Constantine G. Boojamra
Schering-Plough
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Featured researches published by Constantine G. Boojamra.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2008
Tomas Cihlar; Adrian S. Ray; Constantine G. Boojamra; Lijun Zhang; Hon C. Hui; Genevieve Laflamme; Jennifer E. Vela; Deborah Grant; James K. Chen; Florence Myrick; Kirsten L. White; Ying Gao; Kuei Ying Lin; Janet L. Douglas; Neil T. Parkin; Anne Carey; Rowchanak Pakdaman; Richard L. Mackman
ABSTRACT GS-9148 [(5-(6-amino-purin-9-yl)-4-fluoro-2,5-dihydro-furan-2-yloxymethyl)phosphonic acid] is a novel ribose-modified human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) nucleotide reverse transcriptase (RT) inhibitor (NRTI) selected from a series of nucleoside phosphonate analogs for its favorable in vitro biological properties including (i) a low potential for mitochondrial toxicity, (ii) a minimal cytotoxicity in renal proximal tubule cells and other cell types, (iii) synergy in combination with other antiretrovirals, and (iv) a unique resistance profile against multiple NRTI-resistant HIV-1 strains. Notably, antiviral resistance analysis indicated that neither the K65R, L74V, or M184V RT mutation nor their combinations had any effect on the antiretroviral activity of GS-9148. Viruses carrying four or more thymidine analog mutations showed a substantially smaller change in GS-9148 activity relative to that observed with most marketed NRTIs. GS-9131, an ethylalaninyl phosphonoamidate prodrug designed to maximize the intracellular delivery of GS-9148, is a potent inhibitor of multiple subtypes of HIV-1 clinical isolates, with a mean 50% effective concentration of 37 nM. Inside cells, GS-9131 is readily hydrolyzed to GS-9148, which is further phosphorylated to its active diphosphate metabolite (A. S. Ray, J. E. Vela, C. G. Boojamra, L. Zhang, H. Hui, C. Callebaut, K. Stray, K.-Y. Lin, Y. Gao, R. L. Mackman, and T. Cihlar, Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. 52:648-654, 2008). GS-9148 diphosphate acts as a competitive inhibitor of RT with respect to dATP (Ki = 0.8 μM) and exhibits low inhibitory potency against host polymerases including DNA polymerase γ. Oral administration of GS-9131 to beagle dogs at a dose of 3 mg/kg of body weight resulted in high and persistent levels of GS-9148 diphosphate in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (with a maximum intracellular concentration of >9 μM and a half-life of >24 h). This favorable preclinical profile makes GS-9131 an attractive clinical development candidate for the treatment of patients infected with NRTI-resistant HIV.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2009
Constantine G. Boojamra; Jay P. Parrish; David Sperandio; Ying Gao; Oleg V. Petrakovsky; Sharon K. Lee; David Y. Markevitch; Jennifer E. Vela; Genevieve Laflamme; James M. Chen; Adrian S. Ray; Abraham C. Barron; Mark Sparacino; Manoj C. Desai; Choung U. Kim; Tomas Cihlar; Richard L. Mackman
A diphosphate of a novel cyclopentyl based nucleoside phosphonate with potent inhibition of HIV reverse transcriptase (RT) (20, IC(50)=0.13 microM) has been discovered. In cell culture the parent phosphonate diacid 9 demonstrated antiviral activity EC(50)=16 microM, within two-fold of GS-9148, a prodrug of which is currently under clinical investigation, and within 5-fold of tenofovir (PMPA). In vitro cellular metabolism studies using 9 confirmed that the active diphosphate metabolite is produced albeit at a lower efficiency relative to GS-9148.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2008
Adrian S. Ray; Jennifer E. Vela; Constantine G. Boojamra; Lijun Zhang; Hon C. Hui; Christian Callebaut; Kirsten M. Stray; Kuei-Ying Lin; Ying Gao; Richard L. Mackman; Tomas Cihlar
ABSTRACT GS-9131 is a phosphonoamidate prodrug of the novel ribose-modified phosphonate nucleotide analog GS-9148 that demonstrates potent anti-human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) activity and an excellent resistance profile in vitro. Prodrug moieties were optimized for the efficient delivery of GS-9148 and its active diphosphate (DP) metabolite to lymphoid cells following oral administration. To understand the intracellular pharmacology of GS-9131, incubations were performed with various types of lymphoid cells in vitro. The intracellular accumulation and antiviral activity levels of GS-9148 were limited by its lack of cellular permeation, and GS-9131 increased the delivery of GS-9148-DP by 76- to 290-fold relative to that of GS-9148. GS-9131 activation was saturable at high extracellular concentrations, potentially due to a high-affinity promoiety cleavage step. Once inside the cells, GS-9148 was efficiently phosphorylated, forming similar amounts of anabolites in primary lymphoid cells. The levels of GS-9148-DP formed in peripheral blood mononuclear cells infected with HIV-1 were similar to that in uninfected PBMCs, and approximately equivalent intracellular concentrations of GS-9148-DP and tenofovir (TVF)-DP were required to inhibit viral replication by 90%. Once it was formed, GS-9148-DP was efficiently retained in activated CD4+ cells, with a half-life of 19 h. In addition, GS-9131 showed a low potential for drug interactions with other adenine nucleoside/nucleotide reverse transcriptase inhibitors, based on the lack of competition for anabolism between suprapharmacologic concentrations of GS-9148 and TVF and the lack of activity of GS-9131 metabolites against purine nucleoside phosphorylase, an enzyme involved in the clearance of 2′,3′-dideoxyinosine. Together, these observations elucidate the cellular pharmacology of GS-9131 and illustrate its efficient loading of lymphoid cells, resulting in a prolonged intracellular exposure to the active metabolite GS-9148-DP.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015
Richard L. Mackman; Michael Sangi; David Sperandio; Jay P. Parrish; Eugene J. Eisenberg; Michel Perron; Hon C. Hui; Lijun Zhang; Dustin Siegel; Hai Yang; Oliver L. Saunders; Constantine G. Boojamra; Gary Lee; Dharmaraj Samuel; Kerim Babaoglu; Anne Carey; Brian E. Gilbert; Pedro A. Piedra; Robert G. Strickley; Quynh Iwata; Jaclyn Hayes; Kirsten M. Stray; April Kinkade; Dorothy Agnes Theodore; Robert Jordan; Manoj C. Desai; Tomas Cihlar
GS-5806 is a novel, orally bioavailable RSV fusion inhibitor discovered following a lead optimization campaign on a screening hit. The oral absorption properties were optimized by converting to the pyrazolo[1,5-a]-pyrimidine heterocycle, while potency, metabolic, and physicochemical properties were optimized by introducing the para-chloro and aminopyrrolidine groups. A mean EC50 = 0.43 nM was found toward a panel of 75 RSV A and B clinical isolates and dose-dependent antiviral efficacy in the cotton rat model of RSV infection. Oral bioavailability in preclinical species ranged from 46 to 100%, with evidence of efficient penetration into lung tissue. In healthy human volunteers experimentally infected with RSV, a potent antiviral effect was observed with a mean 4.2 log10 reduction in peak viral load and a significant reduction in disease severity compared to placebo. In conclusion, a potent, once daily, oral RSV fusion inhibitor with the potential to treat RSV infection in infants and adults is reported.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2010
Richard L. Mackman; Adrian S. Ray; Hon C. Hui; Lijun Zhang; Gabriel Birkus; Constantine G. Boojamra; Manoj C. Desai; Janet L. Douglas; Ying Gao; Deborah Grant; Genevieve Laflamme; Kuei Ying Lin; David Y. Markevitch; Ruchika Mishra; Martin McDermott; Rowchanak Pakdaman; Oleg V. Petrakovsky; Jennifer E. Vela; Tomas Cihlar
GS-9148 [(5-(6-amino-purin-9-yl)-4-fluoro-2,5-dihydro-furan-2-yloxymethyl)phosphonic acid] 4 is a novel nucleoside phosphonate HIV-1 reverse transcriptase (RT) inhibitor with a unique resistance profile toward N(t)RTI resistance mutations. To effectively deliver 4 and its active phosphorylated metabolite 15 into target cells, a series of amidate prodrugs were designed as substrates of cathepsin A, an intracellular lysosomal carboxypeptidase highly expressed in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs). The ethylalaninyl phosphonamidate prodrug 5 (GS-9131) demonstrated favorable cathepsin A substrate properties, in addition to favorable in vitro intestinal and hepatic stabilities. Following oral dosing (3mg/kg) in Beagle dogs, high levels (>9.0microM) of active metabolite 15 were observed in PBMCs, validating the prodrug design process and leading to the nomination of 5 as a clinical candidate.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2003
Constantine G. Boojamra; Remy Lemoine; Johanne Blais; Nicole G. Vernier; Karin Ann Stein; Angela Magon; Suzanne Chamberland; Scott J. Hecker; Ving J. Lee
Dihydropacidamycins having an antibacterial spectrum modified from that of the natural product pacidamycins and mureidomycins have been synthesized. Synthetic dihydropacidamycins with noteworthy antibacterial activity against wild-type and resistant Escherichia coli have been identified (MIC=4-8 microg/mL). Some dihydropacidamycins are shown to have activity against multi-resistant clinical strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Compounds of this class are inhibitors of the cell wall biosynthetic enzyme, MraY.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008
Constantine G. Boojamra; Richard L. Mackman; David Y. Markevitch; Vidya Prasad; Adrian S. Ray; Janet L. Douglas; Deborah Grant; Choung U. Kim; Tomas Cihlar
Archive | 2004
Constantine G. Boojamra; Carina E. Cannizzaro; James M. Chen; Xiaowu Chen; Aesop Cho; Lee S. Chong; Maria Fardis; Haolun Jin; Ralph Hirschmann; Alan X. Huang; Choung U. Kim; Thorsten A. Kirschberg; Christopher P. Lee; William A. Lee; Richard L. Mackman; David Y. Markevitch; David A. Oare; Vidya K. Prasad; Hyung-Jung Pyun; Adrian S. Ray; Rosemarie Sherlock; Sundaramoorthi Swaminathan; William J. Watkins; Jennifer R. Zhang
Archive | 2004
Constantine G. Boojamra; Carina E. Cannizzaro; James M. Chen; Xiaowu Chen; Aesop Cho; Lee S. Chong; Maria Fardis; Alan X. Huang; Choung U. Kim; Thorsten A. Kirschberg; Steven H. Krawczyk; Christopher P. Lee; Kuei-Ying Lin; Richard L. Mackman; David Y. Markevitch; Peter H. Nelson; David A. Oare; Vidya K. Prasad; Hyung-Jung Pyun; Adrian S. Ray; Sundaramoorthi Swaminathan; William J. Watkins; Jennifer R. Zhang; Lijun Zhang
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2010
Eric Lansdon; Dharmaraj Samuel; Leanna Lagpacan; Katherine M. Brendza; Kirsten L. White; Magdeleine Hung; Xiaohong Liu; Constantine G. Boojamra; Richard L. Mackman; Tomas Cihlar; Adrian S. Ray; Mary E. McGrath; S. Swaminathan