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Dive into the research topics where Craig R. Gibeau is active.

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Featured researches published by Craig R. Gibeau.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015

Discovery of 5-Amino-N-(1H-pyrazol-4-yl)pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidine-3-carboxamide Inhibitors of IRAK4.

Jongwon Lim; Michael D. Altman; James R. Baker; Jason Brubaker; Hongmin Chen; Yiping Chen; Thierry O. Fischmann; Craig R. Gibeau; Melanie A. Kleinschek; Erica Leccese; Charles A. Lesburg; John Maclean; Lily Y. Moy; Erin F. Mulrooney; Jeremy Presland; Larissa Rakhilina; Graham F. Smith; Dietrich Steinhuebel; Ruojing Yang

Interleukin-1 receptor associated kinase 4 (IRAK4) is an essential signal transducer downstream of the IL-1R and TLR superfamily, and selective inhibition of the kinase activity of the protein represents an attractive target for the treatment of inflammatory diseases. A series of 5-amino-N-(1H-pyrazol-4-yl)pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidine-3-carboxamides was developed via sequential modifications to the 5-position of the pyrazolopyrimidine ring and the 3-position of the pyrazole ring. Replacement of substituents responsible for poor permeability and improvement of physical properties guided by cLogD led to the identification of IRAK4 inhibitors with excellent potency, kinase selectivity, and pharmacokinetic properties suitable for oral dosing.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2014

Substituted piperidines as hdm2 inhibitors

Yao Ma; Manami Shizuka; Timothy J. Guzi; Yuan Liu; Yuan Tian; Brian R. Lahue; Craig R. Gibeau; Gerald W. Shipps; Yaolin Wang; Stephane Bogen; Latha G. Nair; Weidong Pan; Mark A. McCoy; Matthew E. Voss; Margarita Kirova-Snover; W. Bent Clayton

Novel small molecule HDM2 inhibitor, substituted piperidine, was identified. Initial SAR study indicated potential for several position optimizations. Additional potency enhancement was achieved by introducing a sidechain off the aromatic ring. DMPK study of one of the active compounds has shown a moderate oral PK and reasonable bioavailability.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2014

Pivotal Role of an Aliphatic Side Chain in the Development of an HDM2 Inhibitor

Yao Ma; Brian R. Lahue; Craig R. Gibeau; Gerald W. Shipps; Stephane L. Bogen; Yaolin Wang; Zhuyan Guo; Timothy J. Guzi

Introduction of an aliphatic side chain to a key position of a novel piperidine-based HDM2 inhibitor scaffold resulted in significant potency gains, enabling further series progression.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2016

Discovery of Novel 3,3-Disubstituted Piperidines as Orally Bioavailable, Potent, and Efficacious HDM2-p53 Inhibitors.

Stephane L. Bogen; Weidong Pan; Craig R. Gibeau; Brian R. Lahue; Yao Ma; Latha G. Nair; Elise Seigel; Gerald W. Shipps; Yuan Tian; Yaolin Wang; Yinghui Lin; Ming Liu; Suxing Liu; Asra Mirza; Xiaoying Wang; Philip Lipari; Cynthia Seidel-Dugan; Daniel J. Hicklin; W. Robert Bishop; Diane Rindgen; Amin A. Nomeir; Winifred W. Prosise; Paul Reichert; Giovanna Scapin; Corey Strickland; Ronald J. Doll

A new subseries of substituted piperidines as p53-HDM2 inhibitors exemplified by 21 has been developed from the initial lead 1. Research focused on optimization of a crucial HDM2 Trp23-ligand interaction led to the identification of 2-(trifluoromethyl)thiophene as the preferred moiety. Further investigation of the Leu26 pocket resulted in potent, novel substituted piperidine inhibitors of the HDM2-p53 interaction that demonstrated tumor regression in several human cancer xenograft models in mice. The structure of HDM2 in complex with inhibitors 3, 10, and 21 is described.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2017

Identification of quinazoline based inhibitors of IRAK4 for the treatment of inflammation.

Graham F. Smith; Michael D. Altman; Brian M. Andresen; James A. Baker; Jason Brubaker; Hongmin Chen; Yiping Chen; Matthew Lloyd Childers; Anthony Donofrio; Heidi Ferguson; Christian Fischer; Thierry O. Fischmann; Craig R. Gibeau; Alexander Hicks; Sue Jin; Sam Kattar; Melanie A. Kleinschek; Erica Leccese; Charles A. Lesburg; Chaomin Li; Jongwon Lim; Duan Liu; John Maclean; Faruk Mansoor; Lilly Y. Moy; Erin F. Mulrooney; Antoaneta S. Necheva; Larissa Rakhilina; Ruojing Yang; Luis Torres

Interleukin-1 receptor associated kinase 4 (IRAK4) has been implicated in IL-1R and TLR based signaling. Therefore selective inhibition of the kinase activity of this protein represents an attractive target for the treatment of inflammatory diseases. Medicinal chemistry optimization of high throughput screening (HTS) hits with the help of structure based drug design led to the identification of orally-bioavailable quinazoline based IRAK4 inhibitors with excellent pharmacokinetic profile and kinase selectivity. These highly selective IRAK4 compounds show activity in vivo via oral dosing in a TLR7 driven model of inflammation.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2016

Structure-based design and development of (benz)imidazole pyridones as JAK1-selective kinase inhibitors

Vladimir Simov; Sujal V. Deshmukh; Christopher J. Dinsmore; Fiona Elwood; Rafael Fernandez; Yudith Garcia; Craig R. Gibeau; Hakan Gunaydin; Joon Jung; Jason D. Katz; Brian Kraybill; Blair T. Lapointe; Sangita B. Patel; Tony Siu; Hua Su; Jonathan R. Young

The mammalian Janus Kinases (JAK1, JAK2, JAK3 and TYK2) are intracellular, non-receptor tyrosine kinases whose activities have been associated in the literature and the clinic with a variety of hyperproliferative diseases and immunological disorders. At the onset of the program, it was hypothesized that a JAK1 selective compound over JAK2 could lead to an improved therapeutic index relative to marketed non-selective JAK inhibitors by avoiding the clinical AEs, such as anemia, presumably associated with JAK2 inhibition. During the course of the JAK1 program, a number of diverse chemical scaffolds were identified from both uHTS campaigns and de novo scaffold design. As part of this effort, a (benz)imidazole scaffold evolved via a scaffold-hopping exercise from a mature chemical series. Concurrent crystallography-driven exploration of the ribose pocket and the solvent front led to analogs with optimized kinome and JAK1 selectivities over the JAK2 isoform by targeting several residues unique to JAK1, such as Arg-879 and Glu-966.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2016

Structure-activity relationship study of 4-substituted piperidines at Leu26 moiety of novel p53-hDM2 inhibitors.

Yuan Tian; Yao Ma; Craig R. Gibeau; Brian R. Lahue; Gerald W. Shipps; Corey Strickland; Stephane Bogen

Led by the structural information of the screening hit with mDM2 protein, a structure modification of Leu26 moiety of the novel p53-hDM2 inhibitors was conducted. A structure-activity relationship study of 4-substituted piperidines revealed compound 20t with good potencies and excellent CYP450 profiles.


Archive | 2007

Substituted piperidines that increase P53 activity and the uses thereof

Yao Ma; Brian R. Lahue; Gerald W. Shipps; Yaolin Wang; Stephane Bogen; Matthew E. Voss; Latha G. Nair; Yuan Tian; Ronald J. Doll; Zhuyan Guo; Corey O. Strickland; Rumin Zhang; Mark A. McCoy; Weidong Pan; Elise M. Siegel; Craig R. Gibeau


Archive | 2012

AMINOPYRIMIDINONES AS INTERLEUKIN RECEPTOR-ASSOCIATED KINASE INHIBITORS

W. Michael Seganish; Stephanie Brumfield; Jongwon Lim; Julius J. Matasi; William T. McElroy; Deen Tulshian; Brian J. Lavey; Michael D. Altman; Craig R. Gibeau; John W. Lampe; Joey L. Methot; Liang Zhu


Archive | 2016

NOVEL TRICYCLIC COMPOUNDS AS INHIBITORS OF MUTANT IDH ENZYMES

Christian Fischer; Stephane Bogen; Matthew Lloyd Childers; Francesc Xavier Fradera Llinas; J. Michael Ellis; Sara Esposite; Qingmei Hong; Chunhui Huang; Alexander J. Kim; John W. Lampe; Michelle R. Machacek; Daniel R. McMasters; Ryan D. Otte; Dann L. Parker; Michael H. Reutershan; Nunzio Sciammetta; Pengcheng P. Shao; David L. Sloman; Feroze Ujjainwalla; Catherine White; Zhicai Wu; Kake Zhao; Craig R. Gibeau; Tesfaye Biftu; Purakkattle J. Biju; Lei Chen; Joshua Close; Peter Fuller; Xianhai Huang; Min K. Park

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Michael D. Altman

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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