Jennifer Golden

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Organization: University of Kansas
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Co-reporter:Daljit S. Matharu ; Daniel P. Flaherty ; Denise S. Simpson ; Chad E. Schroeder ; Donghoon Chung  ; Dan Yan ; James W. Noah  ; Colleen B. Jonsson  ; E. Lucile White  ; Jeffrey Aubé ; Richard K. Plemper ; William E. Severson  ;Jennifer E. Golden
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry 2014 Volume 57(Issue 24) pp:10314-10328
Publication Date(Web):November 15, 2014
DOI:10.1021/jm500902x
A quinazolinedione-derived screening hit 2 was discovered with cellular antiviral activity against respiratory syncytial virus (CPE EC50 = 2.1 μM), moderate efficacy in reducing viral progeny (4.2 log at 10 μM), and marginal cytotoxic liability (selectivity index, SI ∼ 24). Scaffold optimization delivered analogs with improved potency and selectivity profiles. Most notable were compounds 15 and 19 (EC50 = 300–500 nM, CC50 > 50 μM, SI > 100), which significantly reduced viral titer (>400,000-fold), and several analogs were shown to block the activity of the RNA-dependent RNA-polymerase complex of RSV.
Co-reporter:Chad E. Schroeder ; Tuanli Yao ; Julie Sotsky ; Robert A. Smith ; Sudeshna Roy ; Yong-Kyu Chu ; Haixun Guo ; Nichole A. Tower ; James W. Noah ; Sara McKellip ; Melinda Sosa ; Lynn Rasmussen ; Layton H. Smith ; E. Lucile White ; Jeffrey Aubé ; Colleen B. Jonsson ; Donghoon Chung ;Jennifer E. Golden
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry 2014 Volume 57(Issue 20) pp:8608-8621
Publication Date(Web):September 22, 2014
DOI:10.1021/jm501203v
Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (VEEV) is an emerging pathogenic alphavirus that can cause significant disease in humans. Given the absence of therapeutic options available and the significance of VEEV as a weaponized agent, an optimization effort was initiated around a quinazolinone screening hit 1 with promising cellular antiviral activity (EC50 = 0.8 μM), limited cytotoxic liability (CC50 > 50 μM), and modest in vitro efficacy in reducing viral progeny (63-fold at 5 μM). Scaffold optimization revealed a novel rearrangement affording amidines, specifically compound 45, which was found to potently inhibit several VEEV strains in the low nanomolar range without cytotoxicity (EC50 = 0.02–0.04 μM, CC50 > 50 μM) while limiting in vitro viral replication (EC90 = 0.17 μM). Brain exposure was observed in mice with 45. Significant protection was observed in VEEV-infected mice at 5 mg kg–1 day–1 and viral replication appeared to be inhibited through interference of viral nonstructural proteins.
Co-reporter:Daniel P. Flaherty, Justin R. Miller, Danielle M. Garshott, Michael Hedrick, Palak Gosalia, Yujie Li, Monika Milewski, Eliot Sugarman, Stefan Vasile, Sumeet Salaniwal, Ying Su, Layton H. Smith, Thomas D. Y. Chung, Anthony B. Pinkerton, Jeffrey Aubé, Michael U. Callaghan, Jennifer E. Golden, Andrew M. Fribley, and Randal J. Kaufman
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters 2014 Volume 5(Issue 12) pp:1278
Publication Date(Web):October 29, 2014
DOI:10.1021/ml5003234
Cellular proteins that fail to fold properly result in inactive or disfunctional proteins that can have toxic functions. The unfolded protein response (UPR) is a two-tiered cellular mechanism initiated by eukaryotic cells that have accumulated misfolded proteins within the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). An adaptive pathway facilitates the clearance of the undesired proteins; however, if overwhelmed, cells trigger apoptosis by upregulating transcription factors such as C/EBP-homologous protein (CHOP). A high throughput screen was performed directed at identifying compounds that selectively upregulate the apoptotic CHOP pathway while avoiding adaptive signaling cascades, resulting in a sulfonamidebenzamide chemotype that was optimized. These efforts produced a potent and selective CHOP inducer (AC50 = 0.8 μM; XBP1 > 80 μM), which was efficacious in both mouse embryonic fibroblast cells and a human oral squamous cell cancer cell line, and demonstrated antiproliferative effects for multiple cancer cell lines in the NCI-60 panel.Keywords: anticancer; CHOP activator; UPR apoptotic pathway activator; UPR modulator
Co-reporter:Daniel P. Flaherty, Denise S. Simpson, Melissa Miller, Brooks E. Maki, Beiyan Zou, Jie Shi, Meng Wu, Owen B. McManus, Jeffrey Aubé, Min Li, Jennifer E. Golden
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters 2014 Volume 24(Issue 16) pp:3968-3973
Publication Date(Web):15 August 2014
DOI:10.1016/j.bmcl.2014.06.032
TASK-1 is a two-pore domain potassium channel that is important to modulating cell excitability, most notably in the context of neuronal pathways. In order to leverage TASK-1 for therapeutic benefit, its physiological role needs better characterization; however, designing selective inhibitors that avoid the closely related TASK-3 channel has been challenging. In this study, a series of bis-amide derived compounds were found to demonstrate improved TASK-1 selectivity over TASK-3 compared to reported inhibitors. Optimization of a marginally selective hit led to analog 35 which displays a TASK-1 IC50 = 16 nM with 62-fold selectivity over TASK-3 in an orthogonal electrophysiology assay.
ML365
N-(3-Benzamidophenyl)isonicotinamide
Benzamide, N-(3-aminophenyl)-3-(trifluoromethyl)-
N-(3-aminophenyl)-2-(trifluoromethyl)benzamide
4-Piperidinol, 1-[(4-nitrophenyl)sulfonyl]-
Benzamide, N-(3-aminophenyl)-2-(trifluoromethoxy)-
Benzoic acid, 4-[(1,4-dihydro-2,4-dioxo-3(2H)-quinazolinyl)methyl]-
2-[2-[methyl-[(2-methylpropan-2-yl)oxycarbonyl]amino]ethoxy]acetic Acid
4-((2,6-Dimethylmorpholino)sulfonyl)aniline
[1,1'-Biphenyl]-2-carboxamide,N-[(2,4-difluorophenyl)methyl]-2'-[[[(4-methoxyphenyl)acetyl]amino]methyl]-