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Dive into the research topics where Carleton R. Sage is active.

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Featured researches published by Carleton R. Sage.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

3-(1H-Tetrazol-5-yl)-1,4,5,6-tetrahydro-cyclopentapyrazole (MK-0354): A Partial Agonist of the Nicotinic Acid Receptor, G-Protein Coupled Receptor 109a, with Antilipolytic but No Vasodilatory Activity in Mice

Graeme Semple; Philip J. Skinner; Tawfik Gharbaoui; Young-Jun Shin; Jae-Kyu Jung; Martin C. Cherrier; Peter J. Webb; Susan Y. Tamura; P. Douglas Boatman; Carleton R. Sage; Thomas O. Schrader; Ruoping Chen; Steven L. Colletti; James R. Tata; M. Gerard Waters; Kang Cheng; Andrew K.P. Taggart; Tian-Quan Cai; Ester Carballo-Jane; Dominic P. Behan; Daniel T. Connolly; Jeremy G. Richman

The discovery and profiling of 3-(1H-tetrazol-5-yl)-1,4,5,6-tetrahydro-cyclopentapyrazole (5a, MK-0354), a partial agonist of GPR109a, is described. Compound 5a retained the plasma free fatty acid lowering effects in mice associated with GPR109a agonism, but did not induce vasodilation at the maximum feasible dose. Moreover, preadministration of 5a blocked the flushing effect induced by nicotinic acid but not that induced by PGD2. This profile made 5a a suitable candidate for further study for the treatment of dyslipidemia.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Discovery of fused bicyclic agonists of the orphan G-protein coupled receptor GPR119 with in vivo activity in rodent models of glucose control.

Graeme Semple; Albert S. Ren; Beatriz Fioravanti; Guillherme Pereira; Imelda Calderon; Karoline Choi; Yifeng Xiong; Young-Jun Shin; Tawfik Gharbaoui; Carleton R. Sage; Michael Morgan; Charles Xing; Zhi-Liang Chu; James N. Leonard; Andrew J. Grottick; Hussein Al-Shamma; Yin Liang; Keith T. Demarest; Robert M. Jones

We herein outline the design of a new series of agonists of the pancreatic and GI-expressed orphan G-protein coupled receptor GPR119, a target that has been of significant recent interest in the field of metabolism, starting from our prototypical agonist AR231453. A number of key parameters were improved first by incorporation of a pyrazolopyrimidine core to create a new structural series and secondly by the introduction of a piperidine ether group capped with a carbamate. Chronic treatment with one compound from the series, 3k, showed for the first time that blood glucose and glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) levels could be significantly reduced in Zucker Diabetic Fatty (ZDF) rats over several weeks of dosing. As a result of these and other data described here, 3k (APD668, JNJ-28630368) was the first compound with this mechanism of action to be progressed into clinical development for the treatment of diabetes.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

Discovery of a second generation agonist of the orphan G-protein coupled receptor GPR119 with an improved profile

Graeme Semple; Juerg Lehmann; Amy Siu-Ting Wong; Albert S. Ren; Marc A. Bruce; Young-Jun Shin; Carleton R. Sage; Michael Morgan; Weichao Chen; Kristen Sebring; Zhi-Liang Chu; James N. Leonard; Hussein Al-Shamma; Andrew J. Grottick; Fuyong Du; Yin Liang; Keith T. Demarest; Robert M. Jones

The design and synthesis of a second generation GPR119-agonist clinical candidate for the treatment of diabetes is described. Compound 16 (APD597, JNJ-38431055) was selected for preclinical development based on a good balance between agonist potency, intrinsic activity and in particular on its good solubility and reduced drug-drug interaction potential. In addition, extensive in vivo studies showed a more favorable metabolic profile that may avoid the generation of long lasting metabolites with the potential to accumulate in clinical studies.


Targets | 2003

GPCRs: an update on structural approaches to drug discovery

Nigel R. A. Beeley; Carleton R. Sage

Abstract G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are a major opportunity for drug discovery in the post-genomic era. There are thought to be more than 500 therapeutically relevant GPCRs out of a total of over 700 identified to date, although only one, rhodopsin, has been the subject of a full 3D X-ray crystallography study. Two structurally related proteins, bacteriorhodopsin and sensory rhodopsin, which are not GPCRs but are part of the seven-helix membrane receptor family, have also been the subject of X-ray crystallographic studies and have been used in GPCR modeling studies. The significant differences between these rhodopsin structures, the relatively low sequence homology between individual GPCRs, and some difficulties in rationalizing point-mutation data suggests that homology-based molecular modeling alone will not provide the accurate structural information on individual receptors required for ligand design and in silico screening. In the absence of such structural information, several approaches can be used to assist in the discovery of ligands.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

(1aR,5aR)1a,3,5,5a-Tetrahydro-1H-2,3-diaza-cyclopropa[a]pentalene-4-carboxylic acid (MK-1903): a potent GPR109a agonist that lowers free fatty acids in humans.

P. Douglas Boatman; Brett Lauring; Thomas O. Schrader; Michelle Kasem; Benjamin R. Johnson; Philip J. Skinner; Jae-Kyu Jung; Jerry Xu; Martin C. Cherrier; Peter J. Webb; Graeme Semple; Carleton R. Sage; Jens Knudsen; Ruoping Chen; Wen-Lin Luo; Luzelena Caro; Josee Cote; Eseng Lai; John A. Wagner; Andrew K. Taggart; Ester Carballo-Jane; Milton L. Hammond; Steven L. Colletti; James R. Tata; Daniel T. Connolly; M. Gerard Waters; Jeremy G. Richman

G-protein coupled receptor (GPCR) GPR109a is a molecular target for nicotinic acid and is expressed in adipocytes, spleen, and immune cells. Nicotinic acid has long been used for the treatment of dyslipidemia due to its capacity to positively affect serum lipids to a greater extent than other currently marketed drugs. We report a series of tricyclic pyrazole carboxylic acids that are potent and selective agonists of GPR109a. Compound R,R-19a (MK-1903) was advanced through preclinical studies, was well tolerated, and presented no apparent safety concerns. Compound R,R-19a was advanced into a phase 1 clinical trial and produced a robust decrease in plasma free fatty acids. On the basis of these results, R,R-19a was evaluated in a phase 2 study in humans. Because R,R-19a produced only a weak effect on serum lipids as compared with niacin, we conclude that the beneficial effects of niacin are most likely the result of an undefined GPR109a independent pathway.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008

A new family of H3 receptor antagonists based on the natural product Conessine.

Vincent J. Santora; Jonathan A. Covel; Rena Hayashi; Brian J. Hofilena; Jason B. Ibarra; Michelle D. Pulley; Michael I. Weinhouse; Dipanjan Sengupta; Jonathan Duffield; Graeme Semple; Robert R. Webb; Carleton R. Sage; Albert S. Ren; Guilherme Pereira; Jens Knudsen; Jeffrey E. Edwards; Marissa Suarez; John Frazer; William Thomsen; Erin K. Hauser; Kevin Whelan; Andrew J. Grottick

A new family of Histamine H(3) receptor antagonists (5a-t) has been prepared based on the structure of the natural product Conessine, a known H(3) antagonist. Several members of the new series are highly potent and selective binders of rat and human H(3) receptors and display inverse agonism at the human H(3) receptor. Compound 5n exhibited promising rat pharmacokinetic properties and demonstrated functional antagonism of the H(3) receptor in an in-vivo pharmacological model.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Potent tricyclic pyrazole tetrazole agonists of the nicotinic acid receptor (GPR109a)

P. Douglas Boatman; Thomas O. Schrader; Michelle Kasem; Benjamin R. Johnson; Philip J. Skinner; Jae-Kyu Jung; Jerry Xu; Martin C. Cherrier; Peter J. Webb; Graeme Semple; Carleton R. Sage; Jens Knudsen; Ruoping Chen; Andrew K.P. Taggart; Ester Carballo-Jane; Jeremy G. Richman

Tricyclic pyrazole tetrazoles which are potent partial agonists of the high affinity niacin receptor, GPR109a, have been discovered and optimized. One of these compounds has proven to be effective at lowering free fatty acids in vitro and in vivo.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2014

Discovery of APD334: Design of a Clinical Stage Functional Antagonist of the Sphingosine-1-phosphate-1 Receptor.

Daniel J. Buzard; Sun Hee Kim; Luis Lopez; Andrew M. Kawasaki; Xiuwen Zhu; Jeanne V. Moody; Lars Thoresen; Imelda Calderon; Brett Ullman; Sangdon Han; Juerg Lehmann; Tawfik Gharbaoui; Dipanjan Sengupta; Lorene Calvano; Antonio Garrido Montalban; You-An Ma; Carleton R. Sage; Yinghong Gao; Graeme Semple; Jeff Edwards; Jeremy Barden; Michael M. Morgan; Weichao Chen; Khawja A. Usmani; Chuan Chen; Abu Sadeque; Ronald Christopher; Jayant Thatte; Lixia Fu; Michelle Solomon

APD334 was discovered as part of our internal effort to identify potent, centrally available, functional antagonists of the S1P1 receptor for use as next generation therapeutics for treating multiple sclerosis (MS) and other autoimmune diseases. APD334 is a potent functional antagonist of S1P1 and has a favorable PK/PD profile, producing robust lymphocyte lowering at relatively low plasma concentrations in several preclinical species. This new agent was efficacious in a mouse experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) model of MS and a rat collagen induced arthritis (CIA) model and was found to have appreciable central exposure.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

5-N,N-Disubstituted 5-aminopyrazole-3-carboxylic acids are highly potent agonists of GPR109b.

Philip J. Skinner; Peter J. Webb; Carleton R. Sage; Huong T. Dang; Cameron Pride; Ruoping Chen; Susan Y. Tamura; Jeremy G. Richman; Daniel T. Connolly; Graeme Semple

A series of 5-N,N-disubstituted-5-aminopyrazole-3-carboxylic acids were prepared and found to act as highly potent and selective agonists of the G-Protein Coupled Receptor (GPCR) GPR109b, a low affinity receptor for niacin and some aromatic d-amino acids. Little activity was observed at the highly homologous higher affinity niacin receptor, GPR109a.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Discovery and characterization of potent and selective 4-oxo-4-(5-(5-phenyl-1,2,4-oxadiazol-3-yl)indolin-1-yl)butanoic acids as S1P1 agonists

Daniel J. Buzard; Sangdon Han; Lars Thoresen; Jeanne V. Moody; Luis Lopez; Andrew M. Kawasaki; Thomas O. Schrader; Carleton R. Sage; Yinghong Gao; Jeff Edwards; Jeremy Barden; Jayant Thatte; Lixia Fu; Michelle Solomon; Ling Liu; Hussien A. Al-Shamma; Joel Gatlin; Minh Le; Charles Xing; Sheryll Espinola; Robert M. Jones

S1P(1) receptor driven lymphopenia has proven utility in the treatment of an array of autoimmune disease states. As a part of our efforts to develop potent and selective S1P(1) receptor agonists, we have identified a novel chemical series of 4-oxo-4-(5-(5-phenyl-1,2,4-oxadiazol-3-yl)indolin-1-yl)butanoic acid S1P(1) receptor agonists.

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