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Dive into the research topics where Bradley C. Pearce is active.

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Featured researches published by Bradley C. Pearce.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2004

Orally Active Fusion Inhibitor of Respiratory Syncytial Virus

Christopher Cianci; Kuo-Long Yu; Keith D. Combrink; Ny Sin; Bradley C. Pearce; Alan X. Wang; Rita L. Civiello; Stacey Voss; Guangxiang Luo; Kathy Kadow; Eugene V. Genovesi; Brian Lee Venables; Hatice Belgin Gulgeze; Ashok K. Trehan; Jennifer James; Lucinda Lamb; Ivette Medina; Julia Roach; Zheng Yang; Lisa Zadjura; Richard J. Colonno; Junius M. Clark; Nicholas A. Meanwell; Mark Krystal

ABSTRACT BMS-433771 was found to be a potent inhibitor of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) replication in vitro. It exhibited excellent potency against multiple laboratory and clinical isolates of both group A and B viruses, with an average 50% effective concentration of 20 nM. Mechanism-of-action studies demonstrated that BMS-433771 inhibits the fusion of lipid membranes during both the early virus entry stage and late-stage syncytium formation. After isolation of resistant viruses, resistance was mapped to a series of single amino acid mutations in the F1 subunit of the fusion protein. Upon oral administration, BMS-433771 was able to reduce viral titers in the lungs of mice infected with RSV. This new class of orally active RSV fusion inhibitors offers potential for clinical development.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Inhibition of influenza virus replication via small molecules that induce the formation of higher-order nucleoprotein oligomers

Samuel W. Gerritz; Christopher Cianci; Sean Kim; Bradley C. Pearce; Carol Deminie; Linda F. Discotto; Brian McAuliffe; B Minassian; Shuhao Shi; Shirong Zhu; Weixu Zhai; Annapurna Pendri; Guo Li; Michael A. Poss; Suzanne Edavettal; Patricia A. McDonnell; Hal A. Lewis; Klaus Maskos; Mario Mörtl; Reiner Kiefersauer; Stefan Steinbacher; Eric T. Baldwin; William Metzler; James Bryson; Matthew D. Healy; Thomas Philip; Mary Zoeckler; Richard Schartman; Michael Sinz; Victor H. Leyva-Grado

Influenza nucleoprotein (NP) plays multiple roles in the virus life cycle, including an essential function in viral replication as an integral component of the ribonucleoprotein complex, associating with viral RNA and polymerase within the viral core. The multifunctional nature of NP makes it an attractive target for antiviral intervention, and inhibitors targeting this protein have recently been reported. In a parallel effort, we discovered a structurally similar series of influenza replication inhibitors and show that they interfere with NP-dependent processes via formation of higher-order NP oligomers. Support for this unique mechanism is provided by site-directed mutagenesis studies, biophysical characterization of the oligomeric ligand:NP complex, and an X-ray cocrystal structure of an NP dimer of trimers (or hexamer) comprising three NP_A:NP_B dimeric subunits. Each NP_A:NP_B dimeric subunit contains two ligands that bridge two composite, protein-spanning binding sites in an antiparallel orientation to form a stable quaternary complex. Optimization of the initial screening hit produced an analog that protects mice from influenza-induced weight loss and mortality by reducing viral titers to undetectable levels throughout the course of treatment.


Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling | 2006

An empirical process for the design of high-throughput screening deck filters

Bradley C. Pearce; Michael J. Sofia; Andrew C. Good; Dieter M. Drexler; David Stock

A process for objective identification and filtering of undesirable compounds that contribute to high-throughput screening (HTS) deck promiscuity is described. Two methods of mapping hit promiscuity have been developed linking SMARTS-based structural queries with historical primary HTS data. The first compares an expected assay hit rate to actual hit rates. The second examines the propensity of an individual compound to hit multiple assays. Statistical evaluation of the data indicates a correlation between the resultant functional group filters and compound promiscuity. These data corroborate a number of commonly applied filters as well as producing some unexpected results. Application of these models to HTS collection triage reduced the number of in-house compounds considered for screening by 12%. The implications of these findings are further discussed in the context of the HTS screening set and combinatorial library design as well as compound acquisition.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Inhibitors of HIV-1 attachment. Part 2: An initial survey of indole substitution patterns

Nicholas A. Meanwell; Owen B. Wallace; Haiquan Fang; Henry Wang; Milind Deshpande; Tao Wang; Zhiwei Yin; Zhongxing Zhang; Bradley C. Pearce; Jennifer James; Kap Sun Yeung; Zhilei Qiu; J. J. Kim Wright; Zheng Yang; Lisa Zadjura; Donald L. Tweedie; Suresh Yeola; Fang Zhao; Sunanda A. Ranadive; Brett A. Robinson; Yi Fei Gong; Hwei Gene Heidi Wang; Wade S. Blair; Pei Yong Shi; Richard J. Colonno; Pin fang Lin

The effects of introducing simple halogen, alkyl, and alkoxy substituents to the 4, 5, 6 and 7 positions of 1-(4-benzoylpiperazin-1-yl)-2-(1H-indol-3-yl)ethane-1,2-dione, an inhibitor of the interaction between HIV gp120 and host cell CD4 receptors, on activity in an HIV entry assay was examined. Small substituents at C-4 generally resulted in increased potency whilst substitution at C-7 was readily tolerated and uniformly produced more potent HIV entry inhibitors. Substituents deployed at C-6 and, particularly, C-5 generally produced a modest to marked weakening of potency compared to the prototype. Small alkyl substituents at N-1 exerted minimal effect on activity whilst increasing the size of the alkyl moiety led to progressively reduced inhibitory properties. These studies establish a basic understanding of the indole element of the HIV attachment inhibitor pharmacophore.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

HCV NS5A Replication Complex Inhibitors. Part 4.1 Optimization for Genotype 1a Replicon Inhibitory Activity

Denis R. St. Laurent; Michael H. Serrano-Wu; Makonen Belema; Min Ding; Hua Fang; Min Gao; Jason Goodrich; Rudolph G. Krause; Julie A. Lemm; Mengping Liu; Omar D. Lopez; Van N. Nguyen; Peter T. Nower; Donald R. O’Boyle; Bradley C. Pearce; Jeffrey L. Romine; Lourdes Valera; Jin-Hua Sun; Ying-Kai Wang; Fukang Yang; Xuejie Yang; Nicholas A. Meanwell; Lawrence B. Snyder

A series of symmetrical E-stilbene prolinamides that originated from the library-synthesized lead 3 was studied with respect to HCV genotype 1a (G-1a) and genotype 1b (G-1b) replicon inhibition and selectivity against BVDV and cytotoxicity. SAR emerging from an examination of the prolinamide cap region revealed 11 to be a selective HCV NS5A inhibitor exhibiting submicromolar potency against both G-1a and G-1b replicons. Additional structural refinements resulted in the identification of 30 as a potent, dual G-1a/1b HCV NS5A inhibitor.


Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling | 2009

E-novo: an automated workflow for efficient structure-based lead optimization.

Bradley C. Pearce; David R. Langley; Jia Kang; Hongwei Huang; Amit Kulkarni

An automated E-Novo protocol designed as a structure-based lead optimization tool was prepared through Pipeline Pilot with existing CHARMm components in Discovery Studio. A scaffold core having 3D binding coordinates of interest is generated from a ligand-bound protein structural model. Ligands of interest are generated from the scaffold using an R-group fragmentation/enumeration tool within E-Novo, with their cores aligned. The ligand side chains are conformationally sampled and are subjected to core-constrained protein docking, using a modified CHARMm-based CDOCKER method to generate top poses along with CDOCKER energies. In the final stage of E-Novo, a physics-based binding energy scoring function ranks the top ligand CDOCKER poses using a more accurate Molecular Mechanics-Generalized Born with Surface Area method. Correlation of the calculated ligand binding energies with experimental binding affinities were used to validate protocol performance. Inhibitors of Src tyrosine kinase, CDK2 kinase, beta-secretase, factor Xa, HIV protease, and thrombin were used to test the protocol using published ligand crystal structure data within reasonably defined binding sites. In-house Respiratory Syncytial Virus inhibitor data were used as a more challenging test set using a hand-built binding model. Least squares fits for all data sets suggested reasonable validation of the protocol within the context of observed ligand binding poses. The E-Novo protocol provides a convenient all-in-one structure-based design process for rapid assessment and scoring of lead optimization libraries.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Inhibitors of HIV-1 attachment. Part 3: A preliminary survey of the effect of structural variation of the benzamide moiety on antiviral activity.

Nicholas A. Meanwell; Owen B. Wallace; Henry Wang; Milind Deshpande; Bradley C. Pearce; Ashok K. Trehan; Kap Sun Yeung; Zhilei Qiu; J. J. Kim Wright; Brett A. Robinson; Yi Fei Gong; Hwei Gene Heidi Wang; Wade S. Blair; Pei Yong Shi; Pin fang Lin

1-(4-Benzoylpiperazin-1-yl)-2-(1H-indol-3-yl)ethane-1,2-dione (1a) has been characterized as an inhibitor of HIV-1 attachment that interferes with the interaction of viral gp120 with the host cell receptor CD4. In previous studies, the effect of indole substitution pattern on antiviral activity was probed. In this Letter, the effect of structural variation of the benzamide moiety is described, a study that reveals the potential or the phenyl moiety to be replaced by five-membered heterocyclic rings and a restricted tolerance for the introduction of substituents to the phenyl ring.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

Inhibitors of HIV-1 attachment. Part 8: The effect of C7-heteroaryl substitution on the potency, and in vitro and in vivo profiles of indole-based inhibitors

Kap-Sun Yeung; Zhilei Qiu; Zhiwei Yin; Ashok K. Trehan; Haiquan Fang; Bradley C. Pearce; Zheng Yang; Lisa Zadjura; Celia D’Arienzo; Keith Riccardi; Pei Yong Shi; Timothy P. Spicer; Yi-Fei Gong; Marc Browning; Steven Hansel; Kenneth S. Santone; Jonathan Barker; Thomas Stephen Coulter; Ping-Fang Lin; Nicholas A. Meanwell; John F. Kadow

As part of the SAR profiling of the indole-oxoacetic piperazinyl benzamide class of HIV-1 attachment inhibitors, substitution at the C7 position of the lead 4-fluoroindole 2 with various 5- and 6-membered heteroaryl moieties was explored. Highly potent (picomolar) inhibitors of pseudotyped HIV-1 in a primary, cell-based assay were identified and select examples were shown to possess nanomolar inhibitory activity against M- and T-tropic viruses in cell culture. These C7-heteroaryl-indole analogs maintained the ligand efficiency (LE) of 2 and were also lipophilic efficient as measured by LLE and LELP. Pharmacokinetic studies of this class of inhibitor in rats showed that several possessed substantially improved IV clearance and half-lives compared to 2. Oral exposure in the rat correlated with membrane permeability as measured in a Caco-2 assay where the highly permeable 1,2,4-oxadiazole analog 13 exhibited the highest exposure.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2011

Molecular characterization and identification of surrogate substrates for diacylglycerol lipase α

Donna L. Pedicord; Michael J. Flynn; Caroline Fanslau; Maricar Miranda; Lisa Hunihan; Barbara J. Robertson; Bradley C. Pearce; Xuanchuan Yu; Ryan Westphal; Yuval Blat

Diacylglycerol lipase α is the key enzyme in the formation of the most prevalent endocannabinoid, 2-arachidonoylglycerol in the brain. In this study we identified the catalytic triad of diacylglycerol lipase α, consisting of serine 472, aspartate 524 and histidine 650. A truncated version of diacylglycerol lipase α, spanning residues 1-687 retains complete catalytic activity suggesting that the C-terminal domain is not required for catalysis. We also report the discovery and the characterization of fluorogenic and chromogenic substrates for diacylglycerol lipase α. Assays performed with these substrates demonstrate equipotent inhibition of diacylglycerol lipase α by tetrahydrolipastatin and RHC-20867 as compared to reactions performed with the native diacylglycerol substrate. Thus, confirming the utility of assays using these substrates for identification and kinetic characterization of inhibitors from pharmaceutical collections.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2000

Salicylamide inhibitors of influenza virus fusion

Keith D. Combrink; H. Belgin Gulgeze; Kuo-Long Yu; Bradley C. Pearce; Ashok K. Trehan; Jianmei Wei; Milind Deshpande; Mark Krystal; Albert Torri; Guangxiang Luo; Christopher Cianci; Stephanie Danetz; Laurence Tiley; Nicholas A. Meanwell

Structural variation of the quinolizidine heterocycle of the influenza fusion inhibitor BMY-27709 was examined by several topological dissections in order to illuminate the critical features of the ring system. This exercise resulted in the identification of a series of synthetically more accessible decahydroquinolines that retained the structural elements of BMY-27709 important for antiviral activity. The 2-methyl-cis-decahydroquinoline 6f was the most potent influenza inhibitor identified that demonstrated an EC50 of 90 ng/mL in a plaque reduction assay.

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Yi Zhang

Bristol-Myers Squibb

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