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Dive into the research topics where Ariamala Gopalsamy is active.

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Featured researches published by Ariamala Gopalsamy.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2015

Rational Targeting of Active-Site Tyrosine Residues Using Sulfonyl Fluoride Probes

Erik C. Hett; Hua Xu; Kieran F. Geoghegan; Ariamala Gopalsamy; Robert E. Kyne; Carol A. Menard; Arjun Narayanan; Mihir D. Parikh; Shenping Liu; Lee R. Roberts; Ralph P. Robinson; Michael A. Tones; Lyn H. Jones

This work describes the first rational targeting of tyrosine residues in a protein binding site by small-molecule covalent probes. Specific tyrosine residues in the active site of the mRNA-decapping scavenger enzyme DcpS were modified using reactive sulfonyl fluoride covalent inhibitors. Structure-based molecular design was used to create an alkyne-tagged probe bearing the sulfonyl fluoride warhead, thus enabling the efficient capture of the protein from a complex proteome. Use of the probe in competition experiments with a diaminoquinazoline DcpS inhibitor permitted the quantification of intracellular target occupancy. As a result, diaminoquinazoline upregulators of survival motor neuron protein that are used for the treatment of spinal muscular atrophy were confirmed as inhibitors of DcpS in human primary cells. This work illustrates the utility of sulfonyl fluoride probes designed to react with specific tyrosine residues of a protein and augments the chemical biology toolkit by these probes uses in target validation and molecular pharmacology.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Identification and SAR of a new series of thieno[3,2-d]pyrimidines as Tpl2 kinase inhibitors.

Yike Ni; Ariamala Gopalsamy; Derek Cole; Yonghan Hu; Rajiah Aldrin Denny; Manus Ipek; Julie Liu; Julie Lee; J. Perry Hall; Michael Luong; Jean-Baptiste Telliez; Lih-Ling Lin

We report here the synthesis and SAR of a new series of thieno[3,2-d]pyrimidines as potent Tpl2 kinase inhibitors. The proposed binding mode suggests the potential flipped binding mode depending on the substitution. Biacore studies show evidence of binding of these molecules to the protein kinase. The kinome inhibition profile of these molecules suggests good selectivity.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Discovery of indazoles as inhibitors of Tpl2 kinase.

Yonghan Hu; Derek Cole; Rajiah Aldrin Denny; David R. Anderson; Manus Ipek; Yike Ni; Xiaolun Wang; Suvit Thaisrivongs; Timothy Chamberlain; J. Perry Hall; Julie Liu; Michael Luong; Lih-Ling Lin; Jean-Baptiste Telliez; Ariamala Gopalsamy

Synthesis, modeling and structure-activity relationship of indazoles as inhibitors of Tpl2 kinase are described. From a high throughput screening effort, we identified an indazole hit compound 5 that has a single digit micromolar Tpl2 activity. Through SAR modifications at the C3 and C5 positions of the indazole, we discovered compound 31 with good potency in LANCE assay and cell-based p-Erk assay.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

Identification of pyrimidine derivatives as hSMG-1 inhibitors.

Ariamala Gopalsamy; Eric M. Bennett; Mengxiao Shi; Wei-Guo Zhang; Joel Bard; Ker Yu

hSMG-1 kinase plays a dual role in a highly conserved RNA surveillance pathway termed nonsense-mediated RNA decay (NMD) and in cellular genotoxic stress response. Since deregulation of cellular responses to stress contributes to tumor growth and resistance to chemotherapy, hSMG-1 is a potential target for cancer treatment. From our screening efforts, we have identified pyrimidine derivatives as hSMG-1 kinase inhibitors. We report structure-based optimization of this pan-kinase scaffold to improve its biochemical profile and overall kinome selectivity, including mTOR and CDK, to generate the first reported selective hSMG-1 tool compound.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2000

Parallel solid-phase synthesis of vitronectin receptor (αvβ3) inhibitors

Ariamala Gopalsamy; Hui Yang; John W. Ellingboe; Kenneth Lewis Kees; Jeanne Yoon; Richard Murrills

Abstract A combinatorial approach for rapid optimization of a vitronectin receptor (αvβ3) inhibitor lead was accomplished by solid-phase synthesis. Orthogonally bis protected 2,3-diaminopropionic acid was used to immobilize the C-terminus of the molecule. Selective deprotection and functionalization of the α-amino group followed by acyl resorcinol scaffold attachment and N-terminus diversification was used to explore structure–activity relationship (SAR).


Scientific Reports | 2016

Binding site elucidation and structure guided design of macrocyclic IL-17A antagonists.

Shenping Liu; Leslie Anthony Dakin; Li Xing; Jane M. Withka; Parag Sahasrabudhe; Wei Li; Mary Ellen Banker; Paul Balbo; Suman Shanker; Boris A. Chrunyk; Zuojun Guo; Jinshan M. Chen; Jennifer A. Young; Guoyun Bai; Jeremy T. Starr; Stephen W. Wright; Joerg Bussenius; Sheng Tan; Ariamala Gopalsamy; Bruce Allen Lefker; Fabien Vincent; Lyn H. Jones; Hua Xu; Lise R. Hoth; Kieran F. Geoghegan; Xiayang Qiu; Mark Edward Bunnage; Atli Thorarensen

Interleukin-17A (IL-17A) is a principal driver of multiple inflammatory and immune disorders. Antibodies that neutralize IL-17A or its receptor (IL-17RA) deliver efficacy in autoimmune diseases, but no small-molecule IL-17A antagonists have yet progressed into clinical trials. Investigation of a series of linear peptide ligands to IL-17A and characterization of their binding site has enabled the design of novel macrocyclic ligands that are themselves potent IL-17A antagonists.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 1996

Lipophilic bis-arylsulfonates as inhibitors of the CD4-gp120 interaction

Raymond J. Patch; John C. Roberts; Huai Gao; Zhan Shi; Ariamala Gopalsamy; Azis Kongsjahju; Kevin Daniels; Paul J. Kowalczyk; Marie-Rose van Schravendijk; Kristin A. Gordon; Peter V. Pallai

Abstract A series of lipophilic bis-arylsulfonates was synthesized and evaluated as potential inhibitors of the CD4-gp120 interaction. Structure-activity studies suggested a direct relationship between the nature and extent of lipophilicity and inhibitory potency.


PLOS ONE | 2017

In vitro and in vivo effects of 2,4 diaminoquinazoline inhibitors of the decapping scavenger enzyme DcpS: Context-specific modulation of SMN transcript levels

Jonathan J. Cherry; Christine J. DiDonato; Elliot J. Androphy; Alessandro Calo; Kyle Potter; Sara K. Custer; Sarah Du; Timothy L. Foley; Ariamala Gopalsamy; Emily J. Reedich; Susana M. Gordo; William Gordon; Natalie Hosea; Lyn H. Jones; Daniel K. Krizay; Gregory Larosa; Hongxia Li; Sachin Mathur; Carol A. Menard; Paraj Patel; Rebeca Ramos-Zayas; Anne Rietz; Haojing Rong; Baohong Zhang; Michael A. Tones

C5-substituted 2,4-diaminoquinazoline inhibitors of the decapping scavenger enzyme DcpS (DAQ-DcpSi) have been developed for the treatment of spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), which is caused by genetic deficiency in the Survival Motor Neuron (SMN) protein. These compounds are claimed to act as SMN2 transcriptional activators but data underlying that claim are equivocal. In addition it is unclear whether the claimed effects on SMN2 are a direct consequence of DcpS inhibitor or might be a consequence of lysosomotropism, which is known to be neuroprotective. DAQ-DcpSi effects were characterized in cells in vitro utilizing DcpS knockdown and 7-methyl analogues as probes for DcpS vs non-DcpS-mediated effects. We also performed analysis of Smn transcript levels, RNA-Seq analysis of the transcriptome and SMN protein in order to identify affected pathways underlying the therapeutic effect, and studied lysosomotropic and non-lysosomotropic DAQ-DCpSi effects in 2B/- SMA mice. Treatment of cells caused modest and transient SMN2 mRNA increases with either no change or a decrease in SMNΔ7 and no change in SMN1 transcripts or SMN protein. RNA-Seq analysis of DAQ-DcpSi-treated N2a cells revealed significant changes in expression (both up and down) of approximately 2,000 genes across a broad range of pathways. Treatment of 2B/- SMA mice with both lysomotropic and non-lysosomotropic DAQ-DcpSi compounds had similar effects on disease phenotype indicating that the therapeutic mechanism of action is not a consequence of lysosomotropism. In striking contrast to the findings in vitro, Smn transcripts were robustly changed in tissues but there was no increase in SMN protein levels in spinal cord. We conclude that DAQ-DcpSi have reproducible benefit in SMA mice and a broad spectrum of biological effects in vitro and in vivo, but these are complex, context specific, and not the result of simple SMN2 transcriptional activation.


Archive | 2013

CHAPTER 3:Anti-Inflammatory Drugs

Ariamala Gopalsamy; Suvit Thaisrivongs

Chronic pain disorder is a high unmet medical need. Pain differs in underlying causes, symptoms and mechanisms. Inflammatory pain originates from all forms of inflammation. Combating inflammation slows the degenerative process and the associated pain. Some of the current treatment strategies include corticosteroids, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), cyclooxygenase inhibitors (coxibs), disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs, both biologics and small molecules) and intervention of intracellular signalling pathways apart from T-cell inhibition and B-cell depletion. Signalling pathways in inflammatory disorders are regulated by kinases. In the recent past, kinases have emerged as attractive drug development targets. Some of the kinases in the MAP, SYK, JAK and TEC families are specifically implicated in immune disorders. Some of the advanced kinase inhibitors targeting immune disorders are also discussed.


Archive | 1999

Acylresorcinol derivatives as selective vitronectin receptor inhibitors

Kenneth Lewis Kees; Lloyd Michael Garrick; Ariamala Gopalsamy

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