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Dive into the research topics where Cecilia S. Koble is active.

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Featured researches published by Cecilia S. Koble.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2008

The Naphthyridinone GSK364735 Is a Novel, Potent Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Integrase Inhibitor and Antiretroviral

Edward P. Garvey; Brian A. Johns; Margaret J. Gartland; Scott A. Foster; Wayne H. Miller; Robert G. Ferris; Richard J. Hazen; Mark R. Underwood; Eric E. Boros; James B. Thompson; Cecilia S. Koble; Scott H. Allen; Lee T. Schaller; Ronald G. Sherrill; Tomokazu Yoshinaga; Masanori Kobayashi; Chiaki Wakasa-Morimoto; Shigeru Miki; Koichiro Nakahara; Takeshi Noshi; Akihiko Sato; Tamio Fujiwara

ABSTRACT The naphthyridinone GSK364735 potently inhibited recombinant human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) integrase in a strand transfer assay (mean 50% inhibitory concentration ± standard deviation, 8 ± 2 nM). As expected based on the structure of the drug, it bound competitively with another two-metal binding inhibitor (Kd [binding constant], 6 ± 4 nM). In a number of different cellular assays, GSK364735 inhibited HIV replication with potency at nanomolar concentrations (e.g., in peripheral blood mononuclear cells and MT-4 cells, 50% effective concentrations were 1.2 ± 0.4 and 5 ± 1 nM, respectively), with selectivity indexes of antiviral activity versus in-assay cytotoxicity of at least 2,200. When human serum was added, the antiviral potency decreased (e.g., a 35-fold decrease in the presence of 100% human serum was calculated by extrapolation from the results of the MT-4 cell assay). In cellular assays, GSK364735 blocked viral DNA integration, with a concomitant increase in two-long-terminal-repeat circles. As expected, this integrase inhibitor was equally active against wild-type viruses and mutant viruses resistant to approved drugs targeting either reverse transcriptase or protease. In contrast, some but not all viruses resistant to other integrase inhibitors were resistant to GSK364735. When virus was passaged in the presence of the inhibitor, we identified resistance mutations within the integrase active site that were the same as or similar to mutations arising in response to other two-metal binding inhibitors. Finally, either additive or synergistic effects were observed when GSK364735 was tested in combination with approved antiretrovirals (i.e., no antagonistic effects were seen). Thus, based on all the data, GSK364735 exerted potent antiviral activity through the inhibition of viral DNA integration by interacting at the two-metal binding site within the catalytic center of HIV integrase.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009

Synthesis and antiviral activity of 7-benzyl-4-hydroxy-1,5-naphthyridin-2(1H)-one HIV integrase inhibitors.

Eric E. Boros; Cynthia E. Edwards; Scott A. Foster; Masahiro Fuji; Tamio Fujiwara; Edward P. Garvey; Pamela L. Golden; Richard J. Hazen; Jerry Jeffrey; Brian A. Johns; Takashi Kawasuji; Ryuichi Kiyama; Cecilia S. Koble; Noriyuki Kurose; Wayne H. Miller; Angela L. Mote; Hitoshi Murai; Akihiko Sato; James B. Thompson; Mark C. Woodward; Tomokazu Yoshinaga

The medicinal chemistry and structure-activity relationships for a novel series of 7-benzyl-4-hydroxy-1,5-naphthyridin-2(1H)-one HIV-integrase inhibitors are disclosed. Substituent effects were evaluated at the N-1, C-3, and 7-benzyl positions of the naphthyridinone ring system. Low nanomolar IC(50) values were achieved in an HIV-integrase strand transfer assay with both carboxylic ester and carboxamide groups at C-3. More importantly, several carboxamide congeners showed potent antiviral activity in cellular assays. A 7-benzyl substituent was found to be critical for potent enzyme inhibition, and an N-(2-methoxyethyl)carboxamide moiety at C-3 significantly reduced plasma protein binding effects in vitro. Pharmacokinetic data in rats for one carboxamide analogue demonstrated oral bioavailability and reasonable in vivo clearance.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

Discovery of bioavailable 4,4-disubstituted piperidines as potent ligands of the chemokine receptor 5 and inhibitors of the human immunodeficiency virus-1

Wieslaw M. Kazmierski; Christopher Joseph Aquino; Brian A. Chauder; Felix Deanda; Robert M. Ferris; Deborah K. Jones-Hertzog; Terrence P. Kenakin; Cecilia S. Koble; Christian Watson; Pat Wheelan; Hanbiao Yang; Michael Youngman

We describe robust chemical approaches toward putative CCR5 scaffolds designed in our laboratories. Evaluation of analogues in the (125)I-[MIP-1beta] binding and Ba-L-HOS antiviral assays resulted in the discovery of 64 and 68 in the 4,4-disubstitited piperidine class H, both potent CCR5 ligands (pIC 50 = 8.30 and 9.00, respectively) and HIV-1 inhibitors (pIC 50 = 7.80 and 7.84, respectively, in Ba-L-HOS assay). In addition, 64 and 68 were bioavailable in rodents, establishing them as lead molecules for further optimization toward CCR5 clinical candidates.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Discovery of a Potent Boronic Acid Derived Inhibitor of the HCV RNA-Dependent RNA Polymerase.

Andrew Maynard; Renae M. Crosby; Byron Ellis; Robert Hamatake; Zhi Hong; Brian A. Johns; Kirsten M Kahler; Cecilia S. Koble; Anna L. Leivers; Martin Robert Leivers; Amanda Mathis; Andrew J. Peat; Jeffrey J. Pouliot; Christopher Don Roberts; Vicente Samano; Rachel M Schmidt; Gary K. Smith; Andrew Spaltenstein; Eugene L. Stewart; Pia Thommes; Elizabeth M. Turner; Christian Voitenleitner; Jill Walker; Kurt Weaver; Shawn P. Williams; Lois L. Wright; Zhiping Z. Xiong; David Haigh; J. Brad Shotwell

A boronic acid moiety was found to be a critical pharmacophore for enhanced in vitro potency against wild-type hepatitis C replicons and known clinical polymorphic and resistant HCV mutant replicons. The synthesis, optimization, and structure-activity relationships associated with inhibition of HCV replication in a subgenomic replication system for a series of non-nucleoside boron-containing HCV RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (NS5B) inhibitors are described. A summary of the discovery of 3 (GSK5852), a molecule which entered clinical trials in subjects infected with HCV in 2011, is included.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1997

Fatty acids and eicosanoids regulate gene expression through direct interactions with peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors α and γ

Steven A. Kliewer; Scott S. Sundseth; Stacey A. Jones; Peter J. Brown; G. Bruce Wisely; Cecilia S. Koble; Pallavi R. Devchand; Walter Wahli; Timothy M. Willson; James M. Lenhard; Jürgen M. Lehmann


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 1999

A Ureido-Thioisobutyric Acid (GW9578) Is a Subtype-Selective PPARα Agonist with Potent Lipid-Lowering Activity

Peter J. Brown; Deborah A. Winegar; Kelli D. Plunket; Linda B. Moore; Michael C. Lewis; Joan G. Wilson; Scott S. Sundseth; Cecilia S. Koble; Zhengdong Wu; James M. Chapman; Jürgen M. Lehmann; Steven A. Kliewer; Timothy M. Willson


Archive | 2003

Piperidine derivatives as ccr5 antagonists

Wieslaw M. Kazmierski; Christopher Joseph Aquino; Neil Bifulco; Eric E. Boros; Brian Andrew Chauder; Pek Yoke Chong; Maosheng Duan; Jr. Felix Deanda; Cecilia S. Koble; Ed W. McLean; Jennifer Poole Peckham; Angilique C Perkins; James B. Thompson; Dana Vanderwall


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 1992

2-Acetylpyridine thiocarbonohydrazones : potent inactivators of herpes simplex virus ribonucleotide reductase

Todd Andrew Blumenkopf; Joan A. Harrington; Cecilia S. Koble; Donald D. Bankston; Robert W. Morrison; Eric C. Bigham; Virgil L. Styles; Thomas Spector


Organic Letters | 1999

Synthesis of ultra-short-acting neuromuscular blocker GW 0430: a remarkably stereo- and regioselective synthesis of mixed tetrahydroisoquinolinium chlorofumarates.

Vicente Samano; John A. Ray; James B. Thompson; Robert A. Mook; David K. Jung; Cecilia S. Koble; Michael Tolar Martin; Eric C. Bigham; Craig S. Regitz; and Paul L. Feldman; Eric E. Boros


Archive | 2003

Ccr5 antagonists as therapeutic agents

Wieslaw M. Kazmierski; Chrisopher Joseph Aquino; Neil Bifulco; Eric E. Boros; Brian Andrew Chauder; Pek Yoke Chong; Maosheng Duan; Felix DeAnda; Cecilia S. Koble; Ed W. McLean; Jennifer Poole Peckham; Angilique C Perkins; James B. Thompson; Dana Vanderwall

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