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Dive into the research topics where David S. Thomson is active.

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Featured researches published by David S. Thomson.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

5-Aminomethylbenzimidazoles as potent ITK antagonists

Doris Riether; Renee M. Zindell; Jennifer A. Kowalski; Brian Nicholas Cook; Jörg Bentzien; Stephane De Lombaert; David S. Thomson; Stanley Kugler; Donna Skow; Leslie Martin; Ernest L. Raymond; Hnin Hnin Khine; Kathy O’Shea; Joseph R. Woska; Deborah D. Jeanfavre; Rosemarie Sellati; Kerry L. M. Ralph; Jennifer Ahlberg; Gabriel Labissiere; Mohammed A. Kashem; Steven S. Pullen; Hidenori Takahashi

Benzamide 1 demonstrated good potency as a selective ITK inhibitor, however the amide moiety was found to be hydrolytically labile in vivo, resulting in low oral exposure and the generation of mutagenic aromatic amine metabolites. Replacing the benzamide with a benzylamine linker not only addressed the toxicity issue, but also improved the cellular and functional potency as well as the drug-like properties. SAR studies around the benzylamines and the identification of 10n and 10o as excellent tools for proof-of-concept studies are described.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Nonsteroidal Dissociated Glucocorticoid Agonists Containing Azaindoles as Steroid A-Ring Mimetics

Doris Riether; Christian Harcken; Hossein Razavi; Daniel Kuzmich; Thomas A. Gilmore; Jörg Bentzien; Edward J. Pack; Donald Souza; Richard M. Nelson; Alison Kukulka; Tazmeen N. Fadra; Ljiljana Zuvela-Jelaska; Josephine Pelletier; Roger M. Dinallo; Mark Panzenbeck; Carol Torcellini; Gerald H. Nabozny; David S. Thomson

Syntheses and structure-activity relationships (SAR) of nonsteroidal glucocorticoid receptor (GR) agonists are described. These compounds contain azaindole moieties as A-ring mimetics and display various degrees of in vitro dissociation between gene transrepression and transactivation. Collagen induced arthritis studies in mouse have demonstrated that in vitro dissociated compounds (R)-16 and (R)-37 have steroid-like anti-inflammatory properties with improved metabolic side effect profiles, such as a reduced increase in body fat and serum insulin levels, compared to steroids.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008

Arylsulfonamide CB2 receptor agonists: SAR and optimization of CB2 selectivity.

Monika Ermann; Doris Riether; Edward Walker; Innocent Mushi; James Edward Jenkins; Beatriz Noya-Marino; Mark L. Brewer; Malcolm Taylor; Patricia Amouzegh; Stephen Peter East; Brian W. Dymock; Mark J. Gemkow; Andreas Kahrs; Andreas Ebneth; Sabine Löbbe; Kathy O’Shea; Daw-Tsun Shih; David S. Thomson

A high-throughput screening campaign resulted in the discovery of a highly potent dual cannabinoid receptor 1 (CB1) and 2 (CB2) agonist. Following a thorough SAR exploration, a series of selective CB2 full agonists were identified.


Current Topics in Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

Recent progress in the discovery of novel glucocorticoid receptor modulators.

Hidenori Takahashi; Hossein Razavi; David S. Thomson

Glucocorticoids have been used in modern clinical practice for over fifty years. Although they have demonstrated potent anti-inflammatory and immunosuppressive activities, their association with debilitating and life-threatening side effects has been a major drawback. Recent insights into glucocorticoid biology have lent support to the hypothesis that the glucocorticoid anti-inflammatory activities could be dissociated from their adverse side effects. Inspired by these biological findings, the search for dissociated glucocorticoid receptor agonists has intensified. Antag-onists of the glucocorticoid receptor that offer therapeutic benefits for the treatment of diseases such as diabetes have also been pursued. These efforts have been partly focused on the development of tissue, especially liver, selective glucocor-ticoid receptor antagonists, which are thought to have improved safety profiles. This review offers a summary of the research and development activities in this field and covers journal and patent publications from 2003 to March 2006.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2006

Discovery and SAR study of novel dihydroquinoline-containing glucocorticoid receptor agonists

Hidenori Takahashi; Younes Bekkali; Alison Capolino; Thomas A. Gilmore; Susan E. Goldrick; Paul Kaplita; Lisa Liu; Richard M. Nelson; Donna Terenzio; Ji Wang; Ljiljana Zuvela-Jelaska; John R. Proudfoot; Gerald Nabozny; David S. Thomson

We have recently reported the discovery of a novel class of glucocorticoid receptor (GR) antagonists, exemplified by 3, containing a 1,2-dihydroquinoline molecular scaffold. Further SAR studies of these antagonists uncovered chemical modifications conveying agonist functional activity to this series. These agonists exhibit good GR binding affinity and are selective against other nuclear hormone receptors.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015

Synthesis, SAR, and series evolution of novel oxadiazole-containing 5-lipoxygenase activating protein inhibitors: discovery of 2-[4-(3-{(r)-1-[4-(2-amino-pyrimidin-5-yl)-phenyl]-1-cyclopropyl-ethyl}-[1,2,4]oxadiazol-5-yl)-pyrazol-1-yl]-N,N-dimethyl-acetamide (BI 665915).

Hidenori Takahashi; Doris Riether; Alessandra Bartolozzi; Todd Bosanac; Valentina Berger; Ralph Binetti; John Alan Broadwater; Zhidong Chen; Rebecca Crux; Stéphane De Lombaert; Rajvee Dave; Jonathon Alan Dines; Tazmeen Fadra-Khan; Adam Flegg; Michael Garrigou; Ming-Hong Hao; John D. Huber; J. Matthew Hutzler; Steven Kerr; Adrian Kotei Kotey; Weimin Liu; Ho Yin Lo; Pui Leng Loke; Paige E. Mahaney; Tina Morwick; Spencer Napier; Alan Olague; Edward J. Pack; Anil K. Padyana; David S. Thomson

The synthesis, structure-activity relationship (SAR), and evolution of a novel series of oxadiazole-containing 5-lipoxygenase-activating protein (FLAP) inhibitors are described. The use of structure-guided drug design techniques provided compounds that demonstrated excellent FLAP binding potency (IC50 < 10 nM) and potent inhibition of LTB4 synthesis in human whole blood (IC50 < 100 nM). Optimization of binding and functional potencies, as well as physicochemical properties resulted in the identification of compound 69 (BI 665915) that demonstrated an excellent cross-species drug metabolism and pharmacokinetics (DMPK) profile and was predicted to have low human clearance. In addition, 69 was predicted to have a low risk for potential drug-drug interactions due to its cytochrome P450 3A4 profile. In a murine ex vivo whole blood study, 69 demonstrated a linear dose-exposure relationship and a dose-dependent inhibition of LTB4 production.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Morpholine containing CB2 selective agonists.

Renee M. Zindell; Doris Riether; Todd Bosanac; Angela Berry; Mark J. Gemkow; Andreas Ebneth; Sabine Löbbe; Ernest L. Raymond; Diane Thome; Daw-Tsun Shih; David S. Thomson

Identification and optimization of two classes of CB2 selective agonists are described. A representative from each class is profiled in a murine model of inflammation and each shows similar efficacy to prednisolone upon oral dosing.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

1,4-Diazepane compounds as potent and selective CB2 agonists: optimization of metabolic stability.

Doris Riether; Lifen Wu; Pier F. Cirillo; Angela Berry; Edward Walker; Monika Ermann; Beatriz Noya-Marino; James Edward Jenkins; Dan Albaugh; Claudia Albrecht; Michael B. Fisher; Mark J. Gemkow; Heather Grbic; Sabine Löbbe; Clemens Möller; Kathy O’Shea; Achim Sauer; Daw-Tsun Shih; David S. Thomson

A high-throughput screening campaign has identified 1,4-diazepane compounds which are potent Cannabinoid receptor 2 agonists with excellent selectivity against the Cannabinoid receptor 1. This class of compounds suffered from low metabolic stability. Following various strategies, compounds with a good stability in liver microsomes and rat PK profile have been identified.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Non-steroidal dissociated glucocorticoid agonists: indoles as A-ring mimetics and function-regulating pharmacophores

Raj Betageri; Thomas A. Gilmore; Daniel Kuzmich; Thomas M. Kirrane; Jörg Bentzien; Dieter Wiedenmayer; Younes Bekkali; John R. Regan; Angela Berry; Bachir Latli; Alison Kukulka; Tazmeen N. Fadra; Richard M. Nelson; Susan E. Goldrick; Ljiljana Zuvela-Jelaska; Don Souza; Josephine Pelletier; Roger M. Dinallo; Mark Panzenbeck; Carol Torcellini; Heewon Lee; Edward Pack; Christian Harcken; Gerald Nabozny; David S. Thomson

We report a SAR of non-steroidal glucocorticoid mimetics that utilize indoles as A-ring mimetics. Detailed SAR is discussed with a focus on improving PR and MR selectivity, GR agonism, and in vitro dissociation profile. SAR analysis led to compound (R)-33 which showed high PR and MR selectivity, potent agonist activity, and reduced transactivation activity in the MMTV and aromatase assays. The compound is equipotent to prednisolone in the LPS-TNF model of inflammation. In mouse CIA, at 30 mg/kg compound (R)-33 inhibited disease progression with an efficacy similar to the 3 mg/kg dose of prednisolone.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015

Selective CB2 receptor agonists. Part 1: The identification of novel ligands through computer-aided drug design (CADD) approaches

Eugene R. Hickey; Renee M. Zindell; Pier F. Cirillo; Lifen Wu; Monika Ermann; Angela Berry; David S. Thomson; Claudia Albrecht; Mark J. Gemkow; Doris Riether

Computer-aided drug design scaffold hopping strategies were utilized to identify new classes of CB2 agonists when compounds of an established series with low nanomolar potency were challenging to optimize for good drug-like properties. Use of ligand-based design strategies through BI Builder (a tool for de novo design) and PharmShape (a virtual screening software package) approaches led to the discovery of new chemotypes. Specifically, compounds containing azetidine-, proline-, and piperidine-based cores were found to have low nanomolar and picomolar CB2 agonist activities with drug-like properties considered appropriate for early profiling.

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