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Featured researches published by David C. Kombo.
Neuropharmacology | 2012
Terry A. Hauser; Christopher D. Hepler; David C. Kombo; Vladimir P. Grinevich; Melanie N. Kiser; Dawn N. Hooker; Jiahui Zhang; Douglas O. Mountfort; Andrew I. Selwood; S. Rao Akireddy; Sharon R. Letchworth; Daniel Yohannes
The interaction of 13-desmethylspirolide C (SPX-desMe-C) and gymnodimine with several nicotinic and muscarinic acetylcholine receptors was investigated. Interaction at the muscarinic receptors was minimal. At nicotinic receptors, both SPX-desMe-C and gymnodimine displayed greatest affinity for the α7 receptor. The rank order for binding affinity (Ki) for SPX-desMe-C was α7 > α6β3β4α5 >> rat α3β4, α1βγδ > α4β4, human α3β4 > human α4β2 > rat α4β2 and for gymnodimine was α7, α6β3β4α5 > rat α3β4 > human α3β4, α4β4 > rat α4β2, human α4β2 > α1βγδ. Both molecules antagonized agonist-induced nicotinic responses. The antagonism rank order of potency (IC(50)) for SPX-desMe-C was α7 > low sensitivity (LS) α4β2 > human α3β4 > high sensitivity (HS) α4β2, α1βγδ > α4β4 > rat α3β4 and for gymnodimine was LS α4β2 > human α3β4 > α7 > HS α4β2 > α4β4 > rat α3β4 > α1βγδ. Neither gymnodimine nor SPX-desMe-C antagonism could be surmounted by increasing concentrations of nicotine. To elucidate the nature of this insurmountable blockade, we carried out homology modelling and molecular docking studies of both ligands with α7 nAChR. Their very high binding affinity results from very tight hydrophobic enclosures, in addition to previously reported hydrogen-bond and cation-π interactions. Also, the higher the hydrophilic surface area of the binding site of nAChRs, the weaker the binding affinity of both ligands. Together these results show the targets of action are nicotinic and define these marine toxins as additional tools to advance our understanding regarding interactions between antagonists and the nAChR ligand binding domain.
Journal of Cheminformatics | 2012
Kartik Tallapragada; Joseph Chewning; David C. Kombo; Beverly Ludwick
BackgroundThe use of SharePoint® collaboration software for content management has become a critical part of todays drug discovery process. SharePoint 2010 software has laid a foundation which enables researchers to collaborate and search on various contents. The amount of data generated during a transition of a single compound from preclinical discovery to commercialization can easily range in terabytes, thus there is a greater demand of a chemically aware search algorithm that supplements SharePoint which enables researchers to query for information in a more intuitive and effective way. Thus by supplementing SharePoint with Chemically Aware™ features provides a great value to the pharmaceutical and biotech companies and makes drug discovery more efficient. Using several tools we have integrated SharePoint with chemical, compound, and reaction databases, thereby improving the traditional search engine capability and enhancing the user experience.ResultsThis paper describes the implementation of a Chemically Aware™ system to supplement SharePoint. A Chemically Aware SharePoint (CASP) allows users to tag documents by drawing a structure and associating it with the related content. It also allows the user to search SharePoint software content and internal/external databases by carrying out substructure, similarity, SMILES, and IUPAC name searches. Building on traditional search, CASP takes SharePoint one step further by providing a intuitive GUI to the researchers to base their search on their knowledge of chemistry than textual search. CASP also provides a way to integrate with other systems, for example a researcher can perform a sub-structure search on pdf documents with embedded molecular entities.ConclusionA Chemically Aware™ system supplementing SharePoint is a step towards making drug discovery process more efficient and also helps researchers to search for information in a more intuitive way. It also helps the researchers to find information which was once difficult to find by allowing one to tag documents with molecular entities and integrating with image recognition software to find information from pdf documents.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012
Anatoly Mazurov; David C. Kombo; Terry A. Hauser; Lan Miao; Gary Maurice Dull; John Genus; Nikolai Fedorov; Lisa Benson; Serguei S. Sidach; Yun-De Xiao; Philip S. Hammond; John W. James; Craig Harrison Miller; Daniel Yohannes
(2S,3R)-N-[2-(Pyridin-3-ylmethyl)-1-azabicyclo[2.2.2]oct-3-yl]benzo[b]furan-2-carboxamide (7a, TC-5619), a novel selective agonist of the α7 neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptor, has been identified as a promising drug candidate for the treatment of cognitive impairment associated with neurological disorders. 7a demonstrated more than a thousand-fold separation between the affinities for the α7 and α4β2 receptor subtypes and had no detectable effects on muscle or ganglionic nicotinic receptor subtypes, indicating a marked selectivity for the central nervous system over the peripheral nervous system. Results obtained from homology modeling and docking explain the observed selectivity. 7a had positive effects across cognitive, positive, and negative symptoms of schizophrenia in animal models and was additive or synergistic with the antipsychotic clozapine. Compound 7a, as an augmentation therapy to the standard treatment with antipsychotics, demonstrated encouraging results on measures of negative symptoms and cognitive dysfunction in schizophrenia and was well tolerated in a phase II clinical proof of concept trial in patients with schizophrenia.
Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling | 2013
David C. Kombo; Kartik Tallapragada; Rachit Jain; Joseph Chewning; Anatoly Mazurov; Jason D. Speake; Terry A. Hauser; Steve Toler
The pharmacokinetic and safety profiles of clinical drug candidates are greatly influenced by their requisite physicochemical properties. In particular, it has been shown that 2D molecular descriptors such as fraction of Sp3 carbon atoms (Fsp3) and number of stereo centers correlate with clinical success. Using the proteomic off-target hit rate of nicotinic ligands, we found that shape-based 3D descriptors such as the radius of gyration and shadow indices discriminate off-target promiscuity better than do Fsp3 and the number of stereo centers. We have deduced the relevant descriptor values required for a ligand to be nonpromiscuous. Investigating the MDL Drug Data Report (MDDR) database as compounds move from the preclinical stage toward the market, we have found that these shape-based 3D descriptors predict clinical success of compounds at preclinical and phase1 stages vs compounds withdrawn from the market better than do Fsp3 and LogD. Further, these computed 3D molecular descriptors correlate well with experimentally observed solubility, which is among well-known physicochemical properties that drive clinical success. We also found that about 84% of launched drugs satisfy either Shadow index or Fsp3 criteria, whereas withdrawn and discontinued compounds fail to meet the same criteria. Our studies suggest that spherical compounds (rather than their elongated counterparts) with a minimal number of aromatic rings may exhibit a high propensity to advance from clinical trials to market.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012
Anatoly Mazurov; Lan Miao; Balwinder Singh Bhatti; Jon-Paul Strachan; Srinivasa Rao Akireddy; Srinivasa V. Murthy; David C. Kombo; Yun-De Xiao; Philip S. Hammond; Jenny Z. Zhang; Terry A. Hauser; Kristen G. Jordan; Craig Harrison Miller; Jason D. Speake; Gregory J. Gatto; Daniel Yohannes
Diversification of essential nicotinic cholinergic pharmacophoric elements, i.e., cationic center and hydrogen bond acceptor, resulted in the discovery of novel potent α4β2 nAChR selective agonists comprising a series of N-acyldiazabicycles. Core characteristics of the series are an exocyclic carbonyl moiety as a hydrogen bond acceptor and endocyclic secondary amino group. These features are positioned at optimal distance and with optimal relative spatial orientation to provide near optimal interactions with the receptor. A novel potent and highly selective α4β2 nAChR agonist 3-(5-chloro-2-furoyl)-3,7-diazabicyclo[3.3.0]octane (56, TC-6683, AZD1446) with favorable pharmaceutical properties and in vivo efficacy in animal models has been identified as a potential treatment for cognitive deficits associated with psychiatric or neurological conditions and is currently being progressed to phase 2 clinical trials as a treatment for Alzheimers disease.
European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2011
David C. Kombo; Anatoly Mazurov; Kartik Tallapragada; Philip S. Hammond; Joseph Chewning; Terry A. Hauser; Montserrat G. Vásquez-Valdivieso; Daniel Yohannes; Todd T. Talley; Palmer Taylor; William Scott Caldwell
AChBPs isolated from Lymnaea stagnalis (Ls), Aplysia californica (Ac) and Bulinus truncatus (Bt) have been extensively used as structural prototypes to understand the molecular mechanisms that underlie ligand-interactions with nAChRs [1]. Here, we describe docking studies on interactions of benzylidene anabaseine analogs with AChBPs and α7 nAChR. Results reveal that docking of these compounds using Glide software accurately reproduces experimentally-observed binding modes of DMXBA and of its active metabolite, in the binding pocket of Ac. In addition to the well-known nicotinic pharmacophore (positive charge, hydrogen-bond acceptor, and hydrophobic aromatic groups), a hydrogen-bond donor feature contributes to binding of these compounds to Ac, Bt, and the α7 nAChR. This is consistent with benzylidene anabaseine analogs with OH and NH(2) functional groups showing the highest binding affinity of these congeners, and the position of the ligand shown in previous X-ray crystallographic studies of ligand-Ac complexes. In the predicted ligand-Ls complex, by contrast, the ligand OH group acts as hydrogen-bond acceptor. We have applied our structural findings to optimizing the design of novel spirodiazepine and spiroimidazoline quinuclidine series. Binding and functional studies revealed that these hydrogen-bond donor containing compounds exhibit improved affinity and selectivity for the α7 nAChR subtype and demonstrate partial agonism. The gain in affinity is also due to conformational restriction, tighter hydrophobic enclosures, and stronger cation-π interactions. The use of AChBPs structure as a surrogate to predict binding affinity to α7 nAChR has also been investigated. On the whole, we found that molecular docking into Ls binding site generally scores better than when a α7 homology model, Bt or Ac crystal structure is used.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012
David C. Kombo; Anatoly Mazurov; Joseph Chewning; Philip S. Hammond; Kartik Tallapragada; Terry A. Hauser; Jason D. Speake; Daniel Yohannes; William Scott Caldwell
Based on pharmacophore elucidation and docking studies on interactions of benzylidene anabaseine analogs with AChBPs and α7 nAChR, novel spirodiazepine and spiroimidazoline quinuclidine series have been designed. Binding studies revealed that some of hydrogen-bond donor containing compounds exhibit improved affinity and selectivity for the α7 nAChR subtype in comparison with most potent metabolite of GTS-21, 3-(4-hydroxy-2-methoxybenzylidene)-anabaseine. Hydrophobicity and rigidity of the ligand also contribute into its binding affinity. We also describe alternative pharmacophoric features equidistant from the carbonyl oxygen atom of the conserved Trp-148 of the principal face, which may be exploited to further design diverse focused libraries targeting the α7 nAChR.
Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling | 2013
David C. Kombo; Merouane Bencherif
We have carried out a comparative study between docking into homology models and Bayesian categorization, as applied to virtual screening of nicotinic ligands for binding at various nAChRs subtypes (human and rat α4β2, α7, α3β4, and α6β2β3). We found that although results vary with receptor subtype, Bayesian categorization exhibits higher accuracy and enrichment than unconstrained docking into homology models. However, docking accuracy is improved when one sets up a hydrogen-bond (HB) constraint between the cationic center of the ligand and the main-chain carbonyl group of the conserved Trp-149 or its homologue (a residue involved in cation-π interactions with the ligand basic nitrogen atom). This finding suggests that this HB is a hallmark of nicotinic ligands binding to nAChRs. Best predictions using either docking or Bayesian were obtained with the human α7 nAChR, when 100 nM was used as cutoff for biological activity. We also found that ligand-based Bayesian-derived enrichment factors and structure-based docking-derived enrichment factors highly correlate to each other. Moreover, they correlate with the mean molecular fractional polar surface area of actives ligands and the fractional hydrophobic/hydrophilic surface area of the binding site, respectively. This result is in agreement with the fact that hydrophobicity strongly contributes in promoting nicotinic ligands binding to their cognate nAChRs.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013
Anatoly Mazurov; David C. Kombo; Srinivasa Rao Akireddy; Srinivasa V. Murthy; Terry A. Hauser; Kristen G. Jordan; Gregory J. Gatto; Daniel Yohannes
A novel series of α4β2 nAChR agonists lacking common pyridine or its bioisosteric heterocycle have been disclosed. Essential pharmacophoric elements of the series are exocyclic carbonyl moiety as a hydrogen bond acceptor and secondary amino group within diaza- or azabicyclic scaffold. Computer modeling studies suggested that molecular shape of the ligand also contributes to promotion of agonism. Proof of concept for improving working memory performance in a novel object recognition task has been demonstrated on a representative of the series, 3-propionyl-3,7-diazabicyclo[3.3.0]octane (34).
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013
David C. Kombo; Terry A. Hauser; Vladimir P. Grinevich; Matthew S. Melvin; Jon-Paul Strachan; Serguei S. Sidach; Joseph Chewning; Nikolai Fedorov; Kartik Tallapragada; Scott R. Breining; Craig Harrison Miller
We have carried out a pharmacological evaluation of arylmethylene quinuclidine derivatives interactions with human α3β4 nAChRs subtype, using cell-based receptor binding, calcium-influx, electrophysiological patch-clamp assays and molecular modeling techniques. We have found that the compounds bind competitively to the α3β4 receptor with micromolar affinities and some of the compounds behave as non-competitive antagonists (compounds 1, 2 and 3), displaying submicromolar IC(50) values. These evidences suggest a mixed mode of action for these compounds, having interactions at the orthosteric site and more pronounced interactions at an allosteric site to block agonist effects. One of the compounds, 1-benzyl-3-(diphenylmethylene)-1-azoniabicyclo[2.2.2]octane chloride (compound 3), exhibited poorly reversible use-dependent block of α3β4 channels. We also found that removal of a phenyl group from compound 1 confers a partial agonism to the derived analog (compound 6). Introducing a hydrogen-bond acceptor into the 3-benzylidene quinuclidine derivative (compound 7) increases agonism potency at the α3β4 receptor subtype. Docking into the orthosteric binding site of a α3β4 protein structure derived by comparative modeling accurately predicted the experimentally-observed trend in binding affinity. Results supported the notion that binding requires a hydrogen bond formation between the ligand basic nitrogen and the backbone carbonyl oxygen atom of the conserved Trp-149.