David B. Frennesson
Bristol-Myers Squibb
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Featured researches published by David B. Frennesson.
Cancer Research | 2006
Paul Haluska; Joan M. Carboni; David A. Loegering; Francis Y. Lee; Mark D. Wittman; Mark G. Saulnier; David B. Frennesson; Kimberly R. Kalli; Cheryl A. Conover; Ricardo M. Attar; Scott H. Kaufmann; Marco M. Gottardis; Charles Erlichman
The insulin-like growth factor receptor (IGF-IR) and insulin receptor are either overactivated and/or overexpressed in a wide range of tumor types and contribute to tumorigenicity, proliferation, metastasis, and drug resistance. Here, we show that BMS-554417, a novel small molecule developed as an inhibitor of IGF-IR, inhibits IGF-IR and insulin receptor kinase activity and proliferation in vitro, and reduces tumor xenograft size in vivo. In a series of carcinoma cell lines, the IC50 for proliferation ranged from 120 nmol/L (Colo205) to >8.5 micromol/L (OV202). The addition of stimulatory ligands was unnecessary for the antiproliferative effect in MCF-7 and OV202 cells. BMS-554417 treatment inhibited IGF-IR and insulin receptor signaling through extracellular signal-related kinase as well as the phosphoinositide 3-kinase/Akt pathway, as evidenced by decreased Akt phosphorylation at Ser473. At doses that inhibited proliferation, the compound also caused a G0-G1 arrest and prevented nuclear accumulation of cyclin D1 in response to LR3 IGF-I. In Jurkat T-cell leukemia cells, this agent triggered apoptotic cell death via the mitochondrial pathway. BMS-554417 was orally bioavailable and significantly inhibited the growth of IGF1R-Sal tumor xenografts in vivo. BMS-554417 is a member of a novel class of IGF-IR/insulin receptor inhibitors that have potential clinical applications because of their antiproliferative and proapoptotic activity in vitro and in vivo.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009
Mark D. Wittman; Joan M. Carboni; Zheng Yang; Francis Y. Lee; Melissa Antman; Ricardo M. Attar; Praveen Balimane; Chiehying Chang; Cliff Chen; Lorell Discenza; David B. Frennesson; Marco M. Gottardis; Ann Greer; Warren Hurlburt; Walter Lewis Johnson; David R. Langley; Aixin Li; Jianqing Li; Peiying Liu; Harold Mastalerz; Arvind Mathur; Krista Menard; Karishma Patel; John S. Sack; Xiaopeng Sang; Mark G. Saulnier; Daniel J. Smith; Kevin Stefanski; George L. Trainor; Upender Velaparthi
This report describes the biological activity, characterization, and SAR leading to 9d (BMS-754807) a small molecule IGF-1R kinase inhibitor in clinical development.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 1994
Mark G. Saulnier; David B. Frennesson; Milind Deshpande; Steven Hansel; Dolatrai M. Vyas
Abstract A new class of guanidino prodrug is efficiently synthesized from an amine and an appropriate N,N′-bis(acyloxymethoxycarbonyl)-S-methylisothiourea. The N,N′-bis(acyloxymethoxycarbonyl)-S-methylisothiourea is readily prepared from S-methylisothiourea and the corresponding acyloxymethyl carbonochloridate in good yield. The N,N′-bis(acyloxymethyl carbamate) derivatives of the highly basic guanidino group serve as lipophilic, uncharged, esterase-activatable prodrugs of simple guanidine containing molecules.
Tetrahedron Letters | 1995
Mark G. Saulnier; David B. Frennesson; Milind Deshpande; Dinesh Vyas
Abstract The assembly of the parent Indolo[2,3-a]carbazole ring system, common to rebeccamycin and arcyriaflavin A, is efficiently accomplished by the discovery of a novel palladium(0)-catalyzedpolyannulation reaction, wherein 4 bonds are formed in a single step from a simple monocyclic 1,3-diacetylene precursor. This chemistry further demonstrates the power of palladium(0) in the execution of complex synthetic organic chemistry, and also provides a novel approach to the synthesis of Indolo[2,3-a]carbazole alkaloids, an increasingly important class of bioactive natural products.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008
Kurt Zimmermann; Mark D. Wittman; Mark G. Saulnier; Upender Velaparthi; David R. Langley; Xiaopeng Sang; David B. Frennesson; Joan M. Carboni; Aixin Li; Ann Greer; Marco M. Gottardis; Ricardo M. Attar; Zheng Yang; Praveen Balimane; Lorell Discenza; Dolatrai M. Vyas
3-(Benzimidazol-2-yl)-pyridine-2-one-based ATP competitive inhibitors of Insulin-like Growth Factor 1 Kinase (IGF-IR) were optimized for reduced Cyp3A4 inhibition and improved oral exposure. The use of malonate as methyl anion synthon via S(N)Ar reaction and double decarboxylation under mild conditions is demonstrated.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008
Mark G. Saulnier; David B. Frennesson; Mark D. Wittman; Kurt Zimmermann; Upender Velaparthi; David R. Langley; Charles Struzynski; Xiaopeng Sang; Joan M. Carboni; Aixin Li; Ann Greer; Zheng Yang; Praveen Balimane; Marco M. Gottardis; Ricardo M. Attar; Dolatrai M. Vyas
A series of IGF-1R inhibitors is disclosed, wherein the (m-chlorophenyl)ethanol side chain of BMS-536924 (1) is replaced with a series of 2-(1H-imidazol-4-yl)ethanamine and 2-(1H-pyrazol-1-yl)ethanamine side chains. Some analogs show improved IGF-1R potency and oral exposure. Analogs from both series, 16a and 17f, show in vivo activity comparable to 1 in our constitutively activated IGF-1R Sal tumor model. This may be the due to the improved protein binding in human and mouse serum for imidazole 16a and the excellent oral exposure of pyrazole 17f.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010
Kurt Zimmermann; Mark D. Wittman; Mark G. Saulnier; Upender Velaparthi; Xiaopeng Sang; David B. Frennesson; Charles Struzynski; Steven P. Seitz; Liqi He; Joan M. Carboni; Aixin Li; Ann Greer; Marco M. Gottardis; Ricardo M. Attar; Zheng Yang; Praveen Balimane; Lorell Discenza; Francis Y. Lee; Michael Sinz; Sean Kim; Dolatrai M. Vyas
The SAR of PXR transactivation by 3-(benzimidazol-2-yl)-pyridine-2-one based ATP competitive inhibitors of Insulin-like Growth Factor 1 Receptor kinase (IGF-1R) is discussed. Compounds without PXR transactivation, with in vivo antitumor activity, reduced protein binding and improved oral exposure are presented.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010
Upender Velaparthi; Mark G. Saulnier; Mark D. Wittman; Peiying Liu; David B. Frennesson; Kurt Zimmermann; Joan M. Carboni; Marco M. Gottardis; Aixin Li; Ann Greer; Wendy Clarke; Zheng Yang; Krista Menard; Francis Y. Lee; George L. Trainor; Dolatrai M. Vyas
A series of 3-[6-(4-substituted-piperazin-1-yl)-4-methyl-1H-benzimidazol-2-yl]-1H-pyridine-2-one were synthesized to modulate CYP3A4 inhibition and improve aqueous solubility of our prototypical compound BMS-536924 (1), while maintaining potent IGF-1R inhibitory activity. Structure-activity and structure-solubility studies led to the identification of BMS-577098 (27), which demonstrates oral in vivo efficacy in animal models. The improvement was achieved by replacing morpholine with more polar bio-isoster piperazine and modulating the basicity of distal nitrogen with appropriate substitutions.
Organic Letters | 2009
Mark G. Saulnier; Marco Dodier; David B. Frennesson; David R. Langley; Dolatrai M. Vyas
Generation of imino-quinone methide type intermediates from 2-aminothiazole-5-carbinols using alkylsulfonic acids in nitromethane followed by trapping with a wide range of nucleophiles effects C-C, C-O, C-N, C-S, and C-P bond formation.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2012
Petra Ross-Macdonald; Heshani de Silva; Vishal Patel; Amy Truong; Aiqing He; Isaac M. Neuhaus; Charles Tilford; Rui-Ru Ji; Nathan O. Siemers; Ann Greer; Joan M. Carboni; Marco M. Gottardis; Krista Menard; Frank Lee; Marco Dodier; David B. Frennesson; Anthony J. Sampognaro; Mark G. Saulnier; George L. Trainor; Dolatrai M. Vyas; Kurt Zimmermann; Mark D. Wittman
Therapeutic development of a targeted agent involves a series of decisions over additional activities that may be ignored, eliminated or pursued. This paper details the concurrent application of two methods that provide a spectrum of information about the biological activity of a compound: biochemical profiling on a large panel of kinase assays and transcriptional profiling of mRNA responses. Our mRNA profiling studies used a full dose range, identifying subsets of transcriptional responses with differing EC(50)s which may reflect distinct targets. Profiling data allowed prioritization for validation in xenograft models, generated testable hypotheses for active compounds, and informed decisions on the general utility of the series.