Christine E. Brotherton-Pleiss
Hoffmann-La Roche
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Publication
Featured researches published by Christine E. Brotherton-Pleiss.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010
Denis John Kertesz; Christine E. Brotherton-Pleiss; Minmin Yang; Zhanguo Wang; Xianfeng Lin; Zongxing Qiu; Donald Roy Hirschfeld; Shelley K. Gleason; Taraneh Mirzadegan; Pete Dunten; Seth F. Harris; Armando G. Villaseñor; Julie Qi Hang; Gabrielle Heilek; Klaus Klumpp
An analysis of the binding motifs of known HIV-1 non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors has led to discovery of novel piperidine-linked aminopyrimidine derivatives with broad activity against wild-type as well as drug-resistant mutant viruses. Notably, the series retains potency against the K103N/Y181C and Y188L mutants, among others. Thus, the N-benzyl compound 5k has a particularly attractive profile. Synthesis and SAR are presented and discussed, as well as crystal structures relating to the binding motifs.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010
Christine E. Brotherton-Pleiss; Michael Patrick Dillon; Anthony P. D. W. Ford; Joel R Gever; David S. Carter; Shelley K. Gleason; Clara Jeou Jen Lin; Amy Geraldine Moore; Anthony W. Thompson; Marzia Villa; Yansheng Zhai
Despite the extensive literature describing the role of the ATP-gated P2X(3) receptors in a variety of physiological processes the potential of antagonists as therapeutic agents has been limited by the lack of drug-like selective molecules. In this paper we report the discovery and optimization of RO-85, a novel drug-like, potent and selective P2X(3) antagonist. High-throughput screening of the Roche compound collection identified a small hit series of heterocyclic amides from a large parallel synthesis library. Rapid optimization, facilitated by high-throughput synthesis, focusing on increasing potency and improving drug-likeness resulted in the discovery of RO-85.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009
David Mark Rotstein; Stephen Deems Gabriel; Ferenc Makra; Lubov Filonova; Shelley K. Gleason; Christine E. Brotherton-Pleiss; Lina Setti; Alejandra Trejo-Martin; Eun Kyung Lee; Surya Sankuratri; Changhua Ji; André deRosier; Marianna Dioszegi; Gabrielle Heilek; Andreas Jekle; Pamela Berry; Paul Weller; Cheng-I. Mau
A novel series of CCR5 antagonists has been identified, utilizing leads from high-throughput screening which were further modified based on insights from competitor molecules. Lead optimization was pursued by balancing opposing trends of metabolic stability and potency. Selective and potent analogs with good pharmacokinetic properties were successfully developed.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2000
Dean R. Artis; Christine E. Brotherton-Pleiss; Joseph Pease; Clara Jeou Jen Lin; Steve W Ferla; Sherry R Newman; Sunil Bhakta; Helene Ostrelich; Kurt Jarnagin
Six classes of nonpeptide bradykinin antagonists were designed using a template derived from structural studies of peptide antagonists. Several compounds from each class were synthesized and assayed for binding to the human bradykinin B2 receptor. Each family showed compounds active at the level of the smallest template peptide; three classes contained compounds with Kd < 8 microM. These results provide diverse leads for a medicinal chemistry-based optimization program.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2018
Huifen Chen; Matthew Volgraf; Steven Do; Aleksandr Kolesnikov; Daniel Shore; Vishal A. Verma; Elisia Villemure; Lan Wang; Yong Chen; Baihua Hu; Aijun Lu; Guosheng Wu; Xiaofeng Xu; Po-wai Yuen; Yamin Zhang; Shawn David Erickson; Martin Dahl; Christine E. Brotherton-Pleiss; Suzanne Tay; Justin Ly; Lesley J. Murray; Jun Chen; Desiree Amm; Wienke Lange; David H. Hackos; Rebecca M. Reese; Shannon D. Shields; Joseph P. Lyssikatos; Brian Safina; Anthony Estrada
Transient receptor potential ankyrin 1 (TRPA1) is a non-selective cation channel expressed in sensory neurons where it functions as an irritant sensor for a plethora of electrophilic compounds and is implicated in pain, itch, and respiratory disease. To study its function in various disease contexts, we sought to identify novel, potent, and selective small-molecule TRPA1 antagonists. Herein we describe the evolution of an N-isopropylglycine sulfonamide lead (1) to a novel and potent (4 R,5 S)-4-fluoro-5-methylproline sulfonamide series of inhibitors. Molecular modeling was utilized to derive low-energy three-dimensional conformations to guide ligand design. This effort led to compound 20, which possessed a balanced combination of potency and metabolic stability but poor solubility that ultimately limited in vivo exposure. To improve solubility and in vivo exposure, we developed methylene phosphate prodrug 22, which demonstrated superior oral exposure and robust in vivo target engagement in a rat model of AITC-induced pain.
Archive | 2009
Christine E. Brotherton-Pleiss; Huifen Chen; Shaoqing Chen; Zhi Chen; Shawn David Erickson; Anthony Estrada; Kyungjin Kim; Hongju Li; Allen John Lovey; Joseph P. Lyssikatos; Yimin Qian; Sung-Sau So; Peter Michael Wovkulich; Lin Yi
Archive | 2006
Christine E. Brotherton-Pleiss; Michael Patrick Dillon; Shelley K. Gleason; Clara Jeou Jen Lin; Ryan Craig Schoenfeld; Marzia Villa; Yansheng Zhai
Archive | 2006
Christine E. Brotherton-Pleiss; Michael Patrick Dillon; Shelley K. Gleason; Clara Jeou Jen Lin; Ryan Craig Schoenfeld; Marzia Villa; Yansheng Zhai
Archive | 2003
Christine E. Brotherton-Pleiss; Ann Marie Madera; Robert James Weikert
Archive | 2002
Christine E. Brotherton-Pleiss; Ann Marie Madera; Robert James Weikert