Andrew Prongay
Schering-Plough
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Publication
Featured researches published by Andrew Prongay.
Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 1999
Thierry O. Fischmann; Alan Hruza; Xiao Da Niu; James Fossetta; Charles A. Lunn; Edward Dolphin; Andrew Prongay; Paul Reichert; Daniel Lundell; Satwant K. Narula; Patricia C. Weber
Crystal structures of human endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) and human inducible NOS (iNOS) catalytic domains were solved in complex with the arginine substrate and an inhibitor S-ethylisothiourea (SEITU), respectively. The small molecules bind in a narrow cleft within the larger active-site cavity containing heme and tetrahydrobiopterin. Both are hydrogen-bonded to a conserved glutamate (eNOS E361, iNOS E377). The active-site residues of iNOS and eNOS are nearly identical. Nevertheless, structural comparisons provide a basis for design of isozyme-selective inhibitors. The high-resolution, refined structures of eNOS (2.4 Å resolution) and iNOS (2.25 Å resolution) reveal an unexpected structural zinc situated at the intermolecular interface and coordinated by four cysteines, two from each monomer.
Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 1996
Cory Momany; Ladislau C. Kovari; Andrew Prongay; Walter Keller; Rossitza K. Gitti; Brian M. Lee; Alexander E. Gorbalenya; Liang Tong; Jan McClure; Lorna S. Ehrlich; Michael F. Summers; Carol A. Carter; Michael G. Rossmann
X-ray diffraction analysis of a human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) capsid (CA) protein shows that each monomer within the dimer consists of seven α-helices, five of which are arranged in a coiled coil-like structure. Sequence assignments were made for two of the helices, and tentative connectivity of the remainder of the protein was confirmed by the recent solution structure of a monomeric N-terminal fragment. The C-terminal third of the protein is mostly disordered in the crystal. The longest helices in the coiled coil-like structure are separated by a long, highly antigenic peptide that includes the binding site of an antibody fragment complexed with CA in the crystal. The site of binding of the Fab, the position of the antigenic loop and the site of cleavage between the matrix protein and CA establish the side of the dimer that would be on the exterior of the retroviral core.
Antiviral Research | 2008
Xiao Tong; Stephane L. Bogen; Robert Chase; Viyyoor M. Girijavallabhan; Zhuyan Guo; F. George Njoroge; Andrew Prongay; Anil K. Saksena; Angela Skelton; Ellen Xia; Robert Ralston
An issue of clinical importance in the development of new antivirals for HCV is emergence of resistance. Several resistance loci to ketoamide inhibitors of the NS3/4A protease have been identified (residues V36, T54, R155, A156, and V170) by replicon and clinical studies. Using SCH 567312, a more potent protease inhibitor derived from SCH 503034 (boceprevir) series, we identified two new positions (Q41 and F43) that confer resistance to the ketoamide class. The catalytic efficiency of protease enzymes was not affected by most resistance mutations, whereas replicon fitness varied with specific mutations. SCH 503034 and another ketoamide inhibitor, VX-950 (telaprevir), showed moderate losses of activity against most resistance mutations (< or =10-fold); the highest resistance level was conferred by mutations at A156 locus. Although SCH 503034 and VX-950 bind similarly to the active site, differences in resistance level were observed with specific mutations. Changes at V36 and R155 had more severe impact on VX-950, whereas mutations at Q41, F43 and V170 conferred higher resistance to SCH 503034. Structural analysis of resistance mutations on inhibitor binding is discussed.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006
MinKyung Yi; Xiao Tong; Angela Skelton; Robert Chase; Tong Chen; Andrew Prongay; Stephane L. Bogen; Anil K. Saksena; F. George Njoroge; Ronald L. Veselenak; Richard B. Pyles; Nigel Bourne; Bruce A. Malcolm; Stanley M. Lemon
Drug resistance is a major issue in the development and use of specific antiviral therapies. Here we report the isolation and characterization of hepatitis C virus RNA replicons resistant to a novel ketoamide inhibitor of the NS3/4A protease, SCH6 (originally SCH446211). Resistant replicon RNAs were generated by G418 selection in the presence of SCH6 in a dose-dependent fashion, with the emergence of resistance reduced at higher SCH6 concentrations. Sequencing demonstrated remarkable consistency in the mutations conferring SCH6 resistance in genotype 1b replicons derived from two different strains of hepatitis C virus, A156T/A156V and R109K. R109K, a novel mutation not reported previously to cause resistance to NS3/4A inhibitors, conferred moderate resistance only to SCH6. Structural analysis indicated that this reflects unique interactions of SCH6 with P′-side residues in the protease active site. In contrast, A156T conferred high level resistance to SCH6 and a related ketoamide, SCH503034, as well as BILN 2061 and VX-950. Unlike R109K, which had minimal impact on NS3/4A enzymatic function, A156T significantly reduced NS3/4A catalytic efficiency, polyprotein processing, and replicon fitness. However, three separate second-site mutations, P89L, Q86R, and G162R, were capable of partially reversing A156T-associated defects in polyprotein processing and/or replicon fitness, without significantly reducing resistance to the protease inhibitor.
Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2008
Yan Hou; Debra Mcguinness; Andrew Prongay; Boris Feld; Paul Ingravallo; Robert A. Ogert; Charles A. Lunn; John A. Howe
Small-molecule inhibitors of HIV integrase (HIV IN) have emerged as a promising new class of antivirals for the treatment of HIV/AIDS. The compounds currently approved or in clinical development specifically target HIV DNA integration and were identified using strand-transfer assays targeting the HIV IN/viral DNA complex. The authors have developed a second biochemical assay for identification of HIV integrase inhibitors, targeting the interaction between HIV IN and the cellular cofactor LEDGF/p75. They developed a luminescent proximity assay (AlphaScreen™) designed to measure the association of the 80-amino-acid integrase binding domain of LEDGF/p75 with the 163-amino-acid catalytic core domain of HIV IN. This assay proved to be quite robust (with a Z′ factor of 0.84 in screening libraries arrayed as orthogonal mixtures) and successfully identified several compounds specific for this protein-protein interaction. (Journal of Biomolecular Screening 2008:406-414)
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010
Ashok Arasappan; Frank Bennett; Stephane L. Bogen; Srikanth Venkatraman; Melissa Blackman; Kevin X. Chen; Siska Hendrata; Yuhua Huang; Regina Huelgas; Latha G. Nair; Angela I. Padilla; Weidong Pan; Russell E. Pike; Patrick A. Pinto; Sumei Ruan; Mousumi Sannigrahi; Francisco Velazquez; Bancha Vibulbhan; Wanli Wu; Weiying Yang; Anil K. Saksena; Viyyoor M. Girijavallabhan; Neng-Yang Shih; Jianshe Kong; Tao Meng; Yan Jin; Jesse Wong; Paul McNamara; Andrew Prongay; Vincent S. Madison
Boceprevir (SCH 503034), 1, a novel HCV NS3 serine protease inhibitor discovered in our laboratories, is currently undergoing phase III clinical trials. Detailed investigations toward a second generation protease inhibitor culminated in the discovery of narlaprevir (SCH 900518), 37, with improved potency (∼10-fold over 1), pharmacokinetic profile and physicochemical characteristics, currently in phase II human trials. Exploration of synthetic sequence for preparation of 37 resulted in a route that required no silica gel purification for the entire synthesis.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009
Srikanth Venkatraman; Francisco Velazquez; Wu W; Melissa Blackman; Kevin X. Chen; Stephane L. Bogen; Latha G. Nair; Xiao Tong; Robert Chase; Hart A; Sony Agrawal; John Pichardo; Andrew Prongay; Kuo-Chi Cheng; Girijavallabhan; John J. Piwinski; Neng-Yang Shih; Njoroge Fg
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is the major cause of chronic liver disease, leading to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma, and affects more than 200 million people worldwide. Although combination therapy of interferon-alpha and ribavirin is reasonably successful in treating majority of genotypes, its efficacy against the predominant genotype (genotype 1) is moderate at best, with only about 40% of the patients showing sustained virological response. Herein, the SAR leading to the discovery of a series of ketoamide derived P(1)-P(3) macrocyclic inhibitors that are more potent than the first generation clinical candidate, boceprevir (1, Sch 503034), is discussed. The optimization of these macrocyclic inhibitors identified a P(3) imide capped analogue 52 that was 20 times more potent than 1 and demonstrated good oral pharmacokinetics in rats. X-ray structure of 52 bound to NS3 protease and biological data are also discussed.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009
Srikanth Venkatraman; Wanli Wu; Andrew Prongay; Viyyoor M. Girijavallabhan; F. George Njoroge
Chronic hepatitis C infection is the leading causes for cirrhosis of the liver and hepatocellular carcinoma, leading to liver failure and liver transplantation. The etiological agent, HCV virus produces a single positive strand of RNA that is processed with the help of serine protease NS3 to produce mature virus. Inhibition of NS3 protease can be potentially used to develop effective drugs for HCV infections. Numerous efforts are now underway to develop potent inhibitors of HCV protease that contain ketoamides as serine traps. Herein we report the synthesis of a series of potent inhibitors that contain a boronic acid as a serine trap. The activity of these compounds were optimized to 200pM. X-ray structure of compound 17 bound to NS3 protease is also discussed.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010
Frank Bennett; Yuhua Huang; Siska Hendrata; Raymond G. Lovey; Stephane L. Bogen; Weidong Pan; Zhuyan Guo; Andrew Prongay; Kevin X. Chen; Ashok Arasappan; Srikanth Venkatraman; Francisco Velazquez; Latha G. Nair; Mousumi Sannigrahi; Xiao Tong; John Pichardo; K.-C. Cheng; Viyyoor M. Girijavallabhan; Anil K. Saksena; F.G. Njoroge
In the search for a second generation HCV protease inhibitor, molecular modeling studies of the X-ray crystal structure of Boceprevir1 bound to the NS3 protein suggest that expansion into the S4 pocket could provide additional hydrophobic Van der Waals interactions. Effective replacement of the P4 tert-butyl with a cyclohexylmethyl ligand led to inhibitor 2 with improved enzyme and replicon activities. Subsequent modeling and SAR studies led to the pyridine 38 and sulfone analogues 52 and 53 with vastly improved PK parameters in monkeys, forming a new foundation for further exploration.
Biochemistry | 2009
Payal R. Sheth; Andrea D. Basso; Jose S. Duca; Charles A. Lesburg; Polina Ogas; Kimberly Gray; Lissette Nale; Anthony Mannarino; Andrew Prongay; Hung V. Le
Current antimitotic cancer chemotherapy based on vinca alkaloids and taxanes target tubulin, a protein required not only for mitotic spindle formation but also for the overall structural integrity of terminally differentiated cells. Among many innovations targeting specific mitotic events, inhibition of motor enzymes including KSP (or Eg5) has been validated as a highly productive approach. Many reported KSP inhibitors bind to an induced allosteric site near the site of ATP hydrolysis, and some have been tested in clinical trials with varying degrees of success. This allosteric site was defined in detail by X-ray crystallography of inhibitor complexes, yet complementary information on binding thermodynamics is still lacking. Using two model ATP-uncompetitive inhibitors, monastrol and ispinesib, we report here the results of thermal denaturation and isothermal titration calorimetric studies. These binding studies were conducted with the wild-type KSP motor domain as well as two ispinesib mutants (D130V and A133D) identified to confer resistance to ispinesib treatment. The thermodynamic parameters obtained were placed in the context of the available structural information and corresponding models of the two ispinesib-resistant mutants. The resulting overall information formed a strong basis for future structure-based design of inhibitors of KSP and related motor enzymes.