Donna Huryn

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Organization: University of Pittsburgh
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Co-reporter:Celeste Alverez, Stacie L. Bulfer, Ramappa Chakrasali, Michael. S. Chimenti, Raymond J. Deshaies, Neal Green, Mark Kelly, Matthew G. LaPorte, Taber S. Lewis, Mary Liang, William J. Moore, R. Jeffrey Neitz, Vsevolod A. Peshkov, Michael A. Walters, Feng Zhang, Michelle R. Arkin, Peter Wipf, and Donna M. Huryn
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters 2016 Volume 7(Issue 2) pp:182
Publication Date(Web):December 22, 2015
DOI:10.1021/acsmedchemlett.5b00396
A high-throughput screen to discover inhibitors of p97 ATPase activity identified an indole amide that bound to an allosteric site of the protein. Medicinal chemistry optimization led to improvements in potency and solubility. Indole amide 3 represents a novel uncompetitive inhibitor with excellent physical and pharmaceutical properties that can be used as a starting point for drug discovery efforts.Keywords: AAA ATPase; allosteric inhibitor; indole amide; p97 inhibitor; protein homeostasis; ubiquitin pathway modulator
Co-reporter:Celeste Alverez, Michelle R. Arkin, Stacie L. Bulfer, Raffaele Colombo, Marina Kovaliov, Matthew G. LaPorte, Chaemin Lim, Mary Liang, William J. Moore, R. Jeffrey Neitz, Yongzhao Yan, Zhizhou Yue, Donna M. Huryn, and Peter Wipf
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters 2015 Volume 6(Issue 12) pp:1225
Publication Date(Web):October 23, 2015
DOI:10.1021/acsmedchemlett.5b00364
Exploratory SAR studies of a new phenyl indole chemotype for p97 inhibition revealed C-5 indole substituent effects in the ADPGlo assay that did not fully correlate with either electronic or steric factors. A focused series of methoxy-, trifluoromethoxy-, methyl-, trifluoromethyl-, pentafluorosulfanyl-, and nitro-analogues was found to exhibit IC50s from low nanomolar to double-digit micromolar. Surprisingly, we found that the trifluoromethoxy-analogue was biochemically a better match of the trifluoromethyl-substituted lead structure than a pentafluorosulfanyl-analogue. Moreover, in spite of their almost equivalent strongly electron-depleting effect on the indole core, pentafluorosulfanyl- and nitro-derivatives were found to exhibit a 430-fold difference in p97 inhibitory activities. Conversely, the electronically divergent C-5 methyl- and nitro-analogues both showed low nanomolar activities.Keywords: AAA ATPase; fluorinated substituent effects; p97 inhibitors; pentafluorosulfanyl-indole; structure−activity relationships; trifluoromethyl-indole
Co-reporter:Matthew G. LaPorte, Dimas José da Paz Lima, Feng Zhang, Malabika Sen, Jennifer R. Grandis, Daniel Camarco, Yun Hua, Paul A. Johnston, John S. Lazo, Lynn O. Resnick, Peter Wipf, Donna M. Huryn
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters 2014 Volume 24(Issue 21) pp:5081-5085
Publication Date(Web):1 November 2014
DOI:10.1016/j.bmcl.2014.09.001
Synthesis and SAR investigation of 2-guanidinoquinazolines, initially identified in a high content screen for selective STAT3 pathway inhibitors, led to a more potent analog (11c) that demonstrated improved anti-proliferative activity against a panel of HNSCC cell lines.Graphical abstract
Co-reporter:Donna M. Huryn ; Lynn O. Resnick ;Peter Wipf
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry 2013 Volume 56(Issue 18) pp:7161-7176
Publication Date(Web):May 14, 2013
DOI:10.1021/jm400132d
The academic setting provides an environment that may foster success in the discovery of certain types of small molecule tools while proving less suitable in others. For example, small molecule probes for poorly understood systems, those that exploit a specific resident expertise, and those whose commercial return is not apparent are ideally suited to be pursued in a university setting. In this review, we highlight five projects that emanated from academic research groups and generated valuable tool compounds that have been used to interrogate biological phenomena: reactive oxygen species (ROS) sensors, GPR30 agonists and antagonists, selective CB2 agonists, Hsp70 modulators, and β-amyloid PET imaging agents. By taking advantage of the unique expertise resident in university settings and the ability to pursue novel projects that may have great scientific value but with limited or no immediate commercial value, probes from academic research groups continue to provide useful tools and generate a long-term resource for biomedical researchers.
Co-reporter:Donna M. Huryn
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters 2013 Volume 4(Issue 3) pp:313
Publication Date(Web):January 17, 2013
DOI:10.1021/ml400012g
Drug discovery and medicinal chemistry initiatives in academia provide an opportunity to create a unique environment that is distinct from the traditional industrial model. Two characteristics of a university setting that are not usually associated with pharma are the ability to pursue high-risk projects and a depth of expertise, infrastructure, and capabilities in focused areas. Encouraging, supporting, and fostering drug discovery efforts that take advantage of these and other distinguishing characteristics of an academic setting can lead to novel and innovative therapies that might not be discovered otherwise.
Co-reporter:Donna M. Huryn;Alex W. Ireland;Jeffrey L. Brodsky;Benjamin Eyer;Baptiste Manteau;Peter G. Chambers;Kay M. Brummond;Matthew G. LaPorte;Kayla Lloyd;Masaoki Kawasumi;Peter Wipf;Paul Nghiem;Bettina Quade;Sandlin P. Seguin
PNAS 2011 Volume 108 (Issue 17 ) pp:6757-6762
Publication Date(Web):2011-04-26
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1015251108
Unique chemical methodology enables the synthesis of innovative and diverse scaffolds and chemotypes and allows access to previously unexplored “chemical space.” Compound collections based on such new synthetic methods can provide small-molecule probes of proteins and/or pathways whose functions are not fully understood. We describe the identification, characterization, and evolution of two such probes. In one example, a pathway-based screen for DNA damage checkpoint inhibitors identified a compound, MARPIN (ATM and ATR pathway inhibitor) that sensitizes p53-deficient cells to DNA-damaging agents. Modification of the small molecule and generation of an immobilized probe were used to selectively bind putative protein target(s) responsible for the observed activity. The second example describes a focused library approach that relied on tandem multicomponent reaction methodologies to afford a series of modulators of the heat shock protein 70 (Hsp70) molecular chaperone. The synthesis of libraries based on the structure of MAL3-101 generated a collection of chemotypes, each modulating Hsp70 function, but exhibiting divergent pharmacological activities. For example, probes that compromise the replication of a disease-associated polyomavirus were identified. These projects highlight the importance of chemical methodology development as a source of small-molecule probes and as a drug discovery starting point.
1-Nitro-2-benzenesulfoxylmethyl-4-(pentafluorosulfanyl)benzene
1-PROPANONE, 2-BROMO-1-(3,4-DICHLOROPHENYL)-2-METHYL-
obatoclax
1H-Indole, 5-nitro-2-propyl-
Sagopilone
Gimatecan
21-Aminoepothilone B
Camtobell
Eribulin