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Dive into the research topics where Chunyong Ding is active.

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Featured researches published by Chunyong Ding.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Novel Nitrogen-Enriched Oridonin Analogues with Thiazole-Fused A‑Ring: Protecting Group-Free Synthesis, Enhanced Anticancer Profile, and Improved Aqueous Solubility

Chunyong Ding; Yusong Zhang; Haijun Chen; Zhengduo Yang; Christopher Wild; Lili Chu; Huiling Liu; Qiang Shen; Jia Zhou

Oridonin (1), a complex ent-kaurane diterpenoid isolated from the traditional Chinese herb Isodon rubescens , has demonstrated great potential in the treatment of various human cancers due to its unique and safe anticancer pharmacological profile. Nevertheless, the clinical development of oridonin for cancer therapy has been hampered by its relatively moderate potency, limited aqueous solubility, and poor bioavailability. Herein, we report the concise synthesis of a series of novel nitrogen-enriched oridonin derivatives with thiazole-fused A-ring through an efficient protecting group-free synthetic strategy. Most of them, including compounds 7-11, 13, and 14, exhibited potent antiproliferative effects against breast, pancreatic, and prostate cancer cells with low micromolar to submicromolar IC50 values as well as markedly enhanced aqueous solubility. These new analogues obtained by rationally modifying the natural product have been demonstrated not only to significantly induce the apoptosis and suppress growth of triple-negative MDA-MB-231 breast cancer both in vitro and in vivo but also effective against drug-resistant ER-positive MCF-7 clones.


Nature Communications | 2014

Small-molecule Bax agonists for cancer therapy

Meiguo Xin; Rui Li; Maohua Xie; Dongkyoo Park; Taofeek K. Owonikoko; Gabriel Sica; Patrick E. Corsino; Jia Zhou; Chunyong Ding; Mark A. White; Andrew T. Magis; Suresh S. Ramalingam; Walter J. Curran; Fadlo R. Khuri; Xingming Deng

Bax, a central death regulator, is required at the decisional stage of apoptosis. We recently identified serine 184 (S184) of Bax as a critical functional switch controlling its proapoptotic activity. Here, we employed the structural pocket around S184 as a docking site to screen the NCI library of small molecules using the UCSF-DOCK program suite. Three compounds, small molecule Bax agonists SMBA1, SMBA2 and SMBA3, induce conformational changes in Bax by blocking S184 phosphorylation, facilitating Bax insertion into mitochondrial membranes and forming Bax oligomers. The latter leads to cytochrome c release and apoptosis in human lung cancer cells, which occurs in a Bax- but not Bak-dependent fashion. SMBA1 potently suppresses lung tumor growth via apoptosis by selectively activating Bax in vivo without significant normal tissue toxicity. Development of Bax agonists as a new class of anti-cancer drugs offers a strategy for the treatment of lung cancer and other Bax-expressing malignancies.


Cancer Cell | 2015

Small-Molecule Bcl2 BH4 Antagonist for Lung Cancer Therapy

Bingshe Han; Dongkyoo Park; Rui Li; Maohua Xie; Taofeek K. Owonikoko; Guojing Zhang; Gabriel Sica; Chunyong Ding; Jia Zhou; Andrew T. Magis; Zhuo Georgia Chen; Dong M. Shin; Suresh S. Ramalingam; Fadlo R. Khuri; Walter J. Curran; Xingming Deng

The BH4 domain of Bcl2 is required for its antiapoptotic function, thus constituting a promising anticancer target. We identified a small-molecule Bcl2-BH4 domain antagonist, BDA-366, that binds BH4 with high affinity and selectivity. BDA-366-Bcl2 binding induces conformational change in Bcl2 that abrogates its antiapoptotic function, converting it from a survival molecule to a cell death inducer. BDA-366 suppresses growth of lung cancer xenografts derived from cell lines and patient without significant normal tissue toxicity at effective doses. mTOR inhibition upregulates Bcl2 in lung cancer cells and tumor tissues from clinical trial patients. Combined BDA-366 and RAD001 treatment exhibits strong synergy against lung cancer in vivo. Development of this Bcl2-BH4 antagonist may provide a strategy to improve lung cancer outcome.


European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Fragment-based drug design and identification of HJC0123, a novel orally bioavailable STAT3 inhibitor for cancer therapy

Haijun Chen; Zhengduo Yang; Chunyong Ding; Lili Chu; Yusong Zhang; Kristin Terry; Huiling Liu; Qiang Shen; Jia Zhou

Fragment-based drug design (FBDD) is a promising approach for the generation of lead molecules with enhanced activity and especially drug-like properties against therapeutic targets. Herein, we report the fragment-based drug design, systematic chemical synthesis and pharmacological evaluation of novel scaffolds as potent anticancer agents by utilizing six privileged fragments from known STAT3 inhibitors. Several new molecules such as compounds 5, 12, and 19 that may act as advanced chemical leads have been identified. The most potent compound 5 (HJC0123) has demonstrated to inhibit STAT3 promoter activity, downregulate phosphorylation of STAT3, increase the expression of cleaved caspase-3, inhibit cell cycle progression and promote apoptosis in breast and pancreatic cancer cells with low micromolar to nanomolar IC50 values. Furthermore, compound 5 significantly suppressed estrogen receptor (ER)-negative breast cancer MDA-MB-231 xenograft tumor growth in vivo (p.o.), indicating its great potential as an efficacious and orally bioavailable drug candidate for human cancer therapy.


Journal of Surgical Research | 2014

Oridonin inhibits hepatic stellate cell proliferation and fibrogenesis

Fredrick J. Bohanon; Xiaofu Wang; Chunyong Ding; Ye Ding; Geetha L. Radhakrishnan; Cristiana Rastellini; Jia Zhou; Ravi S. Radhakrishnan

BACKGROUND Liver fibrosis is a common response to liver injury and, in severe cases, leads to cirrhosis. The hepatic stellate cells (HSCs) become activated after liver injury and play a significant role in fibrogenesis. The activated HSC is characterized by increased proliferation, overexpression of α smooth muscle actin, and excessive production of extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins. Oridonin, a naturally occurring diterpenoid, has been shown to induce apoptosis in liver and gastric cancer cells. However, its effects on the HSC are unknown. METHODS We tested the effects of oridonin on the activated human and rat HSC lines LX-2 and HSC-T6, and the human hepatocyte cell line C3A. Transforming growth factor β1 (TGF-β1) was used to stimulate LX-2 cells. RESULTS Oridonin significantly inhibited LX-2 and HSC-T6 proliferation. In contrast, oridonin had no antiproliferative effect on C3A cells at our tested range. Oridonin induced apoptosis and S-phase arrest in LX-2 cells. These findings were associated with an increase in p53, p21, p16, and cleaved Poly (ADP-ribose) Polymerase (PARP), and with a decrease in Cyclin-dependent kinase 4 (Cdk4). Oridonin markedly decreased expression of α smooth muscle actin and ECM protein type I collagen and fibronectin, blocked TGF-β1-induced Smad2/3 phosphorylation and type I collagen expression. CONCLUSIONS Oridonin induces apoptosis and cell cycle arrest involving the p53-p21 pathway in HSC and appears to be nontoxic to hepatocytes. In addition, oridonin suppressed endogenous and TGF-β1-induced ECM proteins. Thus, oridonin may act as a novel agent to prevent hepatic fibrosis.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Oridonin Ring A-Based Diverse Constructions of Enone Functionality: Identification of Novel Dienone Analogues Effective for Highly Aggressive Breast Cancer by Inducing Apoptosis

Chunyong Ding; Yusong Zhang; Haijun Chen; Zhengduo Yang; Christopher Wild; Na Ye; Corbin D. Ester; Ailian Xiong; Mark A. White; Qiang Shen; Jia Zhou

Oridonin (1) has attracted considerable attention in recent years because of its unique and safe anticancer pharmacological profile. Nevertheless, it exhibits moderate to poor effects against highly aggressive cancers including triple-negative and drug-resistant breast cancer cells. Herein, we report the rational design and synthesis of novel dienone derivatives with an additional α,β-unsaturated ketone system diversely installed in the A-ring based on this class of natural scaffold that features dense functionalities and stereochemistry-rich frameworks. Efficient and regioselective enone construction strategies have been established. Meanwhile, a unique 3,7-rearrangement reaction was identified to furnish an unprecedented dienone scaffold. Intriguingly, these new analogues have been demonstrated to significantly induce apoptosis and inhibit colony formation with superior antitumor effects against aggressive and drug-resistant breast cancer cells in vitro and in vivo while also exhibiting comparable or lower toxicity to normal human mammary epithelial cells in comparison with 1.


Organic Letters | 2013

Overcoming Synthetic Challenges of Oridonin A-Ring Structural Diversification: Regio- and Stereoselective Installation of Azides and 1,2,3-Triazoles at the C-1, C-2, or C-3 Position

Chunyong Ding; Yusong Zhang; Haijun Chen; Christopher Wild; Tianzhi Wang; Mark A. White; Qiang Shen; Jia Zhou

Efficient and concise synthetic approaches have been developed for the rapid and diverse installation of azide functionalities at the C-1, C-2, or C-3 positions of oridonin (1) with highly controlled regio- and stereoselectivity, while keeping key reactive pharmacophores intact by utilizing unique preactivation strategies based on the common synthon 4. Further functionalization of these azides through click chemistry yielding triazole derivatives successfully provides access to an expanded natural scaffold-based compound library for potential anticancer agents.


European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016

Discovery and development of natural product oridonin-inspired anticancer agents

Ye Ding; Chunyong Ding; Na Ye; Zhiqing Liu; Eric A. Wold; Haiying Chen; Christopher Wild; Qiang Shen; Jia Zhou

Natural products have historically been, and continue to be, an invaluable source for the discovery of various therapeutic agents. Oridonin, a natural diterpenoid widely applied in traditional Chinese medicines, exhibits a broad range of biological effects including anticancer and anti-inflammatory activities. To further improve its potency, aqueous solubility and bioavailability, the oridonin template serves as an exciting platform for drug discovery to yield better candidates with unique targets and enhanced drug properties. A number of oridonin derivatives (e.g. HAO472) have been designed and synthesized, and have contributed to substantial progress in the identification of new agents and relevant molecular mechanistic studies toward the treatment of human cancers and other diseases. This review summarizes the recent advances in medicinal chemistry on the explorations of novel oridonin analogues as potential anticancer therapeutics, and provides a detailed discussion of future directions for the development and progression of this class of molecules into the clinic.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2009

Synthesis Study on Marmycin A: Preparation of the C3'-Desmethyl Analogues

Chunyong Ding; Shanghui Tu; Fuying Li; Yuanxiang Wang; Qizheng Yao; Wenxiang Hu; Hua Xie; Linghua Meng; Ao Zhang

Total synthesis of natural product marmycin A was studied. An expeditious synthetic strategy for the key fragment 8-amino-3-methylbenz[a]anthraquinone (1) was established with decarboxylative alkylation, Pd(OAc)(2)-catalyzed cyclization, aromatization, and C-N coupling as the key steps. However, final assembly of marmycin A was hampered by the failure to obtain the carbohydrate fragment 2. Instead, a small library of desmethyl analogues of marmycin A was prepared in moderate yields by using the InBr(3)-catalyzed C- and N-glycosidation reaction. The absolute configuration of these compounds was confirmed by comparison of their spectroscopic data with that reported for marmycin A, and by X-ray analysis.


Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry | 2014

ent-Kaurane-based regio- and stereoselective inverse electron demand hetero-Diels–Alder reactions: synthesis of dihydropyran-fused diterpenoids

Chunyong Ding; Lili Wang; Haijun Chen; Christopher Wild; Na Ye; Ye Ding; Tianzhi Wang; Mark A. White; Qiang Shen; Jia Zhou

A mild and concise approach for the construction of a 3,4-dihydro-2H-pyran ring integrated into the A-ring of the natural product oridonin using an optimized inverse electron demand hetero-Diels-Alder (IED HDA) reaction is reported herein. A self-dimerization of the exocyclic enone installed in the A-ring through a homo-HDA reaction was identified to exclusively give a dimeric ent-kaurane diterpenoid with the spirochroman core. Moreover, efficient cross-HDA cycloadditions of this enone with various vinyl ethers or vinyl sulfides, instead of its own homo-HDA dimerization, were achieved in a regio- and stereoselective manner, thus providing access to novel dihydropyran-fused diterpenoids as potential anticancer agents to overcome chemoresistance.

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Jia Zhou

University of Texas Medical Branch

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Ao Zhang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Ye Ding

University of Texas Medical Branch

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Christopher Wild

University of Texas Medical Branch

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Qiang Shen

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Mark A. White

University of Texas Medical Branch

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Zhengduo Yang

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Yusong Zhang

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Haiying Chen

University of Texas Medical Branch

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