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Dive into the research topics where Atsu Apedo is active.

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Featured researches published by Atsu Apedo.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

Design, structure-activity relationships, X-ray crystal structure, and energetic contributions of a critical P1 pharmacophore: 3-chloroindole-7-yl-based factor Xa inhibitors.

Yan Shi; Doree Sitkoff; Jing Zhang; Herbert E. Klei; Kevin Kish; Eddie C.-K. Liu; Karen S. Hartl; Steve M. Seiler; Ming Chang; Christine Huang; Sonia Youssef; Thomas E. Steinbacher; William A. Schumacher; Nyeemah Grazier; Andrew T. Pudzianowski; Atsu Apedo; Lorell Discenza; Joseph Yanchunas; Philip D. Stein; Karnail S. Atwal

An indole-based P1 moiety was incorporated into a previously established factor Xa inhibitor series. The indole group was designed to hydrogen-bond with the carbonyl of Gly218, while its 3-methyl or 3-chloro substituent was intended to interact with Tyr228. These interactions were subsequently observed in the X-ray crystal structure of compound 18. SAR studies led to the identification of compound 20 as the most potent FXa inhibitor in this series (IC(50) = 2.4 nM, EC(2xPT) = 1.2 microM). An in-depth energetic analysis suggests that the increased binding energy of 3-chloroindole-versus 3-methylindole-containing compounds in this series is due primarily to (a) the more hydrophobic nature of chloro- versus methyl-containing compounds and (b) an increased interaction of 3-chloroindole versus 3-methylindole with Gly218 backbone. The stronger hydrophobicity of chloro- versus methyl-substituted aromatics may partly explain the general preference for chloro- versus methyl-substituted P1 groups in FXa, which extends beyond the current series.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2007

The Guinea Pig as a Preclinical Model for Demonstrating the Efficacy and Safety of Statins

Cort S. Madsen; Evan B. Janovitz; Rongan Zhang; Van Nguyen-Tran; Carol S. Ryan; Xiaohong Yin; Hossain Monshizadegan; Ming Chang; Celia D'Arienzo; Susan Scheer; Robert Setters; Debra Search; Xing Chen; Shaobin Zhuang; Lori Kunselman; Andrew Peters; Thomas Harrity; Atsu Apedo; Christine Huang; Carolyn A. Cuff; Mark C. Kowala; Michael A. Blanar; Chongqing Sun; Jeffrey A. Robl; Philip D. Stein

Statins, because of their excellent efficacy and manageable safety profile, represent a key component in the current armamentarium for the treatment of hypercholesterolemia. Nonetheless, myopathy remains a safety concern for this important drug class. Cerivastatin was withdrawn from the market for myotoxicity safety concerns. BMS-423526 [{(3R,5S)-7-[4-(4-fluorophenyl)-6,7-dihydro-2-(1-methylethyl)-5H-benzo[6,7]cyclohepta[1,2-b]pyridin-3-yl]-3,5-dihydroxy-heptenoic acid} sodium salt], similar to cerivastatin in potency and lipophilicity, was terminated in early clinical development due to an unacceptable myotoxicity profile. In this report, we describe the guinea pig as a model of statin-induced cholesterol lowering and myotoxicity and show that this model can distinguish statins with unacceptable myotoxicity profiles from statins with acceptable safety profiles. In our guinea pig model, both cerivastatin and BMS-423526 induced myotoxicity at doses near the ED50 for total cholesterol (TC) lowering in plasma. In contrast, wide differences between myotoxic and TC-lowering doses were established for the currently marketed, more hydrophilic statins, pravastatin, rosuvastatin, and atorvastatin. This in vivo model compared favorably to an in vitro model, which used statin inhibition of cholesterol synthesis in rat hepatocytes and L6 myoblasts as surrogates of potential efficacy and toxicity, respectively. Our conclusion is that the guinea pig is a useful preclinical in vivo model for demonstrating whether a statin is likely to have an acceptable therapeutic safety margin.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Identification of a nonbasic melanin hormone receptor 1 antagonist as an antiobesity clinical candidate.

William N. Washburn; Mark Manfredi; Pratik Devasthale; Guohua Zhao; Saleem Ahmad; Andres Hernandez; Jeffrey A. Robl; Wei Wang; James Mignone; Zhenghua Wang; Khehyong Ngu; Mary Ann Pelleymounter; Daniel Longhi; Rulin Zhao; Bei Wang; Ning Huang; Neil Flynn; Anthony V. Azzara; Joel C. Barrish; Kenneth Rohrbach; James Devenny; Michael J. Thomas; Susan Glick; Helen E. Godonis; Susan J. Harvey; Mary Jane Cullen; Hongwei Zhang; Christian Caporuscio; Paul Stetsko; Mary F. Grubb

Identification of MCHR1 antagonists with a preclinical safety profile to support clinical evaluation as antiobesity agents has been a challenge. Our finding that a basic moiety is not required for MCHR1 antagonists to achieve high affinity allowed us to explore structures less prone to off-target activities such as hERG inhibition. We report the SAR evolution of hydroxylated thienopyrimidinone ethers culminating in the identification of 27 (BMS-819881), which entered obesity clinical trials as the phosphate ester prodrug 35 (BMS-830216).


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2014

Synthesis and structure–activity relationship of 2-adamantylmethyl tetrazoles as potent and selective inhibitors of human 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1 (11β-HSD1)

Xiang-Yang Ye; David S. Yoon; Stephanie Y. Chen; Akbar Nayeem; Rajasree Golla; Ramakrishna Seethala; Mengmeng Wang; Timothy W. Harper; Bogdan Sleczka; Atsu Apedo; Yi-Xin Li; Bin He; Mark S. Kirby; David A. Gordon; Jeffrey A. Robl

A series of 2-adamantylmethyl tetrazoles bearing a quaternary carbon at the 2-position of the adamantane ring (i.e. structure A) have been designed and synthesized as novel, potent, and selective inhibitors of human 11β-HSD1 enzyme. Based on the SAR and the docking experiment, we report for the first time a tetrazole moiety serving as the active pharmacophore for inhibitory activity of 11β-HSD1 enzyme. Optimization of two regions of A, R(1) and R(2) respectively, was explored with a focus on improving the inhibitory activity (IC50) and the microsomal stability in both human and mouse species. These efforts led to the identification of 26, an orally bioavailable inhibitor of human 11β-HSD1 with a favorable development profile.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2014

Synthesis and structure–activity relationship of dihydrobenzofuran derivatives as novel human GPR119 agonists

Xiang-Yang Ye; Christian L. Morales; Ying Wang; Karen A. Rossi; Sarah E. Malmstrom; Mojgan Abousleiman; Larisa Sereda; Atsu Apedo; Jeffrey A. Robl; Keith J. Miller; John Krupinski; Dean A. Wacker

Through appropriate medicinal chemistry design tactics and computer-assisted conformational modeling, the initial lead A was evolved into a series of dihydrobenzofuran derivatives 3 as potent GPR119 agonists. This Letter describes the optimization of general structure 3, including the substituent(s) on dihydrobenzofuran, the R(1) attachment on right-hand piperidine nitrogen, and the left-hand piperidine/piperazine and its attachment R(2). The efforts led to the identification of compounds 13c and 24 as potent human GPR119 modulators with favorable metabolic stability, ion channel activity, and PXR profiles.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017

Discovery of a Parenteral Small Molecule Coagulation Factor XIa Inhibitor Clinical Candidate (BMS-962212)

Donald J. P. Pinto; Michael J. Orwat; Leon M Smith; Mimi L. Quan; Patrick Y. S. Lam; Karen A. Rossi; Atsu Apedo; Jeffrery M. Bozarth; Yiming Wu; Joanna J. Zheng; Baomin Xin; Nathalie Toussaint; Paul Stetsko; Olafur S. Gudmundsson; Brad D. Maxwell; Earl J. Crain; Pancras C. Wong; Zhen Lou; Timothy W. Harper; Silvi A. Chacko; Joseph E. Myers; Steven Sheriff; Huiping Zhang; Xiaoping Hou; Arvind Mathur; Dietmar A. Seiffert; Ruth R. Wexler; Joseph M. Luettgen; William R. Ewing

Factor XIa (FXIa) is a blood coagulation enzyme that is involved in the amplification of thrombin generation. Mounting evidence suggests that direct inhibition of FXIa can block pathologic thrombus formation while preserving normal hemostasis. Preclinical studies using a variety of approaches to reduce FXIa activity, including direct inhibitors of FXIa, have demonstrated good antithrombotic efficacy without increasing bleeding. On the basis of this potential, we targeted our efforts at identifying potent inhibitors of FXIa with a focus on discovering an acute antithrombotic agent for use in a hospital setting. Herein we describe the discovery of a potent FXIa clinical candidate, 55 (FXIa Ki = 0.7 nM), with excellent preclinical efficacy in thrombosis models and aqueous solubility suitable for intravenous administration. BMS-962212 is a reversible, direct, and highly selective small molecule inhibitor of FXIa.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017

Discovery of Pyrrolidine-Containing GPR40 Agonists: Stereochemistry Effects a Change in Binding Mode

Elizabeth A. Jurica; Ximao Wu; Kristin N. Williams; Andres S. Hernandez; David S. Nirschl; Richard Rampulla; Arvind Mathur; Min Zhou; Gary Cao; Chunshan Xie; Biji Jacob; Hong Cai; Tao Wang; Brian J. Murphy; Heng Liu; Carrie Xu; Lori Kunselman; Michael B. Hicks; Qin Sun; Dora M. Schnur; Doree Sitkoff; Elizabeth A. Dierks; Atsu Apedo; Douglas B. Moore; Kimberly A. Foster; Mary Ellen Cvijic; Reshma Panemangalore; Neil Flynn; Brad D. Maxwell; Yang Hong

A novel series of pyrrolidine-containing GPR40 agonists is described as a potential treatment for type 2 diabetes. The initial pyrrolidine hit was modified by moving the position of the carboxylic acid, a key pharmacophore for GPR40. Addition of a 4-cis-CF3 to the pyrrolidine improves the human GPR40 binding Ki and agonist efficacy. After further optimization, the discovery of a minor enantiomeric impurity with agonist activity led to the finding that enantiomers (R,R)-68 and (S,S)-68 have differential effects on the radioligand used for the binding assay, with (R,R)-68 potentiating the radioligand and (S,S)-68 displacing the radioligand. Compound (R,R)-68 activates both Gq-coupled intracellular Ca2+ flux and Gs-coupled cAMP accumulation. This signaling bias results in a dual mechanism of action for compound (R,R)-68, demonstrating glucose-dependent insulin and GLP-1 secretion in vitro. In vivo, compound (R,R)-68 significantly lowers plasma glucose levels in mice during an oral glucose challenge, encouraging further development of the series.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015

Synthesis and biological evaluation of novel pyrrolidine acid analogs as potent dual PPARα/γ agonists.

Hao Zhang; Charles Z. Ding; Zhi Lai; Sean S. Chen; Pratik Devasthale; Tim Herpin; George C. Morton; Fucheng Qu; Denis E. Ryono; Rebecca A. Smirk; Wei Wang; Shung Wu; Xiang-Xang Ye; Yi-Xin Li; Atsu Apedo; Dennis Farrelly; Tao Wang; Liqun Gu; Nathan Morgan; Neil Flynn; Cuixia Chu; Lori Kunselman; Jonathan Lippy; Kenneth T. Locke; Kevin O’Malley; Thomas Harrity; Michael Cap; Lisa Zhang; Vinayak Hosagrahara; Pathanjali Kadiyala

The design, synthesis and structure-activity relationships of a novel series of 3,4-disubstituted pyrrolidine acid analogs as PPAR ligands is outlined. In both the 1,3- and 1,4-oxybenzyl pyrrolidine acid series, the preferred stereochemistry was shown to be the cis-3R,4S isomer, as exemplified by the potent dual PPARα/γ agonists 3k and 4i. The N-4-trifluoromethyl-pyrimidinyl pyrrolidine acid analog 4i was efficacious in lowering fasting glucose and triglyceride levels in diabetic db/db mice.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2018

Discovery of Potent and Orally Bioavailable Dihydropyrazole GPR40 Agonists

Jun Shi; Zhengxiang Gu; Elizabeth A. Jurica; Ximao Wu; Lauren Haque; Kristin N. Williams; Andres S. Hernandez; Zhenqiu Hong; Qi Gao; Marta Dabros; Akin H. Davulcu; Arvind Mathur; Richard Rampulla; Arun K. Das Gupta; Ramya Jayaram; Atsu Apedo; Douglas B. Moore; Heng Liu; Lori Kunselman; Edward J. Brady; Jason J. Wilkes; Bradley A. Zinker; Hong Cai; Yue-Zhong Shu; Qin Sun; Elizabeth A. Dierks; Kimberly A. Foster; Carrie Xu; Tao Wang; Reshma Panemangalore

G protein-coupled receptor 40 (GPR40) has become an attractive target for the treatment of diabetes since it was shown clinically to promote glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. Herein, we report our efforts to develop highly selective and potent GPR40 agonists with a dual mechanism of action, promoting both glucose-dependent insulin and incretin secretion. Employing strategies to increase polarity and the ratio of sp3/sp2 character of the chemotype, we identified BMS-986118 (compound 4), which showed potent and selective GPR40 agonist activity in vitro. In vivo, compound 4 demonstrated insulinotropic efficacy and GLP-1 secretory effects resulting in improved glucose control in acute animal models.


Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry | 2004

Liquid chromatographic analysis of nucleosides and their mono‐, di‐ and triphosphates using porous graphitic carbon stationary phase coupled with electrospray mass spectrometry

Jinsong Xing; Atsu Apedo; Adrienne A. Tymiak; Ning Zhao

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Tao Wang

Bristol-Myers Squibb

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