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Dive into the research topics where Adria Colletti is active.

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Featured researches published by Adria Colletti.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2001

The discovery of sulfonylated dipeptides as Potent VLA-4 antagonists

William K. Hagmann; Philippe L. Durette; Thomas J. Lanza; Nancy J. Kevin; Stephen E. de Laszlo; Ihor E. Kopka; David N. Young; Plato A. Magriotis; Bing Li; Linus S. Lin; Ginger X. Yang; Theodore M. Kamenecka; Linda L. Chang; Jonathan E. Wilson; Malcolm Maccoss; Sander G. Mills; Gail Van Riper; Ermengilda McCauley; Linda A. Egger; Usha Kidambi; Kathryn A. Lyons; Stella H. Vincent; Ralph A. Stearns; Adria Colletti; Johannes Teffera; Sharon Tong; Judy Fenyk-Melody; Karen Owens; Dorothy Levorse; Philip Kim

Directed screening of a carboxylic acid-containing combinatorial library led to the discovery of potent inhibitors of the integrin VLA-4. Subsequent optimization by solid-phase synthesis afforded a series of sulfonylated dipeptide inhibitors with structural components that when combined in a single hybrid molecule gave a sub-nanomolar inhibitor as a lead for medicinal chemistry. Preliminary metabolic studies led to the discovery of substituted biphenyl derivatives with low picomolar activities. SAR and pharmacokinetic characterization of this series are presented.


Drug Metabolism and Disposition | 2010

Relationship between Passive Permeability, Efflux, and Predictability of Clearance from In Vitro Metabolic Intrinsic Clearance

Liyue Huang; Loren Berry; Sindhura Ganga; Brett Janosky; April Chen; Jonathan Roberts; Adria Colletti; Min-Hwa Jasmine Lin

In vitro intrinsic metabolic clearance (CLint) is used routinely for compound selection in drug discovery; however, in vitro CLint often underpredicts in vivo clearance (CL). Forty-one proprietary compounds and 16 marketed drugs were selected to determine whether permeability and efflux status could influence the predictability of CL from in vitro CLint obtained from liver microsomal and hepatocyte incubations. For many of the proprietary compounds examined, rat CL was significantly underpredicted using the well stirred model incorporating both fraction of unbound drug in blood and fraction of unbound drug in the microsomal or hepatocyte incubation. Further analysis revealed that the accuracy of the prediction was differentiated by permeability and P-glycoprotein- (P-gp) and mouse breast cancer resistance protein (mBcrp)-mediated efflux. For proprietary compounds with passive permeability greater than 5 × 10−6 cm/s and efflux ratios less than 5 in both P-gp- and mBcrp-expressing cells, CLint provided reasonable prediction. The average -fold error (AFE) was 1.8 for rat liver microsomes (RLMs) and 2.3 for rat hepatocytes. In contrast, CL was dramatically underpredicted for compounds with passive permeability less than 5 × 10−6 cm/s; AFEs of 54.4 and 29.2 were observed for RLM and rat hepatocytes, respectively. In vivo CL was also underpredicted for compounds that were good efflux substrates (permeability >5 × 10−6 cm/s). The AFEs were 7.4 and 8.1 for RLM and rat hepatocytes, respectively. A similar relationship between permeability, efflux status, and human CL prediction reported in the literature was observed for 16 marketed drugs. These data show that permeability and efflux status are determinants for the predictability of CL from in vitro metabolic CLint.


Chemical Research in Toxicology | 2008

Chemical Reactivity of Methoxy 4-O-Aryl Quinolines: Identification of Glutathione Displacement Products in Vitro and in Vivo

Yohannes Teffera; Adria Colletti; Jean Christophe Harmange; L. Steven Hollis; Brian K. Albrecht; Alessandro Boezio; Jingzhou Liu; Zhiyang Zhao

AMG 458 {1-(2-hydroxy-2-methylpropyl)-N-[5-(7-methoxyquinolin-4-yloxy)pyridin-2-yl]-5-methyl-3-oxo-2-phenyl-2,3-dihydro-1H-pyrazole-4-carboxamide} is a potent, selective inhibitor of c-Met, a receptor tyrosine kinase that is often deregulated in cancer. AMG 458 was observed to bind covalently to liver microsomal proteins from rats and humans in the absence of NADPH. When [(14)C]AMG 458 was incubated with liver microsomes in the presence of glutathione and N-acetyl cysteine, thioether adducts were detected by radiochromatography and LC/MS/MS analysis. These adducts were also formed upon incubation of AMG 458 with glutathione and N-acetyl cysteine in buffers at pH 7.4. In vivo, the thioether adducts were detected in bile and urine of bile duct-cannulated rats dosed with [(14)C]AMG 458. The two adducts were isolated, and their structures were determined by MS/MS and NMR analysis. The identified structures resulted from a thiol displacement reaction to yield a quinoline thioether structure and the corresponding hydroxyaryl moiety. The insights gained from elucidating the mechanism of adduct formation led to the design of AMG 458 analogues that exhibited eliminated or reduced glutathione adduct formation in vitro and in vivo.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2002

The discovery of acylated β-amino acids as potent and orally bioavailable VLA-4 antagonists

Linus S. Lin; Ihor E. Kopka; Richard A. Mumford; Plato A. Magriotis; Thomas J. Lanza; Philippe L. Durette; Theodore M. Kamenecka; David N. Young; Stephen E. de Laszlo; Ermenegilda McCauley; Gail Van Riper; Usha Kidambi; Linda A. Egger; Xinchun Tong; Kathryn A. Lyons; Stella H. Vincent; Ralph A. Stearns; Adria Colletti; Yohannes Teffera; Judy Fenyk-Melody; John A. Schmidt; Malcolm Maccoss; William K. Hagmann

Acylated beta-amino acids are described as potent, specific and orally bioavailable antagonists of VLA-4. The initial lead was identified from a combinatorial library. Subsequent optimization using a traditional medicinal chemistry approach led to significant improvement in potency (up to 8-fold) while maintaining good pharmacokinetic properties.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2002

Substituted N-(3,5-dichlorobenzenesulfonyl)-L-prolyl-phenylalanine analogues as potent VLA-4 antagonists.

Ihor E. Kopka; David N. Young; Linus S. Lin; Richard A. Mumford; Plato A. Magriotis; Malcolm Maccoss; Sander G. Mills; Gail Van Riper; Ermengilda McCauley; Linda E Egger; Usha Kidambi; John A. Schmidt; Kathryn A. Lyons; Ralph A. Stearns; Stella H. Vincent; Adria Colletti; Zhen Wang; Sharon Tong; Junying Wang; Song Zheng; Karen Owens; Dorothy Levorse; William K. Hagmann

A series of substituted N-(3,5-dichlorobenzenesulfonyl)-L-prolyl- and alpha-methyl-L-prolyl-phenylalanine derivatives was prepared as VLA-4/VCAM antagonists. The compounds showed excellent potency with a wide variety of neutral, polar, electron withdrawing or donating groups on the phenylalanine ring (IC50 approximately 1 nM). Heteroaryl ring substitution for phenylalanine was also well tolerated. Pharmacokinetic studies in rat were performed on a representative set of compounds in both series.


Drug Metabolism Letters | 2008

Identification of a Novel Glutathione Conjugate of Diclofenac by LTQOrbitrap

Yohannes Teffera; Daniel Waldon; Adria Colletti; Brian K. Albrecht; Zhiyang Zhao

High resolution accurate MS with an LTQ-Orbitrap identified two novel metabolites of diclofenac in rat bile and rat and human hepatocyte incubations: a benzyl-S-glutathione conjugate and 2-(2,6-dichlorophenylamino) benzoic acid. A mechanism for the bioactivation of diclofenac involving decarboxylation is proposed.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2002

Substituted 3-amino biaryl propionic acids as potent VLA-4 antagonists

Ihor E. Kopka; Linus S. Lin; Richard A. Mumford; Thomas J. Lanza; Plato A. Magriotis; David N. Young; Stephen E. deLaszlo; Malcolm Maccoss; Sander G. Mills; Gail Van Riper; Ermengilda McCauley; Kathryn A. Lyons; Stella H. Vincent; Linda A. Egger; Usha Kidambi; Ralph A. Stearns; Adria Colletti; Yohannes Teffera; Sharon Tong; Karen Owens; Dorothy Levorse; John A. Schmidt; William K. Hagmann

A series of substituted N-(3,5-dichlorobenzenesulfonyl)-(L)-prolyl- and (L)-azetidyl-beta-biaryl beta-alanine derivatives was prepared as selective and potent VLA-4 antagonists. The 2,6-dioxygenated biaryl substitution pattern is important for optimizing potency. Oral bioavailability was variable and may be a result of binding to circulating plasma proteins.


Chemical Research in Toxicology | 2010

Bioactivation of isothiazoles: minimizing the risk of potential toxicity in drug discovery.

Yohannes Teffera; Deborah Choquette; Jingzhou Liu; Adria Colletti; L. Steven Hollis; Min-Hwa Jasmine Lin; Zhiyang Zhao

Compound 1, (7-methoxy-N-((6-(3-methylisothiazol-5-yl)-[1,2,4]triazolo[4,3-b]pyridazin-3-yl)methyl)-1,5-naphthyridin-4-amine) is a potent, selective inhibitor of c-Met (mesenchymal-epithelial transition factor), a receptor tyrosine kinase that is often deregulated in cancer. Compound 1 displayed desirable pharmacokinetic properties in multiple preclinical species. Glutathione trapping studies in liver microsomes resulted in the NADPH-dependent formation of a glutathione conjugate. Compound 1 also exhibited very high in vitro NADPH-dependent covalent binding to microsomal proteins. Species differences in covalent binding were observed, with the highest binding in rats, mice, and monkeys (1100-1300 pmol/mg/h), followed by dogs (400 pmol/mg/h) and humans (144 pmol/mg/h). This covalent binding to protein was abolished by coincubation with glutathione. Together, these in vitro data suggest that covalent binding and glutathione conjugation proceed via bioactivation to a chemically reactive intermediate. The cytochrome (CYP) P450 enzymes responsible for this bioactivation were identified as cytochrome P450 3A4, 1A2, and 2D6 in human and cytochrome P450 2A2, 3A1, and 3A2 in rats. The glutathione metabolite was detected in the bile of rats and mice, thus demonstrating bioactivation occurring in vivo. Efforts to elucidate the structure of the glutathione adduct led to the isolation and characterization of the metabolite by NMR and mass spectrometry. The analytical data confirmed conclusively that the glutathione conjugation was on the 4-C position of the isothiazole ring. Such P450-mediated bioactivation of an isothiazole or thiazole group has not been previously reported. We propose a mechanism of bioactivation via sulfur oxidation followed by glutathione attack at the 4-position with subsequent loss of water resulting in the formation of the glutathione conjugate. Efforts to reduce bioactivation without compromising potency and pharmacokinetics were undertaken in order to minimize the potential risk of toxicity. Because of the exemplary pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic (PK/PD) properties of the isothiazole group, initial attempts were focused on introducing alternative metabolic soft spots into the molecule. These efforts resulted in the discovery of 7-(2-methoxyethoxy)-N-((6-(3-methyl-5-isothiazolyl)[1,2,4]triazolo[4,3-b]pyridazin-3-yl)methyl)-1,5-naphthyridin-4-amine (compound 2), with the major metabolic transformation occurring on the naphthyridine ring alkoxy substituent. However, a glutathione conjugate of compound 2 was produced in vitro and in vivo in a manner similar to that observed for compound 1. Furthermore, the covalent binding was high across species (360, 300, 529, 208, and 98 pmol/mg/h in rats, mice, dogs, monkeys, and humans, respectively), but coincubation with glutathione reduced the extent of covalent binding. The second viable alternative in reducing bioactivation involved replacing the isothiazole ring with bioisosteric heterocycles. Replacement of the isothiazole ring with an isoxazole or a pyrazole reduced the bioactivation while retaining the desirable PK/PD characteristics of compounds 1 and 2.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 1997

Inhibition of stromelysin-1 (MMP-3) by P1'-biphenylylethyl carboxyalkyl dipeptides.

Craig K. Esser; Robert L. Bugianesi; Charles G. Caldwell; Kevin T. Chapman; Philippe L. Durette; N.N. Girotra; Ihor E. Kopka; Thomas J. Lanza; Dorothy Levorse; Malcolm Maccoss; Karen Owens; Mitree M. Ponpipom; Joseph P. Simeone; Richard K. Harrison; Lisa M. Niedzwiecki; Joseph W. Becker; Alice I. Marcy; Melinda G. Axel; Amy J. Christen; Vernon L. Moore; Julie Olszewski; Cheryl Saphos; Denise M. Visco; Frank Shen; Adria Colletti; Philip A. Krieter; William K. Hagmann


Drug Metabolism and Disposition | 1994

Disposition and metabolism of the hypoglycemic agent pioglitazone in rats.

P A Krieter; Adria Colletti; G A Doss; Randy R. Miller

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