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Featured researches published by Bing-Yan Zhu.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2011

Discovery of a Potent, Selective, and Orally Available Class I Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinase (PI3K)/Mammalian Target of Rapamycin (mTOR) Kinase Inhibitor (GDC-0980) for the Treatment of Cancer.

Daniel P. Sutherlin; Linda Bao; Megan Berry; Georgette Castanedo; Irina Chuckowree; Jenna Dotson; Adrian Dzh Folks; Lori S. Friedman; Richard Goldsmith; Janet Gunzner; Timothy P. Heffron; John Lesnick; Cristina Lewis; Simon Mathieu; Jeremy Murray; Jim Nonomiya; Jodie Pang; Niel Pegg; Wei Wei Prior; Lionel Rouge; Laurent Salphati; Deepak Sampath; Qingping Tian; Vickie Tsui; Nan Chi Wan; Shumei Wang; Binqing Wei; Christian Wiesmann; Ping Wu; Bing-Yan Zhu

The discovery of 2 (GDC-0980), a class I PI3K and mTOR kinase inhibitor for oncology indications, is described. mTOR inhibition was added to the class I PI3K inhibitor 1 (GDC-0941) scaffold primarily through the substitution of the indazole in 1 for a 2-aminopyrimidine. This substitution also increased the microsomal stability and the free fraction of compounds as evidenced through a pairwise comparison of molecules that were otherwise identical. Highlighted in detail are analogues of an advanced compound 4 that were designed to improve solubility, resulting in 2. This compound, is potent across PI3K class I isoforms with IC(50)s of 5, 27, 7, and 14 nM for PI3Kα, β, δ, and γ, respectively, inhibits mTOR with a K(i) of 17 nM yet is highly selective versus a large panel of kinases including others in the PIKK family. On the basis of the cell potency, low clearance in mouse, and high free fraction, 2 demonstrated significant efficacy in mouse xenografts when dosed as low as 1 mg/kg orally and is currently in phase I clinical trials for cancer.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Discovery of (Thienopyrimidin-2-yl)aminopyrimidines as Potent, Selective, and Orally Available Pan-PI3-Kinase and Dual Pan-PI3-Kinase/mTOR Inhibitors for the Treatment of Cancer.

Daniel P. Sutherlin; Deepak Sampath; Megan Berry; Georgette Castanedo; Zhigang Chang; Irina Chuckowree; Jenna Dotson; Adrian Folkes; Lori Friedman; Richard Goldsmith; Tim Heffron; Leslie Lee; John D. Lesnick; Cristina Lewis; Simon Mathieu; Jim Nonomiya; Alan G. Olivero; Jodie Pang; Wei Wei Prior; Laurent Salphati; Steve Sideris; Qingping Tian; Vickie Tsui; Nan Chi Wan; Shumei Wang; Christian Wiesmann; Susan Wong; Bing-Yan Zhu

The PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway has been shown to play an important role in cancer. Starting with compounds 1 and 2 (GDC-0941) as templates, (thienopyrimidin-2-yl)aminopyrimidines were discovered as potent inhibitors of PI3K or both PI3K and mTOR. Structural information derived from PI3K gamma-ligand cocrystal structures of 1 and 2 were used to design inhibitors that maintained potency for PI3K yet improved metabolic stability and oral bioavailability relative to 1. The addition of a single methyl group to the optimized 5 resulted in 21, which had significantly reduced potency for mTOR. The lead compounds 5 (GNE-493) and 21 (GNE-490) have good pharmacokinetic (PK) parameters, are highly selective, demonstrate knock down of pathway markers in vivo, and are efficacious in xenograft models where the PI3K pathway is deregulated. Both compounds were compared in a PI3K alpha mutated MCF7.1 xenograft model and were found to have equivalent efficacy when normalized for exposure.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009

A class of 2,4-bisanilinopyrimidine Aurora A inhibitors with unusually high selectivity against Aurora B.

Ignacio Aliagas-Martin; Dan Burdick; Laura Corson; Jennafer Dotson; Jason Drummond; Carter Fields; Oscar W. Huang; Thomas Hunsaker; Tracy Kleinheinz; Elaine Krueger; Jun Liang; John Moffat; Gail Lewis Phillips; Rebecca Pulk; Thomas E. Rawson; Mark Ultsch; Leslie Walker; Christian Wiesmann; Birong Zhang; Bing-Yan Zhu; Andrea G. Cochran

The two major Aurora kinases carry out critical functions at distinct mitotic stages. Selective inhibitors of these kinases, as well as pan-Aurora inhibitors, show antitumor efficacy and are now under clinical investigation. However, the ATP-binding sites of Aurora A and Aurora B are virtually identical, and the structural basis for selective inhibition has therefore not been clear. We report here a class of bisanilinopyrimidine Aurora A inhibitors with excellent selectivity for Aurora A over Aurora B, both in enzymatic assays and in cellular phenotypic assays. Crystal structures of two of the inhibitors in complex with Aurora A implicate a single amino acid difference in Aurora B as responsible for poor inhibitory activity against this enzyme. Mutation of this residue in Aurora B (E161T) or Aurora A (T217E) is sufficient to swap the inhibition profile, suggesting that this difference might be exploited more generally to achieve high selectivity for Aurora A.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Identification of GNE-477, a potent and efficacious dual PI3K/mTOR inhibitor

Timothy P. Heffron; Megan Berry; Georgette Castanedo; Christine Chang; Irina Chuckowree; Jennafer Dotson; Adrian Folkes; Janet Gunzner; John Lesnick; Cristina Lewis; Simon Mathieu; Jim Nonomiya; Alan G. Olivero; Jodie Pang; David Peterson; Laurent Salphati; Deepak Sampath; Steve Sideris; Daniel P. Sutherlin; Vickie Tsui; Nan Chi Wan; Shumei Wang; Susan Wong; Bing-Yan Zhu

Efforts to identify potent small molecule inhibitors of PI3 kinase and mTOR led to the discovery of the exceptionally potent 6-aryl morpholino thienopyrimidine 6. In an effort to reduce the melting point in analogs of 6, the thienopyrimidine was modified by the addition of a methyl group to disrupt planarity. This modification resulted in a general improvement in in vivo clearance. This discovery led to the identification of GNE-477 (8), a potent and efficacious dual PI3K/mTOR inhibitor.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2011

Rational Design of Phosphoinositide 3-Kinase α Inhibitors That Exhibit Selectivity over the Phosphoinositide 3-Kinase β Isoform

Timothy P. Heffron; Binqing Wei; Alan G. Olivero; Steven Staben; Vickie Tsui; Steven Do; Jennafer Dotson; Adrian Folkes; Paul Goldsmith; Richard Goldsmith; Janet Gunzner; John D. Lesnick; Cristina Lewis; Simon Mathieu; Jim Nonomiya; Stephen J. Shuttleworth; Daniel P. Sutherlin; Nan Chi Wan; Shumei Wang; Christian Wiesmann; Bing-Yan Zhu

Of the four class I phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) isoforms, PI3Kα has justly received the most attention for its potential in cancer therapy. Herein we report our successful approaches to achieve PI3Kα vs PI3Kβ selectivity for two chemical series. In the thienopyrimidine series of inhibitors, we propose that select ligands achieve selectivity derived from a hydrogen bonding interaction with Arg770 of PI3Kα that is not attained with the corresponding Lys777 of PI3Kβ. In the benzoxepin series of inhibitors, the selectivity observed can be rationalized by the difference in electrostatic potential between the two isoforms in a given region rather than any specific interaction.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

A pentacyclic aurora kinase inhibitor (AKI-001) with high in vivo potency and oral bioavailability.

Thomas E. Rawson; Matthias Rüth; Elizabeth Blackwood; Dan Burdick; Laura Corson; Jenna Dotson; Jason Drummond; Carter Fields; Guy Georges; Bernhard Goller; Jason S. Halladay; Thomas Hunsaker; Tracy Kleinheinz; Hans-Willi Krell; Jun Li; Jun Liang; Anja Limberg; Angela McNutt; John Moffat; Gail Lewis Phillips; Yingqing Ran; Brian Safina; Mark Ultsch; Leslie Walker; Christian Wiesmann; Birong Zhang; Aihe Zhou; Bing-Yan Zhu; Petra Rüger; Andrea G. Cochran

Aurora kinase inhibitors have attracted a great deal of interest as a new class of antimitotic agents. We report a novel class of Aurora inhibitors based on a pentacyclic scaffold. A prototype pentacyclic inhibitor 32 (AKI-001) derived from two early lead structures improves upon the best properties of each parent and compares favorably to a previously reported Aurora inhibitor, 39 (VX-680). The inhibitor exhibits low nanomolar potency against both Aurora A and Aurora B enzymes, excellent cellular potency (IC50 < 100 nM), and good oral bioavailability. Phenotypic cellular assays show that both Aurora A and Aurora B are inhibited at inhibitor concentrations sufficient to block proliferation. Importantly, the cellular activity translates to potent inhibition of tumor growth in vivo. An oral dose of 5 mg/kg QD is well tolerated and results in near stasis (92% TGI) in an HCT116 mouse xenograft model.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Structure-based optimization of pyrazolo-pyrimidine and -pyridine inhibitors of PI3-kinase.

Steven Staben; Timothy P. Heffron; Daniel P. Sutherlin; Seema R. Bhat; Georgette Castanedo; Irina Chuckowree; Jenna Dotson; Adrian Folkes; Lori S. Friedman; Leslie Lee; John Lesnick; Cristina Lewis; Jeremy Murray; Jim Nonomiya; Alan G. Olivero; Emile Plise; Jodie Pang; Wei Wei Prior; Laurent Salphati; Lionel Rouge; Deepak Sampath; Vickie Tsui; Nan Chi Wan; Shumei Wang; Christian Weismann; Ping Wu; Bing-Yan Zhu

Starting from HTS hit 1a, X-ray co-crystallization and molecular modeling were used to design potent and selective inhibitors of PI3-kinase. Bioavailablity in this series was improved through careful modulation of physicochemical properties. Compound 12 displayed in vivo knockdown of PI3K pharmacodynamic markers such as pAKT, pPRAS40, and pS6RP in a PC3 prostate cancer xenograft model.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

2-Amino-[1,2,4]triazolo[1,5-a]pyridines as JAK2 inhibitors.

Michael Siu; Richard Pastor; Wendy Liu; Kathy Barrett; Megan Berry; Wade S. Blair; Christine Chang; Jacob Chen; Charles Eigenbrot; Nico Ghilardi; Paul Gibbons; Haiying He; Christopher Hurley; Jane R. Kenny; S. Cyrus Khojasteh; Hoa Le; Leslie Lee; Joseph P. Lyssikatos; Steve Magnuson; Rebecca Pulk; Vickie Tsui; Mark Ultsch; Yisong Xiao; Bing-Yan Zhu; Deepak Sampath

The advancement of a series of ligand efficient 2-amino-[1,2,4]triazolo[1,5-a]pyridines, initially identified from high-throughput screening, to a JAK2 inhibitor with pharmacodynamic activity in a mouse xenograft model is disclosed.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Structure-based design of thienobenzoxepin inhibitors of PI3-kinase

Steven Staben; Michael Siu; Richard Goldsmith; Alan G. Olivero; Steven Do; Daniel J. Burdick; Timothy P. Heffron; Jenna Dotson; Daniel P. Sutherlin; Bing-Yan Zhu; Vickie Tsui; Hoa Le; Leslie Lee; John Lesnick; Cristina Lewis; Jeremy Murray; Jim Nonomiya; Jodie Pang; Wei Wei Prior; Laurent Salphati; Lionel Rouge; Deepak Sampath; Steve Sideris; Christian Wiesmann; Ping Wu

Starting from thienobenzopyran HTS hit 1, co-crystallization, molecular modeling and metabolic analysis were used to design potent and metabolically stable inhibitors of PI3-kinase. Compound 15 demonstrated PI3K pathway suppression in a mouse MCF7 xenograft model.


Cancer Research | 2011

Abstract 2787: Discovery of GDC-0980, a selective PI3K/mTOR inhibitor in clinical trials

Daniel P. Sutherlin; Marcia Belvin; Linda Bao; Leanne Berry; Megan Berry; Georgette Castanedo; Kyle A. Edgar; Adrian Folkes; Lori S. Friedman; Tim Heffron; Sonal Patel; Alan G. Olivero; John Lesnick; Cristina Lewis; James C. Marsters; Jim Nonomiya; Jodie Pang; Wei Wei Prior; Laurent Salphati; Deepak Sampath; Vickie Tsui; Jeff Wallin; Binqing Wei; Christian Weismann; Bing-Yan Zhu

PI3 Kinase and mTOR have been identified as promising targets for the treatment of cancer. These enzymes participate in related, but not redundant, signaling networks to transmit cellular growth and survival signals, which are hallmarks of tumor growth. An interest in targeting both of these two important points along this critical signaling pathway, and the ability to leverage the high degree of structural similarity in the active sites of PI3K and mTOR kinase, has resulted in the discovery of GDC-0980 as a Class I PI3K and mTOR kinase inhibitor for oncology indications. The structure, efficacy, and medicinal chemistry behind the discovery of this compound is described. Beginning with the morpholin-4-yl-thieno[3,2-d]pyrimidine core of the Class I PI3K inhibitor GDC-0941, structural substitutions were made external to the core that added mTOR potency, improved the metabolic stability in vitro and in vivo, and lowered the plasma protein binding of the scaffold. Homology models of mTOR using PI3Kγ structures with bound inhibitors provided hypotheses for increasing mTOR potency relative to previous compounds. The solubility of the modified compounds was improved through the addition of polar functionality in the solvent exposed region of the scaffold, resulting in GDC-0980. GDC-0980 is potent across Class I isoforms with IC509s of 5, 27, 7, and 14 nM for PI3Kα, β, Δ, and γ, and inhibits mTOR with a Ki of 17 nM. The compound is highly selective versus a large panel of kinases including others in the PIK family. Based on the excellent PK profile, linear increase in exposure, strong potency in a broad range of cancer cells, and high free fraction, GDC-0980 is efficacious in animal models of cancer when dosed orally at low doses. Furthermore, this compound is efficacious when dosed intermittently as well as on a daily schedule. These preclinical data provide compelling support for GDC-0980 as a clinical candidate, and early stage clinical trials are underway. Citation Format: {Authors}. {Abstract title} [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 102nd Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2011 Apr 2-6; Orlando, FL. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2011;71(8 Suppl):Abstract nr 2787. doi:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2011-2787

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