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Featured researches published by Aileen Soriano.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2012

MK-5172, a Selective Inhibitor of Hepatitis C Virus NS3/4a Protease with Broad Activity across Genotypes and Resistant Variants

Vincenzo Summa; Steven W. Ludmerer; John A. McCauley; Christine Fandozzi; Christine Burlein; Giuliano Claudio; Paul J. Coleman; Jillian DiMuzio; Marco Ferrara; Marcello Di Filippo; Adam T. Gates; Donald J. Graham; Steven Harper; Daria J. Hazuda; Carolyn McHale; Edith Monteagudo; Vincenzo Pucci; Michael Rowley; Michael T. Rudd; Aileen Soriano; Mark W. Stahlhut; Joseph P. Vacca; David B. Olsen; Nigel Liverton; Steven S. Carroll

ABSTRACT HCV NS3/4a protease inhibitors are proven therapeutic agents against chronic hepatitis C virus infection, with boceprevir and telaprevir having recently received regulatory approval as add-on therapy to pegylated interferon/ribavirin for patients harboring genotype 1 infections. Overcoming antiviral resistance, broad genotype coverage, and a convenient dosing regimen are important attributes for future agents to be used in combinations without interferon. In this communication, we report the preclinical profile of MK-5172, a novel P2-P4 quinoxaline macrocyclic NS3/4a protease inhibitor currently in clinical development. The compound demonstrates subnanomolar activity against a broad enzyme panel encompassing major hepatitis C virus (HCV) genotypes as well as variants resistant to earlier protease inhibitors. In replicon selections, MK-5172 exerted high selective pressure, which yielded few resistant colonies. In both rat and dog, MK-5172 demonstrates good plasma and liver exposures, with 24-h liver levels suggestive of once-daily dosing. When administered to HCV-infected chimpanzees harboring chronic gt1a or gt1b infections, MK-5172 suppressed viral load between 4 to 5 logs at a dose of 1 mg/kg of body weight twice daily (b.i.d.) for 7 days. Based on its preclinical profile, MK-5172 is anticipated to be broadly active against multiple HCV genotypes and clinically important resistance variants and highly suited for incorporation into newer all-oral regimens.


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2016

Preclinical Characterization of 18F-MK-6240, a Promising PET Tracer for In Vivo Quantification of Human Neurofibrillary Tangles

Eric Hostetler; Abbas M. Walji; Zhizhen Zeng; Patricia Miller; Idriss Bennacef; Cristian Salinas; Brett Connolly; Liza Gantert; Hyking Haley; Marie Holahan; Mona Purcell; Kerry Riffel; Talakad Lohith; Paul J. Coleman; Aileen Soriano; Aimie M. Ogawa; Serena Xu; Xiaoping Zhang; Elizabeth M. Joshi; Joseph Della Rocca; David Hesk; David J. Schenk; Jeffrey L. Evelhoch

A PET tracer is desired to help guide the discovery and development of disease-modifying therapeutics for neurodegenerative diseases characterized by neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs), the predominant tau pathology in Alzheimer disease (AD). We describe the preclinical characterization of the NFT PET tracer 18F-MK-6240. Methods: In vitro binding studies were conducted with 3H-MK-6240 in tissue slices and homogenates from cognitively normal and AD human brain donors to evaluate tracer affinity and selectivity for NFTs. Immunohistochemistry for phosphorylated tau was performed on human brain slices for comparison with 3H-MK-6240 binding patterns on adjacent brain slices. PET studies were performed with 18F-MK-6240 in monkeys to evaluate tracer kinetics and distribution in the brain. 18F-MK-6240 monkey PET studies were conducted after dosing with unlabeled MK-6240 to evaluate tracer binding selectivity in vivo. Results: The 3H-MK-6240 binding pattern was consistent with the distribution of phosphorylated tau in human AD brain slices. 3H-MK-6240 bound with high affinity to human AD brain cortex homogenates containing abundant NFTs but bound poorly to amyloid plaque–rich, NFT-poor AD brain homogenates. 3H-MK-6240 showed no displaceable binding in the subcortical regions of human AD brain slices and in the hippocampus/entorhinal cortex of non-AD human brain homogenates. In monkey PET studies, 18F-MK-6240 displayed rapid and homogeneous distribution in the brain. The 18F-MK-6240 volume of distribution stabilized rapidly, indicating favorable tracer kinetics. No displaceable binding was observed in self-block studies in rhesus monkeys, which do not natively express NFTs. Moderate defluorination was observed as skull uptake. Conclusion: 18F-MK-6240 is a promising PET tracer for the in vivo quantification of NFTs in AD patients.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016

Discovery of 6-(Fluoro-18F)-3-(1H-pyrrolo[2,3-c]pyridin-1-yl)isoquinolin-5-amine ([18F]-MK-6240): A Positron Emission Tomography (PET) Imaging Agent for Quantification of Neurofibrillary Tangles (NFTs)

Abbas Walji; Eric Hostetler; Harold G. Selnick; Zhizhen Zeng; Patricia Miller; Idriss Bennacef; Cristian Salinas; Brett Connolly; Liza Gantert; Marie A. Holahan; Stacey S. O’Malley; Mona Purcell; Kerry Riffel; Jing Li; Jaume Balsells; Julie A. O'Brien; Stacey Melquist; Aileen Soriano; Xiaoping Zhang; Aimie M. Ogawa; Serena Xu; Elizabeth M. Joshi; Joseph Della Rocca; Fred Hess; Joel B. Schachter; David Hesk; David J. Schenk; Arie Struyk; Kerim Babaoglu; Talakad Lohith

Neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) made up of aggregated tau protein have been identified as the pathologic hallmark of several neurodegenerative diseases including Alzheimers disease. In vivo detection of NFTs using PET imaging represents a unique opportunity to develop a pharmacodynamic tool to accelerate the discovery of new disease modifying therapeutics targeting tau pathology. Herein, we present the discovery of 6-(fluoro-(18)F)-3-(1H-pyrrolo[2,3-c]pyridin-1-yl)isoquinolin-5-amine, 6 ([(18)F]-MK-6240), as a novel PET tracer for detecting NFTs. 6 exhibits high specificity and selectivity for binding to NFTs, with suitable physicochemical properties and in vivo pharmacokinetics.


ChemMedChem | 2015

P2‐Quinazolinones and Bis‐Macrocycles as New Templates for Next‐Generation Hepatitis C Virus NS3/4a Protease Inhibitors: Discovery of MK‐2748 and MK‐6325

Michael T. Rudd; John W. Butcher; Kevin T. Nguyen; Charles J. McIntyre; Joseph J. Romano; Kevin F. Gilbert; Kimberly J. Bush; Nigel J. Liverton; M. Katharine Holloway; Steven Harper; Marco Ferrara; Marcello DiFilippo; Vincenzo Summa; John Swestock; Jeff Fritzen; Steven S. Carroll; Christine Burlein; Jillian M. DiMuzio; Adam T. Gates; Donald J. Graham; Qian Huang; Stephanie McClain; Carolyn McHale; Mark Stahlhut; Stuart Black; Robert Chase; Aileen Soriano; Christine Fandozzi; Anne Taylor; Nicole Trainor

With the goal of identifying inhibitors of hepatitis C virus (HCV) NS3/4a protease that are potent against a wide range of genotypes and clinically relevant mutant viruses, several subseries of macrocycles were investigated based on observations made during the discovery of MK‐5172. Quinazolinone‐containing macrocycles were identified as promising leads, and optimization for superior cross‐genotype and mutant enzyme potency as well as rat liver and plasma concentrations following oral dosing, led to the development of MK‐2748. Additional investigation of a series of bis‐macrocycles containing a fused 18‐ and 15‐membered ring system were also optimized for the same properties, leading to the discovery of MK‐6325. Both compounds display the broad genotype and mutant potency necessary for clinical development as next‐generation HCV NS3/4a protease inhibitors.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2016

Discovery of MK-8831, A Novel Spiro-Proline Macrocycle as a Pan-Genotypic HCV-NS3/4a Protease Inhibitor.

Santhosh Francis Neelamkavil; Sony Agrawal; Thomas Bara; Chad E. Bennett; Sathesh Bhat; Dipshikha Biswas; Linda Brockunier; Nicole Buist; Duane Burnette; Mark Cartwright; Samuel Chackalamannil; Robert Chase; Mariappan V. Chelliah; Austin Chen; Martin C. Clasby; Vincent J. Colandrea; Ian W. Davies; Keith Eagen; Zhuyan Guo; Yongxin Han; John A. Howe; Charles Lee Jayne; Hubert Josien; Stacia Kargman; Karen Marcantonio; Shouwu Miao; Randy R. Miller; Andrew Nolting; Patrick A. Pinto; Murali Rajagopalan

We have been focused on identifying a structurally different next generation inhibitor to MK-5172 (our Ns3/4a protease inhibitor currently under regulatory review), which would achieve superior pangenotypic activity with acceptable safety and pharmacokinetic profile. These efforts have led to the discovery of a novel class of HCV NS3/4a protease inhibitors containing a unique spirocyclic-proline structural motif. The design strategy involved a molecular-modeling based approach, and the optimization efforts on the series to obtain pan-genotypic coverage with good exposures on oral dosing. One of the key elements in this effort was the spirocyclization of the P2 quinoline group, which rigidified and constrained the binding conformation to provide a novel core. A second focus of the team was also to improve the activity against genotype 3a and the key mutant variants of genotype 1b. The rational application of structural chemistry with molecular modeling guided the design and optimization of the structure-activity relationships have resulted in the identification of the clinical candidate MK-8831 with excellent pan-genotypic activity and safety profile.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2016

Discovery of Novel Tricyclic Heterocycles as Potent and Selective DPP-4 Inhibitors for the Treatment of Type 2 Diabetes

Wen-Lian Wu; Jinsong Hao; Martin Domalski; Duane A. Burnett; Dmitri A. Pissarnitski; Zhiqiang Zhao; Andrew Stamford; Giovanna Scapin; Ying-Duo Gao; Aileen Soriano; Terri M. Kelly; Zuliang Yao; Mary Ann Powles; Shiying Chen; Hong Mei; Joyce Hwa

In our efforts to develop second generation DPP-4 inhibitors, we endeavored to identify distinct structures with long-acting (once weekly) potential. Taking advantage of X-ray cocrystal structures of sitagliptin and other DPP-4 inhibitors, such as alogliptin and linagliptin bound to DPP-4, and aided by molecular modeling, we designed several series of heterocyclic compounds as initial targets. During their synthesis, an unexpected chemical transformation provided a novel tricyclic scaffold that was beyond our original design. Capitalizing on this serendipitous discovery, we have elaborated this scaffold into a very potent and selective DPP-4 inhibitor lead series, as highlighted by compound 17c.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2014

Novel Quinoline-Based P2-P4 Macrocyclic Derivatives As Pan-Genotypic HCV NS3/4a Protease Inhibitors.

Unmesh G. Shah; Charles Lee Jayne; Samuel Chackalamannil; Francisco Velazquez; Zhuyan Guo; Alexei V. Buevich; John A. Howe; Robert Chase; Aileen Soriano; Sony Agrawal; Michael T. Rudd; John A. McCauley; Nigel J. Liverton; Joseph J. Romano; Kimberly J. Bush; Paul J. Coleman; Christiane Grisé-Bard; Marie-Christine Brochu; Sylvie Charron; Virender Aulakh; Benoit Bachand; Patrick Beaulieu; Helmi Zaghdane; Sathesh Bhat; Yongxin Han; Joseph P. Vacca; Ian W. Davies; Ann E. Weber; Srikanth Venkatraman

We have previously reported the discovery of our P2-P4 macrocyclic HCV NS3/4a protease inhibitor MK-5172, which in combination with the NS5a inhibitor MK-8742 recently received a breakthrough therapy designation from the US FDA for treatment of chronic HCV infection. Our goal for the next generation NS3/4a inhibitor was to achieve pan-genotypic activity while retaining the pharmacokinetic profile of MK-5172. One of the areas for follow-up investigation involved replacement of the quinoxaline moiety in MK-5172 with a quinoline and studying the effect of substitution at 4-position of the quinoline. The rationale for this effort was based on molecular modeling, which indicated that such modifications would improve interactions with the S2 subsite, in particular with D79. We wish to report herein the discovery of highly potent inhibitors with pan-genotypic activity and an improved profile over MK-5172, especially against gt-3a and A156 mutants.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2016

Scaffold-hopping from xanthines to tricyclic guanines: A case study of dipeptidyl peptidase 4 (DPP4) inhibitors

Dmitri Pissarnitski; Zhiqiang Zhao; David Cole; Wen-Lian Wu; Martin Domalski; John W. Clader; Giovanna Scapin; Johannes Voigt; Aileen Soriano; Theresa M. Kelly; Mary Ann Powles; Zuliang Yao; Duane A. Burnett

Molecular modeling of unbound tricyclic guanine scaffolds indicated that they can serve as effective bioisosteric replacements of xanthines. This notion was further confirmed by a combination of X-ray crystallography and SAR studies, indicating that tricyclic guanine DPP4 inhibitors mimic the binding mode of xanthine inhibitors, exemplified by linagliptin. Realization of the bioisosteric relationship between these scaffolds potentially will lead to a wider application of cyclic guanines as xanthine replacements in drug discovery programs for a variety of biological targets. Newly designed DPP4 inhibitors achieved sub-nanomolar potency range and demonstrated oral activity in vivo in mouse glucose tolerance test.


Alzheimers & Dementia | 2016

DISCOVERY AND FIRST-IN-HUMAN EVALUATION OF THE TAU-IMAGING PET RADIOTRACER [18F]MK-6240

Idriss Bennacef; Zhizhen Zeng; Talakad Lohith; Patricia Miller; Cristian Salinas; Brett Connolly; Liza Gantert; Haley D. Hyking; Marie Holahan; Stacey S. O’Malley; Mona Purcell; Kerry Riffel; Paul J. Coleman; Jing Li; Jaume Balsells-Padros; Aileen Soriano; Aimie M. Ogawa; Serena Xu; Zhang Xiaoping; Joseph Della Rocca; Joel B. Schachter; David Hesk; Florestina Telan-Choing; Arie Struyk; Cyrille Sur; Sofie Celen; Kim Serdons; Guy Bormans; Mathieu Vandenbulcke; Rik Vandenberghe

Parametric [C]PBB3, and [C]PiB PET images were generated by calculation of target-to-cerebellar cortex standardized uptake value ratio (SUVR) at 30-50 min, and 50-70 min after radiotracer injection, respectively. [C]PiB retention was assessed by visual inspection of SUVR images. A two sample t-test was also performed on [C]PBB3 PET SUVR images between each patient and 13 HCs using SPM12. Neuropathological and autoradiographic examinations were performed in postmortem brain sections of other patients with three MAPT mutations. Results: All subjects were negative for amyloid PET. Five subjects with MAPT gene mutations exhibited increased [C]PBB3 binding in the brain compared with HCs. In the N279K mutation carriers, increased [C]PBB3 bindings were detected at an asymptomatic stage, and were spatially extended involving white matter with the progression of clinical manifestations. In contrast, patients with R406W and G272V mutations showed increased [C]PBB3 binding mostly restricted to gray matter in the brain. Autoradiographic signals and fluorescence labeling of brain sections revealed that PBB3 binds to various tau inclusions in the brain with these three mutations. Conclusions: [C]PBB3 PET can detect diverse tau inclusions, and may be useful for monitoring disease progression and therapeutic effect of anti-tau therapy in patients with MATP mutations, and other tauopathies.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2016

Design and Synthesis of P2–P4 Macrocycles Containing a Unique Spirocyclic Proline: A New Class of HCV NS3/4A Inhibitors

Francisco Velazquez; Mariappan V. Chelliah; Martin C. Clasby; Zhuyan Guo; John A. Howe; Randy R. Miller; Santhosh Francis Neelamkavil; Unmesh G. Shah; Aileen Soriano; Yan Xia; Srikanth Venkatraman; Samuel Chackalamannil; Ian W. Davies

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