Alexander R. Hurd
Harvard University
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Featured researches published by Alexander R. Hurd.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009
J. Craig Ruble; Alexander R. Hurd; Timothy A. Johnson; Debra Ann Sherry; Michael R. Barbachyn; Peter L. Toogood; Gordon L. Bundy; David R. Graber; Gregg M. Kamilar
PNU-286607 is the first member of a promising, novel class of antibacterial agents that act by inhibiting bacterial DNA gyrase, a target of clinical significance. Importantly, PNU-286607 displays little cross-resistance with marketed antibacterial agents and is active against methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and fluoroquinoline-resistant bacterial strains. Despite the apparent stereochemical complexity of this unique spirocyclic barbituric acid compound, the racemic core is accessible by a two-step route employing a relatively obscure rearrangement of vinyl anilines, known in the literature as the tert-amino effect. After a full investigation of the stereochemical course of the racemic reaction, starting with the meso cis-dimethylmorpholine, a practical asymmetric variant of this process was developed.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2008
Alita A. Miller; Gordon L. Bundy; John Mott; Jill E. Skepner; Timothy P. Boyle; Douglas W. Harris; Alexander E. Hromockyj; Keith R. Marotti; Gary E. Zurenko; Jennifer B. Munzner; Michael T. Sweeney; Gary F. Bammert; Judith C. Hamel; Charles W. Ford; Wei-Zhu Zhong; David R. Graber; Gary E. Martin; Fusen Han; Lester A. Dolak; Eric P. Seest; J. Craig Ruble; Gregg M. Kamilar; John R. Palmer; Lee S. Banitt; Alexander R. Hurd; Michael R. Barbachyn
ABSTRACT QPT-1 was discovered in a compound library by high-throughput screening and triage for substances with whole-cell antibacterial activity. This totally synthetic compound is an unusual barbituric acid derivative whose activity resides in the (−)-enantiomer. QPT-1 had activity against a broad spectrum of pathogenic, antibiotic-resistant bacteria, was nontoxic to eukaryotic cells, and showed oral efficacy in a murine infection model, all before any medicinal chemistry optimization. Biochemical and genetic characterization showed that the QPT-1 targets the β subunit of bacterial type II topoisomerases via a mechanism of inhibition distinct from the mechanisms of fluoroquinolones and novobiocin. Given these attributes, this compound represents a promising new class of antibacterial agents. The success of this reverse genomics effort demonstrates the utility of exploring strategies that are alternatives to target-based screens in antibacterial drug discovery.
OncoImmunology | 2016
Xiao Hu; Xikui Liu; Jacques Moisan; Yahong Wang; Charles Lesch; Chauncey Spooner; Rodney W. Morgan; Elizabeth Zawidzka; David Mertz; Dick Bousley; Kinga Majchrzak; Ilona Kryczek; Clarke B. Taylor; Chad A. Van Huis; Don Skalitzky; Alexander R. Hurd; Thomas D. Aicher; Peter L. Toogood; Gary D. Glick; Chrystal M. Paulos; Weiping Zou; Laura Carter
ABSTRACT RORγt is the key transcription factor controlling the development and function of CD4+ Th17 and CD8+ Tc17 cells. Across a range of human tumors, about 15% of the CD4+ T cell fraction in tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes are RORγ+ cells. To evaluate the role of RORγ in antitumor immunity, we have identified synthetic, small molecule agonists that selectively activate RORγ to a greater extent than the endogenous agonist desmosterol. These RORγ agonists enhance effector function of Type 17 cells by increasing the production of cytokines/chemokines such as IL-17A and GM-CSF, augmenting expression of co-stimulatory receptors like CD137, CD226, and improving survival and cytotoxic activity. RORγ agonists also attenuate immunosuppressive mechanisms by curtailing Treg formation, diminishing CD39 and CD73 expression, and decreasing levels of co-inhibitory receptors including PD-1 and TIGIT on tumor-reactive lymphocytes. The effects of RORγ agonists were not observed in RORγ−/− T cells, underscoring the selective on-target activity of the compounds. In vitro treatment of tumor-specific T cells with RORγ agonists, followed by adoptive transfer to tumor-bearing mice is highly effective at controlling tumor growth while improving T cell survival and maintaining enhanced IL-17A and reduced PD-1 in vivo. The in vitro effects of RORγ agonists translate into single agent, immune system-dependent, antitumor efficacy when compounds are administered orally in syngeneic tumor models. RORγ agonists integrate multiple antitumor mechanisms into a single therapeutic that both increases immune activation and decreases immune suppression resulting in robust inhibition of tumor growth. Thus, RORγ agonists represent a novel immunotherapy approach for cancer.
Angewandte Chemie | 2002
Andrew G. Myers; Philip C. Hogan; Alexander R. Hurd; Steven D. Goldberg
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2002
Andrew G. Myers; Alexander R. Hurd; Philip C. Hogan
Archive | 2003
Michael R. Barbachyn; J. Craig Ruble; Arthur Glenn Romero; Lisa Marie Thomasco; Alexander R. Hurd; John R. Palmer; Peter L. Toogood; Dennis Joseph McNamara; Debra Ann Sherry; Paul J. Dobrowolski
Archive | 2011
Gary D. Glick; Alexander R. Hurd; Matthew N. Mattson; Clarke B. Taylor; Chad A. Van Huis
Archive | 2013
Alexander R. Hurd; Clarke B. Taylor; Peter L. Toogood
Archive | 2014
Alexander R. Hurd; Clarke B. Taylor; Jian Wang; Peng Zhou
Archive | 2013
Alexander R. Hurd; Clarke B. Taylor; Peter L. Toogood