Subjects
Central Nervous System ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Molecular Structure ,Piperidines ,Receptor, Muscarinic M4 ,Drug Discovery ,Quinolines ,Animals ,Humans ,Article ,Rats - Abstract
This Letter details the discovery and subsequent optimization of a novel M4 PAM scaffold based on an 6-fluoro-4-(piperidin-1-yl)quinoline-3-carbonitrile core, which represents a distinct departure from the classical M4 PAM chemotypes. Optimized compounds in this series demonstrated improved M4 PAM potency on both human and rat M4 (4 to 5-fold relative to HTS hit), and displayed attractive physicochemical and DMPK profiles, including good CNS penetration (rat brain:plasma Kp = 5.3, Kp,uu = 2.4; MDCK-MDR1 (P-gp) ER = 1.1).
- Published
- 2017
39. Design and Synthesis of mGlu
- Author
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Katrina A, Bollinger, Andrew S, Felts, Christopher J, Brassard, Julie L, Engers, Alice L, Rodriguez, Rebecca L, Weiner, Hyekyung P, Cho, Sichen, Chang, Michael, Bubser, Carrie K, Jones, Anna L, Blobaum, Colleen M, Niswender, P Jeffrey, Conn, Kyle A, Emmitte, and Craig W, Lindsley
- Abstract
Herein, we detail the optimization of the mGlu
- Published
- 2017
40. Discovery of N-(5-Fluoropyridin-2-yl)-6-methyl-4-(pyrimidin-5-yloxy)picolinamide (VU0424238): A Novel Negative Allosteric Modulator of Metabotropic Glutamate Receptor Subtype 5 Selected for Clinical Evaluation
- Author
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Andrew S. Felts, Daryl F. Venable, Frank W. Byers, Analisa D. Thompson Gray, P. Jeffrey Conn, Carrie K. Jones, Brittney S. Bates, Mohammed N. Tantawy, Jerri M. Rook, Craig W. Lindsley, Colleen M. Niswender, Kyle A. Emmitte, Gilles Tamagnan, Vincent B. Luscombe, Anna L. Blobaum, J. Scott Daniels, Alice L. Rodriguez, Sichen Chang, and Ryan D. Morrison
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Allosteric modulator ,Stereochemistry ,Receptor, Metabotropic Glutamate 5 ,Allosteric regulation ,Drug Evaluation, Preclinical ,Aminopyridines ,Mice, Inbred Strains ,Chemistry Techniques, Synthetic ,Pharmacology ,Article ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,03 medical and health sciences ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,0302 clinical medicine ,Allosteric Regulation ,Drug Discovery ,Structure–activity relationship ,Animals ,Humans ,Tissue Distribution ,Receptor ,Picolinic Acids ,Chemistry ,HEK 293 cells ,Small molecule ,3. Good health ,High-Throughput Screening Assays ,Macaca fascicularis ,030104 developmental biology ,HEK293 Cells ,Metabotropic glutamate receptor ,Molecular Medicine ,Clinical evaluation ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Preclinical evidence in support of the potential utility of mGlu5 NAMs for the treatment of a variety of psychiatric and neurodegenerative disorders is extensive, and multiple such molecules have entered clinical trials. Despite some promising results from clinical studies, no small molecule mGlu5 NAM has yet to reach market. Here we present the discovery and evaluation of N-(5-fluoropyridin-2-yl)-6-methyl-4-(pyrimidin-5-yloxy)picolinamide (27, VU0424238), a compound selected for clinical evaluation. Compound 27 is more than 900-fold selective for mGlu5 versus the other mGlu receptors, and binding studies established a Ki value of 4.4 nM at a known allosteric binding site. Compound 27 had a clearance of 19.3 and 15.5 mL/min/kg in rats and cynomolgus monkeys, respectively. Imaging studies using a known mGlu5 PET ligand demonstrated 50% receptor occupancy at an oral dose of 0.8 mg/kg in rats and an intravenous dose of 0.06 mg/kg in baboons.
- Published
- 2017
41. Discovery of a novel 2,3-dimethylimidazo[1,2-a]pyrazine-6-carboxamide M4 positive allosteric modulator (PAM) chemotype
- Author
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Craig W. Lindsley, Thomas M. Bridges, Colleen M. Niswender, Sichen Chang, Darren W. Engers, Kayla J. Temple, P. Jeffrey Conn, Vincent B. Luscombe, Madeline F. Long, Matthew T. Jenkins, Katherine J. Watson, Alice L. Rodriguez, and Julie L. Engers
- Subjects
Allosteric modulator ,Chemotype ,Pyrazine ,010405 organic chemistry ,Chemistry ,Stereochemistry ,medicine.drug_class ,Organic Chemistry ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Carboxamide ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,PAM activity ,0104 chemical sciences ,Cns penetration ,010404 medicinal & biomolecular chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Drug Discovery ,medicine ,Molecular Medicine ,Molecular Biology - Abstract
This Letter details our efforts to discover structurally unique M4 PAMs containing 5,6-heteroaryl ring systems. In an attempt to improve the DMPK profiles of the 2,3-dimethyl-2H-indazole-5-carboxamide and 1-methyl-1H-benzo[d][1,2,3]triazole-6-carboxamide cores, we investigated a plethora of core replacements. This exercise identified a novel 2,3-dimethylimidazo[1,2-a]pyrazine-6-carboxamide core that provided improved M4 PAM activity and CNS penetration.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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42. Discovery of structurally distinct tricyclic M4 positive allosteric modulator (PAM) chemotypes
- Author
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P. Jeffrey Conn, Julie L. Engers, Kayla J. Temple, Colleen M. Niswender, Craig W. Lindsley, Darren W. Engers, Madeline F. Long, Thomas M. Bridges, Sichen Chang, Vincent B. Luscombe, Katherine J. Watson, and Alice L. Rodriguez
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Allosteric modulator ,010405 organic chemistry ,Stereochemistry ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Pharmaceutical Science ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,0104 chemical sciences ,010404 medicinal & biomolecular chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Drug Discovery ,Quinazoline ,Molecular Medicine ,Molecular Biology ,Tricyclic - Abstract
This Letter details our efforts to develop new M4 PAM scaffolds with improved pharmacological properties. This endeavor involved replacing the 3,4-dimethylpyridazine core with two novel cores: a 2,3-dimethyl-2H-indazole-5-carboxamide core or a 1-methyl-1H-benzo[d][1,2,3]triazole-6-carboxamide core. Due to shallow SAR, these cores were further evolved into two unique tricyclic cores: an 8,9-dimethyl-8H-pyrazolo[3,4-h]quinazoline core and an 1-methyl-1H-[1,2,3]triazolo[4,5-h]quinazoline core. Both tricyclic cores displayed low nanomolar potency against both human and rat M4.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Discovery of a novel 3,4-dimethylcinnoline carboxamide M4 positive allosteric modulator (PAM) chemotype via scaffold hopping
- Author
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Kayla J. Temple, Julie L. Engers, Madeline F. Long, Alison R. Gregro, Katherine J. Watson, Sichen Chang, Matthew T. Jenkins, Vincent B. Luscombe, Alice L. Rodriguez, Colleen M. Niswender, Thomas M. Bridges, P. Jeffrey Conn, Darren W. Engers, and Craig W. Lindsley
- Subjects
Organic Chemistry ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Drug Discovery ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Molecular Medicine ,Molecular Biology ,Biochemistry - Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Diverse Effects on M
- Author
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Jerri M, Rook, Masahito, Abe, Hyekyung P, Cho, Kellie D, Nance, Vincent B, Luscombe, Jeffrey J, Adams, Jonathan W, Dickerson, Daniel H, Remke, Pedro M, Garcia-Barrantes, Darren W, Engers, Julie L, Engers, Sichen, Chang, Jarrett J, Foster, Anna L, Blobaum, Colleen M, Niswender, Carrie K, Jones, P Jeffrey, Conn, and Craig W, Lindsley
- Subjects
Mice ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,Allosteric Regulation ,Drug Discovery ,Receptor, Muscarinic M1 ,Animals ,Humans ,Muscarinic Agonists ,Article ,Rats - Abstract
Both historical clinical and recent preclinical data suggest that the M1 muscarinic acetylcholine receptor is an exciting target for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease and the cognitive and negative symptom clusters in schizophrenia; however, early drug discovery efforts targeting the orthosteric binding site have failed to afford selective M1 activation. Efforts then shifted to focus on selective activation of M1 via either allosteric agonists or positive allosteric modulators (PAMs). While M1 PAMs have robust efficacy in rodent models, some chemotypes can induce cholinergic adverse effects (AEs) that could limit their clinical utility. Here, we report studies aimed at understanding the subtle structural and pharmacological nuances that differentiate efficacy from adverse effect liability within an indole-based series of M1 ago-PAMs. Our data demonstrate that closely related M1 PAMs can display striking differences in their in vivo activities, especially their propensities to induce adverse effects. We report the discovery of a novel PAM in this series that is devoid of observable adverse effect liability. Interestingly, the molecular pharmacology profile of this novel PAM is similar to that of a representative M1 PAM that induces severe AEs. For instance, both compounds are potent ago-PAMs that demonstrate significant interaction with the orthosteric site (either bitopic or negative cooperativity). However, there are subtle differences in efficacies of the compounds at potentiating M1 responses, agonist potencies, and abilities to induce receptor internalization. While these differences may contribute to the differential in vivo profiles of these compounds, the in vitro differences are relatively subtle and highlight the complexities of allosteric modulators and the need to focus on in vivo phenotypic screening to identify safe and effective M1 PAMs.
- Published
- 2016
45. Discovery of VU0467485/AZ13713945: An M
- Author
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Michael R, Wood, Meredith J, Noetzel, Bruce J, Melancon, Michael S, Poslusney, Kellie D, Nance, Miguel A, Hurtado, Vincent B, Luscombe, Rebecca L, Weiner, Alice L, Rodriguez, Atin, Lamsal, Sichen, Chang, Michael, Bubser, Anna L, Blobaum, Darren W, Engers, Colleen M, Niswender, Carrie K, Jones, Nicholas J, Brandon, Michael W, Wood, Mark E, Duggan, P Jeffrey, Conn, Thomas M, Bridges, and Craig W, Lindsley
- Abstract
Herein, we report the structure-activity relationships within a series of potent, selective, and orally bioavailable muscarinic acetylcholine receptor 4 (M
- Published
- 2016
46. Further optimization of the M1 PAM VU0453595: Discovery of novel heterobicyclic core motifs with improved CNS penetration
- Author
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Ryan D. Morrison, Hykeyung P. Cho, Kellie D. Nance, Colleen M. Niswender, Joseph D. Panarese, Craig W. Lindsley, Jeffrey J. Adams, P. Jeffrey Conn, Shaun R. Stauffer, Sichen Chang, Pedro M. Garcia-Barrantes, and Anna L. Blobaum
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Central Nervous System ,Stereochemistry ,Pyridines ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Allosteric regulation ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Structural diversity ,Computational biology ,Biochemistry ,Article ,Cns penetration ,03 medical and health sciences ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,Allosteric Regulation ,Heterocyclic Compounds ,Drug Discovery ,Structure–activity relationship ,Animals ,Pyrroles ,Molecular Biology ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Molecular Structure ,Drug discovery ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Receptor, Muscarinic M1 ,Rats ,030104 developmental biology ,Molecular Medicine ,Central Nervous System Agents - Abstract
This letter describes the continued chemical optimization of the VU0453595 series of M1 positive allosteric modulators (PAMs). By surveying alternative 5,6- and 6,6-heterobicylic cores for the 6,7-dihydro-5H-pyrrolo[3,4-b]pyridine-5-one core of VU453595, we found new cores that engendered not only comparable or improved M1 PAM potency, but significantly improved CNS distribution (Kps 0.3 to 3.1). Moreover, this campaign provided fundamentally distinct M1 PAM chemotypes, greatly expanding the available structural diversity for this valuable CNS target, devoid of hydrogen-bond donors.
- Published
- 2016
47. Discovery and optimization of a novel series of highly CNS penetrant M4 PAMs based on a 5,6-dimethyl-4-(piperidin-1-yl)thieno[2,3-d]pyrimidine core
- Author
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Alison R. Gregro, Sichen Chang, Mark E. Duggan, Changho Han, Corey R. Hopkins, Meredith J. Noetzel, Kyle A. Emmitte, Mary K. West, Craig W. Lindsley, P. Jeffrey Conn, Katrina A. Bollinger, Julie L. Engers, James C. Tarr, Peter Chase, Sonia Ajmera, Thomas M. Bridges, Atin Lamsal, Colleen M. Niswender, Emery Smith, Michael R. Wood, Peter Hodder, Michael W. Wood, Bruce J. Melancon, Michael Bubser, and Carrie K. Jones
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Pyrimidine ,Stereochemistry ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Allosteric regulation ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Subtype selectivity ,Structural diversity ,Thiophenes ,Biochemistry ,Article ,Cns penetration ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,0302 clinical medicine ,Penetrant (mechanical, electrical, or structural) ,Allosteric Regulation ,Piperidines ,Drug Discovery ,Structure–activity relationship ,Animals ,Humans ,Molecular Biology ,Receptor, Muscarinic M4 ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Brain ,Rat brain ,Rats ,030104 developmental biology ,Pyrimidines ,Microsomes, Liver ,Quinazolines ,Molecular Medicine ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
This Letter describes the chemical optimization of a novel series of M4 positive allosteric modulators (PAMs) based on a 5,6-dimethyl-4-(piperidin-1-yl)thieno[2,3-d]pyrimidine core, identified from an MLPCN functional high-throughput screen. The HTS hit was potent and selective, but not CNS penetrant. Potency was maintained, while CNS penetration was improved (rat brain:plasma Kp = 0.74), within the original core after several rounds of optimization; however, the thieno[2,3-d]pyrimidine core was subject to extensive oxidative metabolism. Ultimately, we identified a 6-fluoroquinazoline core replacement that afforded good M4 PAM potency, muscarinic receptor subtype selectivity and CNS penetration (rat brain:plasma Kp > 10). Moreover, this campaign provided fundamentally distinct M4 PAM chemotypes, greatly expanding the available structural diversity for this exciting CNS target.
- Published
- 2016
48. Corrigendum to 'Challenges in the development of an M4 PAM preclinical candidate: The discovery, SAR, and biological characterization of a series of azetidine-derived tertiary amides' [Bioorg. Med. Chem. Lett. 27(23) (2017) 5179–5184]
- Author
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Mark E. Duggan, Frank W. Byers, Darren W. Engers, Craig W. Lindsley, Colleen M. Niswender, Michael R. Wood, Vincent B. Luscombe, Atin Lamsal, Sichen Chang, Carrie K. Jones, Michael W. Wood, Hyekyung P. Cho, P. Jeffrey Conn, Nicholas J. Brandon, Meredith J. Noetzel, Bruce J. Melancon, Alice L. Rodriguez, Thomas M. Bridges, and James C. Tarr
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_compound ,Chemistry ,Stereochemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Drug Discovery ,Azetidine ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Molecular Medicine ,Molecular Biology ,Biochemistry - Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Discovery of a Selective and CNS Penetrant Negative Allosteric Modulator of Metabotropic Glutamate Receptor Subtype 3 with Antidepressant and Anxiolytic Activity in Rodents
- Author
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Analisa D. Thompson, Frank W. Byers, Julie L. Engers, Colleen M. Niswender, Ryan D. Morrison, Anna L. Blobaum, Alice L. Rodriguez, Carrie K. Jones, Kyle A. Emmitte, J. Scott Daniels, Daryl F. Venable, Matthew T. Loch, P. Jeffrey Conn, Leah C. Konkol, Craig W. Lindsley, and Sichen Chang
- Subjects
Allosteric modulator ,medicine.drug_class ,Pyridines ,Allosteric regulation ,Pharmacology ,Receptors, Metabotropic Glutamate ,Anxiolytic ,Heterocyclic Compounds, 2-Ring ,Permeability ,Article ,Madin Darby Canine Kidney Cells ,Mice ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,Dogs ,Allosteric Regulation ,In vivo ,Drug Discovery ,medicine ,Structure–activity relationship ,Animals ,Humans ,Receptor ,Chemistry ,Brain ,Stereoisomerism ,Antidepressive Agents ,Rats ,Anti-Anxiety Agents ,Metabotropic glutamate receptor ,Microsomes, Liver ,Molecular Medicine ,Antidepressant ,Calcium - Abstract
Previous preclinical work has demonstrated the therapeutic potential of antagonists of the group II metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGlus). Still, compounds that are selective for the individual group II mGlus (mGlu2 and mGlu3) have been scarce. There remains a need for such compounds with the balance of properties suitable for convenient use in a wide array of rodent behavioral studies. We describe here the discovery of a selective mGlu3 NAM 106 (VU0650786) suitable for in vivo work. Compound 106 is a member of a series of 5-aryl-6,7-dihydropyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrazine-4(5H)-one compounds originally identified as a mGlu5 positive allosteric modulator (PAM) chemotype. Its suitability for use in rodent behavioral models has been established by extensive in vivo PK studies, and the behavioral experiments presented here with compound 106 represent the first examples in which an mGlu3 NAM has demonstrated efficacy in models where prior efficacy had previously been noted with nonselective group II antagonists.
- Published
- 2015
50. Discovery of a Selective and CNS Penetrant NegativeAllosteric Modulator of Metabotropic Glutamate Receptor Subtype 3with Antidepressant and Anxiolytic Activity in Rodents.
- Author
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JulieL. Engers, Alice L. Rodriguez, Leah C. Konkol, Ryan D. Morrison, Analisa D. Thompson, Frank W. Byers, Anna L. Blobaum, Sichen Chang, Daryl F. Venable, MatthewT. Loch, Colleen M. Niswender, J. Scott Daniels, CarrieK. Jones, P. Jeffrey Conn, Craig W. Lindsley, and Kyle A. Emmitte
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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