Barri Wautlet
Bristol-Myers Squibb
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Barri Wautlet.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009
Gretchen M. Schroeder; Yongmi An; Zhen-Wei Cai; Xiao-Tao Chen; Cheryl M. Clark; Lyndon A. M. Cornelius; Jun Dai; Johnni Gullo-Brown; Ashok Kumar Gupta; Benjamin Henley; John T. Hunt; Robert Jeyaseelan; Amrita Kamath; Kyoung S. Kim; Jonathan Lippy; Louis J. Lombardo; Veeraswamy Manne; Simone Oppenheimer; John S. Sack; Robert J. Schmidt; Guoxiang Shen; Kevin Stefanski; John S. Tokarski; George L. Trainor; Barri Wautlet; Donna D. Wei; David K. Williams; Yingru Zhang; Yueping Zhang; Joseph Fargnoli
Substituted N-(4-(2-aminopyridin-4-yloxy)-3-fluoro-phenyl)-1-(4-fluorophenyl)-2-oxo-1,2-dihydropyridine-3-carboxamides were identified as potent and selective Met kinase inhibitors. Substitution of the pyridine 3-position gave improved enzyme potency, while substitution of the pyridone 4-position led to improved aqueous solubility and kinase selectivity. Analogue 10 demonstrated complete tumor stasis in a Met-dependent GTL-16 human gastric carcinoma xenograft model following oral administration. Because of its excellent in vivo efficacy and favorable pharmacokinetic and preclinical safety profiles, 10 has been advanced into phase I clinical trials.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008
Zhen-Wei Cai; Yongzheng Zhang; Robert M. Borzilleri; Ligang Qian; Stephanie Barbosa; Donna D. Wei; Xiaoping Zheng; Lawrence Wu; Junying Fan; Zhongping Shi; Barri Wautlet; Steve Mortillo; Robert Jeyaseelan; Daniel W. Kukral; Amrita Kamath; Punit Marathe; Celia D’Arienzo; George Derbin; Joel C. Barrish; Jeffrey A. Robl; John T. Hunt; Louis J. Lombardo; Joseph Fargnoli; Rajeev S. Bhide
A series of amino acid ester prodrugs of the dual VEGFR-2/FGFR-1 kinase inhibitor 1 (BMS-540215) was prepared in an effort to improve the aqueous solubility and oral bioavailability of the parent compound. These prodrugs were evaluated for their ability to liberate parent drug 1 in in vitro and in vivo systems. The l-alanine prodrug 8 (also known as brivanib alaninate/BMS-582664) was selected as a development candidate and is presently in phase II clinical trials.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008
Kyoung S. Kim; Liping Zhang; Robert J. Schmidt; Zhen-Wei Cai; Donna D. Wei; David K. Williams; Louis J. Lombardo; George L. Trainor; Dianlin Xie; Yaquan Zhang; Yongmi An; John S. Sack; John S. Tokarski; Celia D'Arienzo; Amrita Kamath; Punit Marathe; Yueping Zhang; Jonathan Lippy; Robert Jeyaseelan; Barri Wautlet; Benjamin Henley; Johnni Gullo-Brown; Veeraswamy Manne; John T. Hunt; Joseph Fargnoli; Robert M. Borzilleri
Conformationally constrained 2-pyridone analogue 2 is a potent Met kinase inhibitor with an IC50 value of 1.8 nM. Further SAR of the 2-pyridone based inhibitors of Met kinase led to potent 4-pyridone and pyridine N-oxide inhibitors such as 3 and 4. The X-ray crystallographic data of the inhibitor 2 bound to the ATP binding site of Met kinase protein provided insight into the binding modes of these inhibitors, and the SAR of this series of analogues was rationalized. Many of these analogues showed potent antiproliferative activities against the Met dependent GTL-16 gastric carcinoma cell line. Compound 2 also inhibited Flt-3 and VEGFR-2 kinases with IC50 values of 4 and 27 nM, respectively. It possesses a favorable pharmacokinetic profile in mice and demonstrates significant in vivo antitumor activity in the GTL-16 human gastric carcinoma xenograft model.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997
Kevin Coleman; Barri Wautlet; David Morrissey; Janet G. Mulheron; Sylvia A. Sedman; Pamela M. Brinkley; Sandy Price; Kevin R. Webster
Activation of CDK4 is regulated, in part, by its association with a D-type cyclin. Conversely, CDK4 activity is inhibited when it is bound to the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor, p16 INK4A . To investigate the molecular basis of the interactions between CDK4 and cyclin D1 or p16 INK4A we performed site-directed mutagenesis of CDK4. The interaction was examined using in vitro translated wild type and mutant CDK4 proteins and bacterially expressed cyclin D1 and p16 fusion proteins. As mutational analysis of CDC2 suggests that its cyclin binding domain is primarily located near its amino terminus, the majority of the mutations constructed in CDK4 were located near its amino terminus. In addition, CDK4 residues homologous to CDC2 sites involved in Suc1 binding were also mutated. Our analysis indicates that cyclin D1 and p16 binding sites are overlapping and located primarily near the amino terminus. All CDK4 mutations that resulted in decreased p16 binding capability also diminished cyclin D1 binding. In contrast, amino-terminal sequences were identified, including the PSTAIRE region, that are important for cyclin D1 binding but are not involved in p16 binding.
Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2010
Rajeev S. Bhide; Louis J. Lombardo; John T. Hunt; Zhen-Wei Cai; Joel C. Barrish; Susan Galbraith; Robert Jeyaseelan; Steven Mortillo; Barri Wautlet; Bala Krishnan; Daniel Kukral; Harold Malone; Anne Lewin; Benjamin Henley; Joseph Fargnoli
Tumor angiogenesis is a complex and tightly regulated network mediated by various proangiogenic factors. The fibroblast growth factor (FGF) and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) family of growth factors, and associated tyrosine kinase receptors have a major influence in tumor growth and dissemination and may work synergistically to promote angiogenesis. Brivanib alaninate is the orally active prodrug of brivanib, a selective dual inhibitor of FGF and VEGF signaling. Here, we show that brivanib demonstrates antitumor activity in a broad range of xenograft models over multiple dose levels and that brivanib alaninate shows dose-dependent efficacy equivalent to brivanib in L2987 human tumor xenografts. Brivanib alaninate (107 mg/kg) reduced tumor cell proliferation as determined by a 76% reduction in Ki-67 staining and reduced tumor vascular density as determined by a 76% reduction in anti-CD34 endothelial cell staining. Furthermore, Matrigel plug assays in athymic mice showed that brivanib alaninate inhibited angiogenesis driven by VEGF or basic FGF alone, or combined. Dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging, used to assess the effects of brivanib alaninate on tumor microcirculation, showed a marked decrease in gadopentetate dimeglumine contrast agent uptake at 107 mg/kg dose, with a reduction in area under the plasma concentration-time curve from time 0 to 60 minutes at 24 and 48 hours of 54% and 64%, respectively. These results show that brivanib alaninate is an effective antitumor agent in preclinical models across a range of doses, and that efficacy is accompanied by changes in cellular and vascular activities. Mol Cancer Ther; 9(2); 369–78
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008
Gretchen M. Schroeder; Xiao-Tao Chen; David K. Williams; David S. Nirschl; Zhen-Wei Cai; Donna D. Wei; John S. Tokarski; Yongmi An; John S. Sack; Zhong Chen; Tram Huynh; Wayne Vaccaro; Michael A. Poss; Barri Wautlet; Johnni Gullo-Brown; Kristen A. Kellar; Veeraswamy Manne; John T. Hunt; Tai W. Wong; Louis J. Lombardo; Joseph Fargnoli; Robert M. Borzilleri
An amide library derived from the pyrrolo[2,1-f][1,2,4]triazine scaffold led to the identification of modest inhibitors of Met kinase activity. Introduction of polar side chains at C-6 of the pyrrolotriazine core provided significant improvements in in vitro potency. The amide moiety could be replaced with acylurea and malonamide substituents to give compounds with improved potency in the Met-driven GTL-16 human gastric carcinoma cell line. Acylurea pyrrolotriazines with substitution at C-5 demonstrated single digit nanomolar kinase activity. X-ray crystallography revealed that the C-5 substituted pyrrolotriazines bind to the Met kinase domain in an ATP-competitive manner.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008
Zhen-Wei Cai; Donna D. Wei; Robert M. Borzilleri; Ligang Qian; Amrita Kamath; Steven Mortillo; Barri Wautlet; Benjamin Henley; Robert Jeyaseelan; John S. Tokarski; John T. Hunt; Rajeev S. Bhide; Joseph Fargnoli; Louis J. Lombardo
Introduction of the 2,4-difluoro-5-(cyclopropylcarbamoyl)phenylamino group at the C-4 position of the pyrrolo[2,1-f][1,2,4] triazine scaffold led to the discovery of a novel sub-series of inhibitors of VEGFR-2 kinase activity. Subsequent SAR studies on the 1,3,5-oxadiazole ring appended to the C-6 position of this new sub-family of pyrrolotriazines resulted in the identification of low nanomolar inhibitors of VEGFR-2. Antitumor efficacy was observed with compound 37 against L2987 human lung carcinoma xenografts in athymic mice.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010
David K. Williams; Xiao-Tao Chen; Christine M. Tarby; Robert F. Kaltenbach; Zhen-Wei Cai; John S. Tokarski; Yongmi An; John S. Sack; Barri Wautlet; Johnni Gullo-Brown; Benjamin Henley; Robert Jeyaseelan; Kristen A. Kellar; Veeraswamy Manne; George L. Trainor; Louis J. Lombardo; Joseph Fargnoli; Robert M. Borzilleri
Biarylamine-based inhibitors of Met kinase have been identified. Lead compounds demonstrate nanomolar potency in Met kinase biochemical assays and significant activity in the Met-driven GTL-16 human gastric carcinoma cell line. X-ray crystallography revealed that these compounds adopt a bioactive conformation, in the kinase domain, consistent with that previously seen with 2-pyridone-based Met kinase inhibitors. Compound 9b demonstrated potent in vivo antitumor activity in the GTL-16 human tumor xenograft model.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008
Rejean Ruel; Carl Thibeault; Alexandre L’Heureux; Alain Martel; Zhen-Wei Cai; Donna D. Wei; Ligang Qian; Joel C. Barrish; Arvind Mathur; Celia D’Arienzo; John T. Hunt; Amrita Kamath; Punit Marathe; Yueping Zhang; George Derbin; Barri Wautlet; Steven Mortillo; Robert Jeyaseelan; Benjamin Henley; Ravindra W. Tejwani; Rajeev S. Bhide; George L. Trainor; Joseph Fargnoli; Louis J. Lombardo
We report herein a series of substituted N-(1H-pyrrolo[2,3-b]pyridin-5-yl)pyrrolo[2,1-f][1,2,4]triazin-4-amines as inhibitors of vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-2 tyrosine kinase. Through structure-activity relationship studies, biochemical potency, pharmacokinetics, and kinase selectivity were optimized to afford BMS-645737 (13), a compound with good preclinical in vivo activity against human tumor xenograft models.
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2018
Yong Zhang; Yufen Zhao; Andrew J. Tebben; Steven Sheriff; Max Ruzanov; Mark P. Fereshteh; Yi Fan; Jonathan Lippy; Jesse Swanson; Ching-Ping Ho; Barri Wautlet; Anne Rose; Karen Parrish; Zheng Yang; Andrew F. Donnell; Liping Zhang; Brian E. Fink; Gregory D. Vite; Karen Augustine-Rauch; Joseph Fargnoli; Robert M. Borzilleri
The multifunctional cytokine TGFβ plays a central role in regulating antitumor immunity. It has been postulated that inhibition of TGFβ signaling in concert with checkpoint blockade will provide improved and durable immune response against tumors. Herein, we describe a novel series of 4-azaindole TGFβ receptor kinase inhibitors with excellent selectivity for TGFβ receptor 1 kinase. The combination of compound 3f and an antimouse-PD-1 antibody demonstrated significantly improved antitumor efficacy compared to either treatment alone in a murine tumor model.