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

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Featured researches published by David S. Weinstein.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Dimethyl-diphenyl-propanamide derivatives as nonsteroidal dissociated glucocorticoid receptor agonists.

Bingwei V. Yang; David S. Weinstein; Lidia M. Doweyko; Hua Gong; Wayne Vaccaro; Tram N. Huynh; Hai-Yun Xiao; Arthur M. Doweyko; Lorraine I. McKay; Deborah A. Holloway; John E. Somerville; Sium Habte; Mark D. Cunningham; Michele McMahon; Robert Townsend; David J. Shuster; John H. Dodd; Steven G. Nadler; Joel C. Barrish

A series of 2,2-dimethyl-3,3-diphenyl-propanamides as novel glucocorticoid receptor modulators is reported. SAR exploration led to the identification of 4-hydroxyphenyl propanamide derivatives displaying good agonist activity in GR-mediated transrepression assays and reduced agonist activity in GR-mediated transactivation assays. Compounds 17 and 30 showed anti-inflammatory activity comparable to prednisolone in the rat carrageenan-induced paw edema model, with markedly decreased side effects with regard to increases in blood glucose and expression of hepatic tyrosine aminotransferase. A hypothetical binding mode accounting for the induction of the functional activity by a 4-hydroxyl group is proposed.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2011

Azaxanthene Based Selective Glucocorticoid Receptor Modulators: Design, Synthesis, and Pharmacological Evaluation of (S)-4-(5-(1-((1,3,4-Thiadiazol-2-yl)amino)-2-methyl-1-oxopropan-2-yl)-5H-chromeno[2,3-b]pyridin-2-yl)-2-fluoro-N,N-dimethylbenzamide (BMS-776532) and Its Methylene Homologue (BMS-791826)

David S. Weinstein; Hua Gong; Arthur M. Doweyko; Mark D. Cunningham; Sium Habte; Jin Hong Wang; Deborah A. Holloway; Christine Burke; Ling Gao; Victor Guarino; Julie Carman; John E. Somerville; David J. Shuster; Luisa Salter-Cid; John H. Dodd; Steven G. Nadler; Joel C. Barrish

Structurally novel 5H-chromeno[2,3-b]pyridine (azaxanthene) selective glucocorticoid receptor (GR) modulators have been identified. A screening paradigm utilizing cellular assays of GR-mediated transrepression of proinflammatory transcription factors and transactivation of GR-dependent genes combined with three physiologically relevant assays of cytokine induction in human whole blood has allowed for the identification of high affinity, selective GR ligands that display a broad range of pharmacological profiles. Agonist efficacy in reporter assays can be tuned by halogenation of a pendent phenyl ring and correlates well with efficacy for cytokine inhibition in human whole blood. A hypothetical binding mode is proposed, invoking an expanded ligand binding pocket resembling that of arylpyrazole-bound GR structures. Two compounds of close structural similarity (35 and 37; BMS-776532 and BMS-791826, respectively) have been found to maintain distinct and consistent levels of partial agonist efficacy across several assays, displaying anti-inflammatory activity comparable to that of prednisolone 2 in suppressing cytokine production in whole blood and in rodent models of acute and chronic inflammation.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Pyrazole-based sulfonamide and sulfamides as potent inhibitors of mammalian 15-lipoxygenase.

Khehyong Ngu; David S. Weinstein; Wen Liu; Charles M. Langevine; Donald W. Combs; Shaobin Zhuang; Xing Chen; Cort S. Madsen; Timothy W. Harper; Saleem Ahmad; Jeffrey A. Robl

A series of inhibitors of mammalian 15-lipoxygenase (15-LO) based on a 3,4,5-tri-substituted pyrazole scaffold is described. Replacement of a sulfonamide functionality in the lead series with a sulfamide group resulted in improved physicochemical properties generating analogs with enhanced inhibition in cell-based and whole blood assays.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015

Tyrosine Kinase 2-mediated Signal Transduction in T Lymphocytes Is Blocked by Pharmacological Stabilization of Its Pseudokinase Domain

John S. Tokarski; Adriana Zupa-Fernandez; Jeffrey Tredup; Kristen Pike; Chiehying Chang; Dianlin Xie; Lihong Cheng; Donna L. Pedicord; Jodi K. Muckelbauer; Stephen R. Johnson; Sophie Wu; Suzanne C. Edavettal; Yang Hong; Mark R. Witmer; Lisa Elkin; Yuval Blat; William J. Pitts; David S. Weinstein; James R. Burke

Background: Interleukin-23 mediates pathobiology in many autoimmune disorders. Results: A chemogenomics approach identified small molecule agents that block receptor-mediated activation or tyrosine kinase 2 (Tyk2) and downstream signaling. Compounds stabilize the pseudokinase domain of Tyk2. Conclusion: Small molecule ligands of the Tyk2 pseudokinase domain stabilize an autoinhibitory interaction with the catalytic domain. Significance: This work enables the discovery of selective therapeutics targeting Tyk2-dependent pathways critical in autoimmunity. Inhibition of signal transduction downstream of the IL-23 receptor represents an intriguing approach to the treatment of autoimmunity. Using a chemogenomics approach marrying kinome-wide inhibitory profiles of a compound library with the cellular activity against an IL-23-stimulated transcriptional response in T lymphocytes, a class of inhibitors was identified that bind to and stabilize the pseudokinase domain of the Janus kinase tyrosine kinase 2 (Tyk2), resulting in blockade of receptor-mediated activation of the adjacent catalytic domain. These Tyk2 pseudokinase domain stabilizers were also shown to inhibit Tyk2-dependent signaling through the Type I interferon receptor but not Tyk2-independent signaling and transcriptional cellular assays, including stimulation through the receptors for IL-2 (JAK1- and JAK3-dependent) and thrombopoietin (JAK2-dependent), demonstrating the high functional selectivity of this approach. A crystal structure of the pseudokinase domain liganded with a representative example showed the compound bound to a site analogous to the ATP-binding site in catalytic kinases with features consistent with high ligand selectivity. The results support a model where the pseudokinase domain regulates activation of the catalytic domain by forming receptor-regulated inhibitory interactions. Tyk2 pseudokinase stabilizers, therefore, represent a novel approach to the design of potent and selective agents for the treatment of autoimmunity.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Discovery of novel dihydro-9,10-ethano-anthracene carboxamides as glucocorticoid receptor modulators.

Bingwei V. Yang; Wayne Vaccaro; Arthur M. Doweyko; Lidia M. Doweyko; Tram Huynh; David R. Tortolani; Steven G. Nadler; Lorraine I. McKay; John E. Somerville; Deborah A. Holloway; Sium Habte; David S. Weinstein; Joel C. Barrish

A series of dihydro-9,10-ethano-anthracene-11-carboxamides as novel glucocorticoid receptor modulators is reported. SAR exploration identified compounds from this series displaying a promising dissociation profile in discriminating between transrepression and transactivation activities. 17a is a partial agonist of GR-mediated transactivation which elicits potent and efficacious transrepression in reporter gene assays. A hypothetical binding mode is provided which accounts for the induction of functional activity by a bridgehead methyl group.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2014

Discovery of acylurea isosteres of 2-acylaminothiadiazole in the azaxanthene series of glucocorticoid receptor agonists

Hua Gong; Michael Yang; Zili Xiao; Arthur M. Doweyko; Mark D. Cunningham; Jinhong Wang; Sium Habte; Deborah A. Holloway; Christine Burke; David J. Shuster; Ling Gao; Julie Carman; John E. Somerville; Steven G. Nadler; Luisa Salter-Cid; Joel C. Barrish; David S. Weinstein

Acylureas and acyclic imides are found to be excellent isosteres for 2-acylamino-1,3,4-thiadiazole in the azaxanthene-based series of glucocorticoid receptor (GR) agonists. The results reported herein show that primary acylureas maintain high affinity and selectivity for GR while providing improved CYP450 inhibition and pharmacokinetic profile over 2-acylamino-1,3,4-thiadiazoles. General methods for synthesis of a variety of acylureas and acyclic imides from a carboxylic acid were utilized and are described.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015

Improving the pharmacokinetic and CYP inhibition profiles of azaxanthene-based glucocorticoid receptor modulators-identification of (S)-5-(2-(9-fluoro-2-(4-(2-hydroxypropan-2-yl)phenyl)-5H-chromeno[2,3-b]pyridin-5-yl)-2-methylpropanamido)-N-(tetrahydro-2H-pyran-4-yl)-1,3,4-thiadiazole-2-carboxamide (BMS-341).

Yang Mg; Dhar Tg; Zili Xiao; Hai-Yun Xiao; Duan Jj; Jiang B; Galella Ma; Mark D. Cunningham; Wang J; Sium Habte; David J. Shuster; Kim W. McIntyre; Julie Carman; Deborah A. Holloway; John E. Somerville; Steven G. Nadler; Luisa Salter-Cid; Joel C. Barrish; David S. Weinstein

An empirical approach to improve the microsomal stability and CYP inhibition profile of lead compounds 1a and 1b led to the identification of 5 (BMS-341) as a dissociated glucocorticoid receptor modulator. Compound 5 showed significant improvements in pharmacokinetic properties and, unlike compounds 1a-b, displayed a linear, dose-dependent pharmacokinetic profile in rats. When tested in a chronic model of adjuvant-induced arthritis in rat, the ED50 of 5 (0.9 mg/kg) was superior to that of both 1a and 1b (8 and 17 mg/kg, respectively).


Tetrahedron Letters | 2001

A new facile method for the stereoselective synthesis of trans-2-aryl-3,3-dimethylcyclopropane-1-carboxylic acids

Bang-Chi Chen; Khehyong Ngu; Peng Guo; Wen Liu; Joseph E. Sundeen; David S. Weinstein; Karnail S. Atwal; Saleem Ahmad

Abstract A new facile method for the preparation of trans -2-aryl-3,3-dimethylcyclopropane-1-carboxylic acids was developed. The new method involved [2+2]-cycloaddition of styrenes with N , N ,2-trimethylpropionamide followed by bromination and rearrangement of the resulting 3-aryl-2,2-dimethylcyclobutanones, affording the title compounds in two steps in 60–84% overall yields.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2018

Identification of bicyclic hexafluoroisopropyl alcohol sulfonamides as retinoic acid receptor-related orphan receptor gamma (RORγ/RORc) inverse agonists. Employing structure-based drug design to improve pregnane X receptor (PXR) selectivity

Hua Gong; David S. Weinstein; Zhonghui Lu; James J.-W. Duan; Sylwia Stachura; Lauren Haque; Ananta Karmakar; Hemalatha Hemagiri; Dhanya Kumar Raut; Arun Kumar Gupta; Javed Khan; Dan Camac; John S. Sack; Andrew T. Pudzianowski; Dauh-Rurng Wu; Melissa Yarde; Ding-Ren Shen; Virna Borowski; Jenny Xie; Huadong Sun; Celia D'Arienzo; Marta Dabros; Michael A. Galella; Faye Wang; Carolyn A. Weigelt; Qihong Zhao; William R. Foster; John E. Somerville; Luisa Salter-Cid; Joel C. Barrish

We disclose the optimization of a high throughput screening hit to yield benzothiazine and tetrahydroquinoline sulfonamides as potent RORγt inverse agonists. However, a majority of these compounds showed potent activity against pregnane X receptor (PXR) and modest activity against liver X receptor α (LXRα). Structure-based drug design (SBDD) led to the identification of benzothiazine and tetrahydroquinoline sulfonamide analogs which completely dialed out LXRα activity and were less potent at PXR. Pharmacodynamic (PD) data for compound 35 in an IL-23 induced IL-17 mouse model is discussed along with the implications of a high Ymax in the PXR assay for long term preclinical pharmacokinetic (PK) studies.


Archive | 2000

Heterocyclic sodium/proton exchange inhibitors and method

Saleem Ahmad; Shung C. Wu; Steven V. O'neil; Khehyong Ngu; Karnail S. Atwal; David S. Weinstein

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Hua Gong

Bristol-Myers Squibb

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