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Dive into the research topics where Bobby Lee Barnett is active.

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Featured researches published by Bobby Lee Barnett.


Bone | 2011

The relationship between the chemistry and biological activity of the bisphosphonates

Frank H. Ebetino; Anne-Marie L. Hogan; Shuting Sun; M.K. Tsoumpra; Xuchen Duan; J T Triffitt; Aaron Kwaasi; J E Dunford; Bobby Lee Barnett; U. Oppermann; Mark Walden Lundy; A. Boyde; Boris A. Kashemirov; Charles E. McKenna; R. Graham G. Russell

The ability of bisphosphonates ((HO)(2)P(O)CR(1)R(2)P(O)(OH)(2)) to inhibit bone resorption has been known since the 1960s, but it is only recently that a detailed molecular understanding of the relationship between chemical structures and biological activity has begun to emerge. The early development of chemistry in this area was largely empirical and based on modifying R(2) groups in a variety of ways. Apart from the general ability of bisphosphonates to chelate Ca(2+) and thus target the calcium phosphate mineral component of bone, attempts to refine clear structure-activity relationships had led to ambiguous or seemingly contradictory results. However, there was increasing evidence for cellular effects, and eventually the earliest bisphosphonate drugs, such as clodronate (R(1)=R(2)=Cl) and etidronate (R(1)=OH, R(2)=CH(3)), were shown to exert intracellular actions via the formation in vivo of drug derivatives of ATP. The observation that pamidronate, a bisphosphonate with R(1)=OH and R(2)=CH(2)CH(2)NH(2), exhibited higher potency than previously known bisphosphonate drugs represented the first step towards the later recognition of the critical importance of having nitrogen in the R(2) side chain. The synthesis and biological evaluation of a large number of nitrogen-containing bisphosphonates took place particularly in the 1980s, but still with an incomplete understanding of their structure-activity relationships. A major advance was the discovery that the anti-resorptive effects of the nitrogen-containing bisphosphonates (including alendronate, risedronate, ibandronate, and zoledronate) on osteoclasts appear to result from their potency as inhibitors of the enzyme farnesyl pyrophosphate synthase (FPPS), a key branch-point enzyme in the mevalonate pathway. FPPS generates isoprenoid lipids utilized in sterol synthesis and for the post-translational modification of small GTP-binding proteins essential for osteoclast function. Effects on other cellular targets, such as osteocytes, may also be important. Over the years many hundreds of bisphosphonates have been synthesized and studied. Interest in expanding the structural scope of the bisphosphonate class has also motivated new approaches to the chemical synthesis of these compounds. Recent chemical innovations include the synthesis of fluorescently labeled bisphosphonates, which has enabled studies of the biodistribution of these drugs. As a class, bisphosphonates share common properties. However, as with other classes of drugs, there are chemical, biochemical, and pharmacological differences among the individual compounds. Differences in mineral binding affinities among bisphosphonates influence their differential distribution within bone, their biological potency, and their duration of action. The overall pharmacological effects of bisphosphonates on bone, therefore, appear to depend upon these two key properties of affinity for bone mineral and inhibitory effects on osteoclasts. The relative contributions of these properties differ among individual bisphosphonates and help determine their clinical behavior and effectiveness.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

Structure-activity relationships among the nitrogen containing bisphosphonates in clinical use and other analogues: time-dependent inhibition of human farnesyl pyrophosphate synthase.

J E Dunford; Aaron Kwaasi; Michael J. Rogers; Bobby Lee Barnett; F H Ebetino; R.G.G. Russell; U. Oppermann; K.L. Kavanagh

The nitrogen-containing bisphosphonates (N-BPs) are the main drugs currently used to treat diseases characterized by excessive bone resorption. The major molecular target of N-BPs is farnesylpyrophosphate synthase. N-BPs inhibit the enzyme by a mechanism that involves time dependent isomerization of the enzyme. We investigated features of N-BPs that confer maximal slow and tight-binding by quantifying the initial and final K(i)s and calculating the isomerization constant K(isom) for many N-BPs. Disruption of the phosphonate-carbon-phosphonate backbone resulted in loss of potency and reduced K(isom). The lack of a hydroxyl group on the geminal carbon also reduced K(isom). The position of the nitrogen in the side chain was crucial to both K(i) and K(isom). A correlation of K(isom) and also final K(i) with previously published in vivo potency reveals that the isomerization constant ( R = -0.77, p < 0.0001) and the final inhibition of FPPS by N-BPs ( R = 0.74, p < 0.0001) are closely linked to antiresorptive efficacy.


Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part B | 2010

Differences between bisphosphonates in binding affinities for hydroxyapatite

M. A. Lawson; Zhidao Xia; Bobby Lee Barnett; J T Triffitt; R. J. Phipps; J E Dunford; R M Locklin; Frank H. Ebetino; Russell Rg

Bisphosphonates (BPs) inhibit bone resorption and are widely used for the treatment of bone diseases, including osteoporosis. BPs are also being studied for their effects on hydroxyapatite (HAP)-containing biomaterials. There is a growing appreciation that there are hitherto unexpected differences among BPs in their mineral binding affinities that affect their pharmacological and biological properties. To study these differences, we have developed a method based on fast performance liquid chromatography using columns of HAP to which BPs and other phosphate-containing compounds can adsorb and be eluted by using phosphate buffer gradients at pH 6.8. The individual compounds emerge as discrete and reproducible peaks for a range of compounds with different affinities. For example, the peak retention times (min; mean +/- SEM) were 22.0 +/- 0.3 for zoledronate, 16.16 +/- 0.44 for risedronate, and 9.0 +/- 0.28 for its phosphonocarboxylate analog, NE10790. These results suggest that there are substantial differences among BPs in their binding to HAP. These differences may be exploited in the development of biomaterials and may also partly explain the extent of their relative skeletal retention and persistence of biological effects observed in both animal and clinical studies.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 1999

The Next Generation of MMP Inhibitors: Design and Synthesis

Biswanath De; Michael George Natchus; Menyan Cheng; Stanislaw Pikul; Neil Gregory Almstead; Yetunde Olabisi Taiwo; Catherine E. Snider; Longyin Chen; Bobby Lee Barnett; Fei Gu; Martin E. Dowty

ABSTRACT: Since their inception during the eighties, MMP inhibitors (MMPIs) have gone through several cycles of metamorphosis. The design of early MMPIs was based on the cleavage site of peptide substrates. The second generation contained a substituted succinate scaffold (e.g., marimastat) coupled to a modified amino acid residue. The lower molecular weight analogs with multiple substitution possibilities produced a series of MMP inhibitors with varying degrees of selectivity for various MMPs. The introduction of sulfonamides in the midnineties added a new dimension to this field. The simplicity of synthesis coupled with high potency (e.g., CGS‐27023A, AG‐3340) produced a number of clinical candidates. This review highlights some of the key features that contributed to the discovery of this novel series of MMP inhibitors.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 1998

Design and synthesis of conformationally-constrained MMP inhibitors

Michael George Natchus; Menyan Cheng; C. T. Wahl; Stanislaw Pikul; Neil Gregory Almstead; R. S. Bradley; Yetunde Olabisi Taiwo; Glen E. Mieling; C. M. Dunaway; C. E. Snider; John Mcmillan Mciver; Bobby Lee Barnett; Sara Johnson Mcphail; M. B. Anastasio; Biswanath De

A novel series of conformationally constrained matrix metalloprotease inhibitors was identified. The potencies observed for these inhibitors were highly dependent upon the substitution pattern on the caprolactam ring as well as the succinate moiety.


Proteins | 2006

Serendipitous discovery of novel bacterial methionine aminopeptidase inhibitors

Artem G. Evdokimov; Matthew Pokross; Richard Walter; Marlene Mekel; Bobby Lee Barnett; Jack S. Amburgey; William Lee Seibel; Shari Joy Soper; Jane Far-Jine Djung; Neil T. Fairweather; Conrad Diven; Vinit Rastogi; Leo Grinius; Charles Klanke; Richard Siehnel; Tracy L. Twinem; Ryan Andrews; Alan Curnow

In this article we describe the application of structural biology methods to the discovery of novel potent inhibitors of methionine aminopeptidases. These enzymes are employed by the cells to cleave the N‐terminal methionine from nascent peptides and proteins. As this is one of the critical steps in protein maturation, it is very likely that inhibitors of these enzymes may prove useful as novel antibacterial agents. Involvement of crystallography at the very early stages of the inhibitor design process resulted in serendipitous discovery of a new inhibitor class, the pyrazole‐diamines. Atomic‐resolution structures of several inhibitors bound to the enzyme illuminate a new mode of inhibitor binding. Proteins 2007.


Bone | 2015

The inhibition of human farnesyl pyrophosphate synthase by nitrogen-containing bisphosphonates. Elucidating the role of active site threonine 201 and tyrosine 204 residues using enzyme mutants

M.K. Tsoumpra; J.R.C. Muniz; Bobby Lee Barnett; Aaron Kwaasi; E.S. Pilka; K.L. Kavanagh; Artem G. Evdokimov; Richard Walter; Frank von Delft; F H Ebetino; U. Oppermann; R. Graham G. Russell; J E Dunford

Farnesyl pyrophosphate synthase (FPPS) is the major molecular target of nitrogen-containing bisphosphonates (N-BPs), used clinically as bone resorption inhibitors. We investigated the role of threonine 201 (Thr201) and tyrosine 204 (Tyr204) residues in substrate binding, catalysis and inhibition by N-BPs, employing kinetic and crystallographic studies of mutated FPPS proteins. Mutants of Thr201 illustrated the importance of the methyl group in aiding the formation of the Isopentenyl pyrophosphate (IPP) binding site, while Tyr204 mutations revealed the unknown role of this residue in both catalysis and IPP binding. The interaction between Thr201 and the side chain nitrogen of N-BP was shown to be important for tight binding inhibition by zoledronate (ZOL) and risedronate (RIS), although RIS was also still capable of interacting with the main-chain carbonyl of Lys200. The interaction of RIS with the phenyl ring of Tyr204 proved essential for the maintenance of the isomerized enzyme-inhibitor complex. Studies with conformationally restricted analogues of RIS reaffirmed the importance of Thr201 in the formation of hydrogen bonds with N-BPs. In conclusion we have identified new features of FPPS inhibition by N-BPs and revealed unknown roles of the active site residues in catalysis and substrate binding.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008

Farnesyl pyrophosphate synthase enantiospecificity with a chiral risedronate analog, [6,7-dihydro-5H-cyclopenta[c]pyridin-7-yl(hydroxy)methylene]bis(phosphonic acid) (NE-10501): Synthetic, structural, and modeling studies.

Sylvine Deprèle; Boris A. Kashemirov; James M. Hogan; Frank H. Ebetino; Bobby Lee Barnett; Artem G. Evdokimov; Charles E. McKenna

The complex formed from crystallization of human farnesyl pyrophosphate synthase (hFPPS) from a solution of racemic [6,7-dihydro-5H-cyclopenta[c]pyridin-7-yl(hydroxy)methylene]bis(phosphonic acid) (NE-10501, 8), a chiral analog of the anti-osteoporotic drug risedronate, contained the R enantiomer in the enzyme active site. This enantiospecificity was assessed by computer modeling of inhibitor-active site interactions using Autodock 3, which was also evaluated for predictive ability in calculations of the known configurations of risedronate, zoledronate, and minodronate complexed in the active site of hFPPS. In comparison with these structures, the 8 complex exhibited certain differences, including the presence of only one Mg(2+), which could contribute to its 100-fold higher IC(50). An improved synthesis of 8 is described, which decreases the number of steps from 12 to 8 and increases the overall yield by 17-fold.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2007

Bisphosphonates : An Update on Mechanisms of Action and How These Relate to Clinical Efficacy

R.G.G. Russell; Zhidao Xia; J E Dunford; U. Oppermann; A. Kwaasi; P A Hulley; K.L. Kavanagh; J T Triffitt; Mark Walden Lundy; Roger Phipps; Bobby Lee Barnett; F P Coxon; Michael J. Rogers; Nelson B. Watts; F. H. Ebetino


Archive | 1994

Protease-containing cleaning compositions

Andre Cesar Baeck; Chanchal Kumar Ghosh; Thomas Paul Pacifico Graycar; Richard Ray Bott; Lori Jean Wilson; Philip Frederick Brode; Bobby Lee Barnett; Donn Nelton Rubingh

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