Buwen Huang
Pfizer
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Publication
Featured researches published by Buwen Huang.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2011
Luke Raymond Zehnder; Michael Bennett; Jerry Meng; Buwen Huang; Sacha Ninkovic; Fen Wang; John Frederick Braganza; John Howard Tatlock; Tanya Michelle Jewell; Joe Zhongxiang Zhou; Ben Burke; Jeff Wang; Karen Maegley; Pramod P. Mehta; Min-Jean Yin; Ketan S. Gajiwala; Michael J. Hickey; Shinji Yamazaki; Evan Smith; Ping Kang; Anand Sistla; Elena Z. Dovalsantos; Michael R. Gehring; Robert Steven Kania; Martin James Wythes; Pei-Pei Kung
A novel class of heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90) inhibitors was discovered by high-throughput screening and was subsequently optimized using a combination of structure-based design, parallel synthesis, and the application of medicinal chemistry principles. Through this process, the biochemical and cell-based potency of the original HTS lead were substantially improved along with the corresponding metabolic stability properties. These efforts culminated with the identification of a development candidate (compound 42) which displayed desired PK/PD relationships, significant efficacy in a melanoma A2058 xenograft tumor model, and attractive DMPK profiles.
Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2014
Pei-Pei Kung; Ricardo N. Martínez; Zhou Zhu; Michael Zager; Alessandra Blasina; Isha Rymer; Jill Hallin; Meirong Xu; Christopher Carroll; John Chionis; Peter P. Wells; Kirk Kozminski; Jeffery Fan; Oivin Guicherit; Buwen Huang; Mei Cui; Chaoting Liu; Zhongdong Huang; Anand Sistla; Jennifer Yang; Brion W. Murray
Breast cancer patients with tumors lacking the three diagnostic markers (ER, PR, and HER2) are classified as triple-negative (primarily basal-like) and have poor prognosis because there is no disease-specific therapy available. To address this unmet medical need, gene expression analyses using more than a thousand breast cancer samples were conducted, which identified elevated centromere protein E (CENP-E) expression in the basal-a molecular subtype relative to other subtypes. CENP-E, a mitotic kinesin component of the spindle assembly checkpoint, is shown to be induced in basal-a tumor cell lines by the mitotic spindle inhibitor drug docetaxel. CENP-E knockdown by inducible shRNA reduces basal-a breast cancer cell viability. A potent, selective CENP-E inhibitor (PF-2771) was used to define the contribution of CENP-E motor function to basal-like breast cancer. Mechanistic evaluation of PF-2771 in basal-a tumor cells links CENP-E–dependent molecular events (e.g., phosphorylation of histone H3 Ser-10; phospho-HH3-Ser10) to functional outcomes (e.g., chromosomal congression defects). Across a diverse panel of breast cell lines, CENP-E inhibition by PF-2771 selectively inhibits proliferation of basal breast cancer cell lines relative to premalignant ones and its response correlates with the degree of chromosomal instability. Pharmacokinetic–pharmacodynamic efficacy analysis in a basal-a xenograft tumor model shows that PF-2771 exposure is well correlated with increased phospho-HH3-Ser10 levels and tumor growth regression. Complete tumor regression is observed in a patient-derived, basal-a breast cancer xenograft tumor model treated with PF-2771. Tumor regression is also observed with PF-2771 in a taxane-resistant basal-a model. Taken together, CENP-E may be an effective therapeutic target for patients with triple-negative/basal-a breast cancer. Mol Cancer Ther; 13(8); 2104–15. ©2014 AACR.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016
Pei-Pei Kung; Eugene Rui; Simon Bergqvist; Patrick Bingham; John Frederick Braganza; Michael Raymond Collins; Mei Cui; Wade Diehl; Dac M. Dinh; Connie Fan; Valeria R. Fantin; Hovhannes J. Gukasyan; Wenyue Hu; Buwen Huang; Susan Kephart; Cody Krivacic; Robert Arnold Kumpf; Gary Li; Karen Maegley; Indrawan McAlpine; Lisa Nguyen; Sacha Ninkovic; Martha Ornelas; Michael Ryskin; Stephanie Scales; Scott C. Sutton; John Howard Tatlock; Dominique Verhelle; Fen Wang; Peter A. Wells
A new enhancer of zeste homolog 2 (EZH2) inhibitor series comprising a substituted phenyl ring joined to a dimethylpyridone moiety via an amide linkage has been designed. A preferential amide torsion that improved the binding properties of the compounds was identified for this series via computational analysis. Cyclization of the amide linker resulted in a six-membered lactam analogue, compound 18. This transformation significantly improved the ligand efficiency/potency of the cyclized compound relative to its acyclic analogue. Additional optimization of the lactam-containing EZH2 inhibitors focused on lipophilic efficiency (LipE) improvement, which provided compound 31. Compound 31 displayed improved LipE and on-target potency in both biochemical and cellular readouts relative to compound 18. Inhibitor 31 also displayed robust in vivo antitumor growth activity and dose-dependent de-repression of EZH2 target genes.
Acta Crystallographica Section E-structure Reports Online | 2009
Buwen Huang; Pei-Pei Kung; Arnold L. Rheingold; Antonio G. DiPasquale; Alex Yanovsky
The title compound, C9H12N4O4S, was proven to be the product of the reaction of methyl 5-amino-1H-pyrazole-3-carboxylate with ethyl isothiocyanatocarbonate. All non-H atoms of the molecule are planar, the mean deviation from the least squares plane being 0.048 Å. The intramolecular N—H⋯O bond involving the NH-group, which links the thiourea and pyrazole fragments, closes a six-membered pseudo-heterocyclic ring, and two more hydrogen bonds (N—H⋯O with the participation of the pyrazole NH group and N—H⋯S involving the second thiourea NH group) link the molecules into infinite chains running along [10].
Acta Crystallographica Section E-structure Reports Online | 2010
Buwen Huang; Eugene Rui; Martin James Wythes; Pei-Pei Kung; Curtis E. Moore; Arnold L. Rheingold; Alex Yanovsky
The structure of the title compound, C12H9BrN4, prepared by the reaction of 2-bromo-1-(6-bromo-3-pyridyl)ethanone with 2-amino-3-methylpyrazine indicates that the compound with the bromopyridyl substituent at position 2 of the imidazopyrazine fused-ring system represents the major product of this reaction. The plane of the pyridine ring forms a dihedral angle of 16.2 (2)° with the essentially planar (r.m.s. deviation = 0.006 Å) imidazopyrazine system. In the crystal, molecules are linked by weak C—H⋯N interactions.
Archive | 2006
Hengmiao Cheng; Stephan James Cripps; Klaus Ruprecht Dress; Buwen Huang; Sajiv Krishnan Nair; Yong Wang
Archive | 2006
Hengmiao Cheng; Stephan James Cripps; Klaus Ruprecht Dress; Buwen Huang; Sajiv Krishnan Nair; Yong Wang
Archive | 2004
Larry Andrew Alegria; Klaus Ruprecht Dress; Buwen Huang; Robert Arnold Kumpf; Kathleen Kingsley Lewis; Jean Matthews; Sylvie Kim Sakata; Stacie Sara Canan-Koch; Christopher Scott Virgil
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017
Pei-Pei Kung; Patrick Bingham; Alexei Brooun; Michael Raymond Collins; Ya-Li Deng; Dac M. Dinh; Connie Fan; Ketan S. Gajiwala; Rita Grantner; Hovhannes J. Gukasyan; Wenyue Hu; Buwen Huang; Robert Steven Kania; Susan Kephart; Cody Krivacic; Robert Arnold Kumpf; Penney Khamphavong; Manfred Kraus; Wei Liu; Karen Maegley; Lisa Nguyen; Shijian Ren; Daniel T. Richter; Robert A. Rollins; Neal W. Sach; Shikhar Sharma; John Sherrill; Jillian E. Spangler; Albert E. Stewart; Scott C. Sutton
Archive | 2006
Hengmiao Cheng; Stephan James Cripps; Klaus Ruprecht Dress; Buwen Huang; Sajiv Krishnan Nair; Yong Wang