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Dive into the research topics where Dan McKay is active.

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Featured researches published by Dan McKay.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Residues Distant from the Active Site Influence Protein-tyrosine Phosphatase 1B Inhibitor Binding

Jacqueline Montalibet; Kathryn Skorey; Dan McKay; Giovanna Scapin; Ernest Asante-Appiah; Brian Kennedy

Regions of protein-tyrosine phosphatase (PTP) 1B that are distant from the active site yet affect inhibitor binding were identified by a novel library screen. This screen was based on the observation that expression of v-Src in yeast leads to lethality, which can be rescued by the coexpression of PTP1B. However, this rescue is lost when yeast are grown in the presence of PTP1B inhibitors. To identify regions of PTP1B (amino acids 1-400, catalytic domain plus 80-amino acid C-terminal tail) that can affect the binding of the difluoromethyl phosphonate (DFMP) inhibitor 7-bromo-6-difluoromethylphosphonate 3-naphthalenenitrile, a library coexpressing PTP1B mutants and v-Src was generated, and the ability of yeast to grow in the presence of the inhibitor was evaluated. PTP1B inhibitor-resistant mutations were found to concentrate on helix α7 and its surrounding region, but not in the active site. No resistant amino acid substitutions were found to occur in the C-terminal tail, suggesting that this region has little effect on active-site inhibitor binding. An in-depth characterization of a resistant substitution localizing to region α7 (S295F) revealed that this change minimally affected enzyme catalytic activity, but significantly reduced the potency of a panel of structurally diverse DFMP PTP1B inhibitors. This loss of inhibitor potency was found to be due to the difluoro moiety of these inhibitors because only the difluoro inhibitors were shifted. For example, the inhibitor potency of a monofluorinated or non-fluorinated analog of one of these DFMP inhibitors was only minimally affected. Using this type of library screen, which can scan the nearly full-length PTP1B sequence (catalytic domain and C-terminal tail) for effects on inhibitor binding, we have been able to identify novel regions of PTP1B that specifically affect the binding of DFMP inhibitors.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Addressing time-dependent CYP 3A4 inhibition observed in a novel series of substituted amino propanamide renin inhibitors, a case study

Austin Chen; Daniel Dube; Laurence Dube; Sébastien Gagné; Michel Gallant; Mireille Gaudreault; Erich L. Grimm; Robert Houle; Patrick Lacombe; Sebastien Laliberte; Suzanna Liu; Dwight Macdonald; Bruce Mackay; David Martin; Dan McKay; David Powell; Jean-François Lévesque

Time-dependent inhibitors of CYPs have the potential to perpetrate drug-drug interactions in the clinical setting. After finding that several leading compounds in a novel series of substituted amino propanamide renin inhibitors inactivated CYP3A4 in an NADPH-dependent and time-dependent manner, a search to identify the cause of this liability was initiated. Extensive SAR revealed that the amide bridge present in compound 1 as a possible culprit. Through the installation of a metabolic soft spot distal to this moiety, potent renin inhibitors with improved CYP profile were identified.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Design and optimization of a substituted amino propanamide series of renin inhibitors for the treatment of hypertension.

Austin Chen; Christopher I. Bayly; Olivier Bezencon; Sylvia Richard-Bildstein; Daniel Dube; Laurence Dube; Sébastien Gagné; Michel Gallant; Mireille Gaudreault; Erich L. Grimm; Robert Houle; Patrick Lacombe; Sebastien Laliberte; Jean-François Lévesque; Suzanna Liu; Dwight Macdonald; Bruce Mackay; David Martin; Dan McKay; David Powell; L’uboš Remeň; Stephen Soisson; Sylvie Toulmond

The discovery and SAR of a new series of substituted amino propanamide renin inhibitors are herein described. This work has led to the preparation of compounds with in vitro and in vivo profiles suitable for further development. Specifically, challenges pertaining to oral bioavailability, covalent binding and time-dependent CYP 3A4 inhibition were overcome thereby culminating in the identification of compound 50 as an optimized renin inhibitor with good efficacy in the hypertensive double-transgenic rat model.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Renin inhibitors for the treatment of hypertension: Design and optimization of a novel series of pyridone-substituted piperidines

Austin Chen; Louis-Charles Campeau; Elizabeth Cauchon; Amandine Chefson; Yves Ducharme; Daniel Dube; Jean-Pierre Falgueyret; Pierre-André Fournier; Sébastien Gagné; Erich L. Grimm; Yongxin Han; Robert Houle; JingQi Huang; Patrick Lacombe; Sebastien Laliberte; Jean-François Lévesque; Susana Liu; Dwight Macdonald; Bruce Mackay; Dan McKay; M. David Percival; Christopher P. Regan; Hillary K. Regan; René St-Jacques; Sylvie Toulmond

An SAR campaign aimed at decreasing the overall lipophilicity of renin inhibitors such as 1 is described herein. It was found that replacement of the northern appendage in 1 with an N-methyl pyridone and subsequent re-optimization of the benzyl amide handle afforded compounds with in vitro and in vivo profiles suitable for further profiling. An unexpected CV toxicity in dogs observed with compound 20 led to the employment of a time and resource sparing rodent model for in vivo screening of key compounds. This culminated in the identification of compound 31 as an optimized renin inhibitor.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Renin inhibitors for the treatment of hypertension: Design and optimization of a novel series of tertiary alcohol-bearing piperidines

Austin Chen; Elizabeth Cauchon; Amandine Chefson; Sarah J. Dolman; Yves Ducharme; Daniel Dube; Jean-Pierre Falgueyret; Pierre-André Fournier; Sébastien Gagné; Michel Gallant; Erich L. Grimm; Yongxin Han; Robert Houle; JingQi Huang; Gregory Hughes; Helene Juteau; Patrick Lacombe; Sophie Lauzon; Jean-François Lévesque; Susana Liu; Dwight Macdonald; Bruce Mackay; Dan McKay; M. David Percival; René St-Jacques; Sylvie Toulmond

The design and optimization of a novel series of renin inhibitor is described herein. Strategically, by committing the necessary resources to the development of synthetic sequences and scaffolds that were most amenable for late stage structural diversification, even as the focus of the SAR campaign moved from one end of the molecule to another, highly potent renin inhibitors could be rapidly identified and profiled.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Renin inhibitors for the treatment of hypertension: design and optimization of a novel series of spirocyclic piperidines.

Austin Chen; Renee Aspiotis; Louis-Charles Campeau; Elizabeth Cauchon; Amadine Chefson; Yves Ducharme; Jean-Pierre Falgueyret; Sébastien Gagné; Yongxin Han; Robert Houle; Sebastien Laliberte; Guillaume Larouche; Jean-François Lévesque; Dan McKay; David Percival

The discovery and SAR of a novel series of spirocyclic renin inhibitors are described herein. It was found that by restricting the northern aromatic plate to the bioactive conformation through spirocyclization, increase in renin potency and decrease in hERG affinity could both be realized. When early members of this series were found to be potent time-dependent CYP3A4 inhibitors, two distinct strategies to address this liability were explored and this effort culminated in the identification of compound 31 as an optimized renin inhibitor.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

The discovery and synthesis of potent zwitterionic inhibitors of renin

Renee Aspiotis; Austin Chen; Elizabeth Cauchon; Daniel Dube; Jean-Pierre Falgueyret; Sébastien Gagné; Michel Gallant; Erich L. Grimm; Robert Houle; Helene Juteau; Patrick Lacombe; Sebastien Laliberte; Jean-François Lévesque; Dwight Macdonald; Dan McKay; M. David Percival; Patrick Roy; Stephen Soisson; Tom Wu

The incorporation of a carboxylic acid within in a series of 3-amido-4-aryl substituted piperidines (represented by general structure 32) led to the discovery of potent, zwitterionic, renin inhibitors with improved off-target profiles (CYP3A4 time-dependent inhibition and hERG affinity) relative to analogous non-zwitterionic inhibitors of the past (i.e., 3). Strategies to address the oral absorption of these zwitterions are also discussed within.


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2012

A fluorogenic near-infrared imaging agent for quantifying plasma and local tissue renin activity in vivo and ex vivo

Jun Zhang; Dorin V. Preda; Kristine O. Vasquez; Jeff Morin; Jeannine Delaney; Bagna Bao; M. David Percival; Daigen Xu; Dan McKay; Michael Klimas; Bohumil Bednar; Cyrille Sur; David Z. Gao; Karen N. Madden; Wael Yared; Milind Rajopadhye; Jeffrey D. Peterson

The renin-angiotensin system (RAS) is well studied for its regulation of blood pressure and fluid homeostasis, as well as for increased activity associated with a variety of diseases and conditions, including cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and kidney disease. The enzyme renin cleaves angiotensinogen to form angiotensin I (ANG I), which is further cleaved by angiotensin-converting enzyme to produce ANG II. Although ANG II is the main effector molecule of the RAS, renin is the rate-limiting enzyme, thus playing a pivotal role in regulating RAS activity in hypertension and organ injury processes. Our objective was to develop a near-infrared fluorescent (NIRF) renin-imaging agent for noninvasive in vivo detection of renin activity as a measure of tissue RAS and in vitro plasma renin activity. We synthesized a renin-activatable agent, ReninSense 680 FAST (ReninSense), using a NIRF-quenched substrate derived from angiotensinogen that is cleaved specifically by purified mouse and rat renin enzymes to generate a fluorescent signal. This agent was assessed in vitro, in vivo, and ex vivo to detect and quantify increases in plasma and kidney renin activity in sodium-sensitive inbred C57BL/6 mice maintained on a low dietary sodium and diuretic regimen. Noninvasive in vivo fluorescence molecular tomographic imaging of the ReninSense signal in the kidney detected increased renin activity in the kidneys of hyperreninemic C57BL/6 mice. The agent also effectively detected renin activity in ex vivo kidneys, kidney tissue sections, and plasma samples. This approach could provide a new tool for assessing disorders linked to altered tissue and plasma renin activity and to monitor the efficacy of therapeutic treatments.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

Design and synthesis of potent, isoxazole-containing renin inhibitors

Pierre-André Fournier; Mélissa Arbour; Elizabeth Cauchon; Austin Chen; Amandine Chefson; Yves Ducharme; Jean-Pierre Falgueyret; Sébastien Gagné; Erich L. Grimm; Yongxin Han; Robert Houle; Patrick Lacombe; Jean-François Lévesque; Dwight Macdonald; Bruce Mackay; Dan McKay; M. David Percival; Yeeman K. Ramtohul; René St-Jacques; Sylvie Toulmond

The design and optimization of a novel isoxazole S(1) linker for renin inhibitor is described herein. This effort culminated in the identification of compound 18, an orally bioavailable, sub-nanomolar renin inhibitor even in the presence of human plasma. When compound 18 was found to inhibit CYP3A4 in a time dependent manner, two strategies were pursued that successfully delivered equipotent compounds with minimal TDI potential.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Identification of a new biaryl scaffold generating potent renin inhibitors.

Patrick Lacombe; Renee Aspiotis; Christopher I. Bayly; Austin Chen; Daniel Dube; Rejean Fortin; Michel Gallant; Helene Juteau; Suzanna Liu; Dan McKay; Patrick Roy; Tom Wu

The discovery and SAR of a series of potent renin inhibitors possessing a novel biaryl scaffold are described herein. Molecular modeling revealed that the cyclopropylamide spacer present in 1 can be replaced by a simple, substituted aromatic ring such as a toluene in 2. The resulting compounds exhibit subnanomolar renin IC(50) and good oral bioavailability in rats.

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