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Dive into the research topics where Dennis Colussi is active.

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Featured researches published by Dennis Colussi.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2009

First Demonstration of Cerebrospinal Fluid and Plasma Aβ Lowering with Oral Administration of a β-Site Amyloid Precursor Protein-Cleaving Enzyme 1 Inhibitor in Nonhuman Primates

Sethu Sankaranarayanan; Marie A. Holahan; Dennis Colussi; Ming-Chih Crouthamel; Viswanath Devanarayan; Joan D. Ellis; Amy S. Espeseth; Adam T. Gates; Samuel Graham; Allison R. Gregro; Daria J. Hazuda; Jerome H. Hochman; Katharine M Holloway; Lixia Jin; Jason A. Kahana; Ming-Tain Lai; Janet Lineberger; Georgia B. McGaughey; Keith P. Moore; Philippe G. Nantermet; Beth Pietrak; Eric A. Price; Hemaka A. Rajapakse; Shaun R. Stauffer; Melissa A. Steinbeiser; Guy R. Seabrook; Harold G. Selnick; Xiao-Ping Shi; Matthew G. Stanton; John Swestock

β-Site amyloid precursor protein (APP)-cleaving enzyme (BACE) 1 cleavage of amyloid precursor protein is an essential step in the generation of the potentially neurotoxic and amyloidogenic Aβ42 peptides in Alzheimers disease. Although previous mouse studies have shown brain Aβ lowering after BACE1 inhibition, extension of such studies to nonhuman primates or man was precluded by poor potency, brain penetration, and pharmacokinetics of available inhibitors. In this study, a novel tertiary carbinamine BACE1 inhibitor, tertiary carbinamine (TC)-1, was assessed in a unique cisterna magna ported rhesus monkey model, where the temporal dynamics of Aβ in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and plasma could be evaluated. TC-1, a potent inhibitor (IC50 ∼ 0.4 nM), has excellent passive membrane permeability, low susceptibility to P-glycoprotein transport, and lowered brain Aβ levels in a mouse model. Intravenous infusion of TC-1 led to a significant but transient lowering of CSF and plasma Aβ levels in conscious rhesus monkeys because it underwent CYP3A4-mediated metabolism. Oral codosing of TC-1 with ritonavir, a potent CYP3A4 inhibitor, twice daily over 3.5 days in rhesus monkeys led to sustained plasma TC-1 exposure and a significant and sustained reduction in CSF sAPPβ, Aβ40, Aβ42, and plasma Aβ40 levels. CSF Aβ42 lowering showed an EC50 of ∼20 nM with respect to the CSF [TC-1] levels, demonstrating excellent concordance with its potency in a cell-based assay. These results demonstrate the first in vivo proof of concept of CSF Aβ lowering after oral administration of a BACE1 inhibitor in a nonhuman primate.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

LRRTM3 promotes processing of amyloid-precursor protein by BACE1 and is a positional candidate gene for late-onset Alzheimer's disease

John Majercak; William J. Ray; Amy S. Espeseth; Adam J. Simon; Xiao-Ping Shi; Carrie Wolffe; Krista Getty; Shane Marine; Erica Stec; Marc Ferrer; Berta Strulovici; Steven R. Bartz; Adam T. Gates; Min Xu; Qian Huang; Lei Ma; Paul J. Shughrue; Julja Burchard; Dennis Colussi; Beth Pietrak; Jason A. Kahana; Dirk Beher; Thomas W. Rosahl; Mark S. Shearman; Daria J. Hazuda; Alan B. Sachs; Kenneth S. Koblan; Guy R. Seabrook; David J. Stone

Rare familial forms of Alzheimers disease (AD) are thought to be caused by elevated proteolytic production of the Aβ42 peptide from the β-amyloid-precursor protein (APP). Although the pathogenesis of the more common late-onset AD (LOAD) is not understood, BACE1, the protease that cleaves APP to generate the N terminus of Aβ42, is more active in patients with LOAD, suggesting that increased amyloid production processing might also contribute to the sporadic disease. Using high-throughput siRNA screening technology, we assessed 15,200 genes for their role in Aβ42 secretion and identified leucine-rich repeat transmembrane 3 (LRRTM3) as a neuronal gene that promotes APP processing by BACE1. siRNAs targeting LRRTM3 inhibit the secretion of Aβ40, Aβ42, and sAPPβ, the N-terminal APP fragment produced by BACE1 cleavage, from cultured cells and primary neurons by up to 60%, whereas overexpression increases Aβ secretion. LRRTM3 is expressed nearly exclusively in the nervous system, including regions affected during AD, such as the dentate gyrus. Furthermore, LRRTM3 maps to a region of chromosome 10 linked to both LOAD and elevated plasma Aβ42, and is structurally similar to a family of neuronal receptors that includes the NOGO receptor, an inhibitor of neuronal regeneration and APP processing. Thus, LRRTM3 is a functional and positional candidate gene for AD, and, given its receptor-like structure and restricted expression, a potential therapeutic target.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Discovery of aminoheterocycles as a novel beta-secretase inhibitor class: pH dependence on binding activity part 1.

Shawn J. Stachel; Craig A. Coburn; Diane Rush; Kristen L.G. Jones; Hong Zhu; Hemaka A. Rajapakse; Samuel L. Graham; Adam J. Simon; M. Katharine Holloway; Tim J. Allison; Sanjeev Munshi; Amy S. Espeseth; Paul Zuck; Dennis Colussi; Abigail Wolfe; Beth Pietrak; Ming-Tain Lai; Joseph P. Vacca

We have developed a novel series of heteroaromatic BACE-1 inhibitors. These inhibitors interact with the enzyme in a unique fashion that allows for potent binding in a non-traditional paradigm. In addition to the elucidation of their binding profile, we have discovered a pH dependent effect on the binding affinity as a result of the intrinsic pK(a) of these inhibitors and the pH of the BACE-1 enzyme binding assay.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

Discovery and X-ray Crystallographic Analysis of a Spiropiperidine Iminohydantoin Inhibitor of β-Secretase‡

James C. Barrow; Shaun R. Stauffer; Kenneth E. Rittle; Phung L. Ngo; Zhi-Qiang Yang; Harold G. Selnick; Samuel L. Graham; Sanjeev Munshi; Georgia B. McGaughey; M. Katharine Holloway; Adam J. Simon; Eric A. Price; Sethu Sankaranarayanan; Dennis Colussi; Katherine Tugusheva; Ming Tain Lai; Amy S. Espeseth; Min Xu; Qian Huang; Abigail Wolfe; Beth Pietrak; Paul Zuck; Dorothy Levorse; Daria J. Hazuda; Joseph P. Vacca

A high-throughput screen at 100 microM inhibitor concentration for the BACE-1 enzyme revealed a novel spiropiperidine iminohydantoin aspartyl protease inhibitor template. An X-ray cocrystal structure with BACE-1 revealed a novel mode of binding whereby the inhibitor interacts with the catalytic aspartates via bridging water molecules. Using the crystal structure as a guide, potent compounds with good brain penetration were designed.


Biochemistry | 2009

Fragment-based discovery of nonpeptidic BACE-1 inhibitors using tethering.

Wenjin Yang; Raymond V. Fucini; Bruce T. Fahr; Mike Randal; Kenneth E. Lind; Melissa B. Lam; Wanli Lu; Yafan Lu; Douglas R. Cary; Michael J. Romanowski; Dennis Colussi; Beth Pietrak; Timothy J. Allison; Sanjeev Munshi; David M. Penny; Phuongly Pham; Jian Sun; Anila E. Thomas; Jennifer Wilkinson; Jeffrey W. Jacobs; Robert Mcdowell; Marcus Ballinger

BACE-1 (beta-site amyloid precursor protein cleaving enzyme), a prominent target in Alzheimers disease drug discovery efforts, was surveyed using Tethering technology to discover small molecule fragment ligands that bind to the enzyme active site. Screens of a library of >15000 thiol-containing fragments versus a panel of BACE-1 active site cysteine mutants under redox-controlled conditions revealed several novel amine-containing fragments that could be selectively captured by subsets of the tethering sites. For one such hit class, defined by a central aminobenzylpiperidine (ABP) moiety, X-ray crystal structures of BACE mutant-disulfide conjugates revealed that the fragment bound by engaging both catalytic aspartates with hydrogen bonds. The affinities of ABP fragments were improved by structure-guided chemistry, first for conjugation as thiol-containing fragments and then for stand-alone, noncovalent inhibition of wild-type (WT) BACE-1 activity. Crystallography confirmed that the inhibitors bound in exactly the same mode as the disulfide-conjugated fragments that were originally selected from the screen. The ABP ligands represent a new type of nonpeptidic BACE-1 inhibitor motif that has not been described in the aspartyl protease literature and may serve as a starting point for the development of BACE-1-directed Alzheimers disease therapeutics.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 1999

Sulfonamidopyrrolidinone factor Xa inhibitors : Potency and selectivity enhancements via P-1 and P-4 optimization

Yong Mi Choi-Sledeski; Daniel G. Mcgarry; Daniel M. Green; Helen J. Mason; Michael R. Becker; Roderick S. Davis; William R. Ewing; William P. Dankulich; Vincent E. Manetta; Robert L. Morris; Alfred P. Spada; Daniel L. Cheney; Karen D. Brown; Dennis Colussi; Valeria Chu; Christopher L. Heran; Suzanne R. Morgan; Ross Bentley; Robert J. Leadley; Sébastien Maignan; Jean-Pierre Guilloteau; Christopher T. Dunwiddie; Henry W. Pauls

Sulfonamidopyrrolidinones were previously disclosed as a selective class of factor Xa (fXa) inhibitors, culminating in the identification of RPR120844 as a potent member with efficacy in vivo. Recognizing the usefulness of the central pyrrolidinone template for the presentation of ligands to the S-1 and S-4 subsites of fXa, studies to optimize the P-1 and P-4 groups were initiated. Sulfonamidopyrrolidinones containing 4-hydroxy- and 4-aminobenzamidines were discovered to be effective inhibitors of fXa. X-ray crystallographic experiments in trypsin and molecular modeling studies suggest that our inhibitors bind by insertion of the 4-hydroxybenzamidine moiety into the S-1 subsite of the fXa active site. Of the P-4 groups examined, the pyridylthienyl sulfonamides were found to confer excellent potency and selectivity especially in combination with 4-hydroxybenzamidine. Compound 20b (RPR130737) was shown to be a potent fXa inhibitor (K(i) = 2 nM) with selectivity against structurally related serine proteinases (>1000 times). Preliminary biological evaluation demonstrates the effectiveness of this inhibitor in common assays of thrombosis in vitro (e.g. activated partial thromboplastin time) and in vivo (e.g. rat FeCl(2)-induced carotid artery thrombosis model).


Blood Coagulation & Fibrinolysis | 2005

Demonstration of enhanced endogenous fibrinolysis in thrombin activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor-deficient mice

Shi-Shan Mao; Marie A. Holahan; Carolyn Bailey; Guoxin Wu; Dennis Colussi; Steven S. Carroll; Jacquelynn J. Cook

To investigate the importance of thrombin activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor (TAFI) in the stabilization of plasma clots, we have compared fibrinolysis in TAFI-deficient (KO) and wild-type (WT) littermate mice. TAFI-deficient mice were previously generated by targeted gene disruption. The level of TAFI activity generated in plasma from WT mice in the presence of added thrombin and thrombomodulin (activatable TAFI) is twice that of plasma from TAFI heterozygous mice (HET); no activatable TAFI is detected in TAFI KO plasma. In vitro, TAFI KO plasma clots lysed faster than WT plasma clots, and HET plasma clots lysed at an intermediate rate. The rate of clot lysis for KO mice is not changed in the presence of potato carboxypeptidase inhibitor, a specific inhibitor of TAFIa, whereas the WT and HET clot lysis rates are increased in the presence of potato carboxypeptidase inhibitor. C-terminal lysine residues are preserved on partially degraded clots from KO mice, but are absent from partially degraded WT clots. In vivo, in a batroxobin-induced pulmonary embolism model, KO mice displayed a lower retention of fibrin in the lungs than did WT mice. These results are the first demonstration of enhanced endogenous fibrinolysis in an in vivo model without the addition of exogenous thrombolytic.


Analytical Biochemistry | 2003

Electrochemiluminescence assay for basic carboxypeptidases: inhibition of basic carboxypeptidases and activation of thrombin-activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor.

Shi-Shan Mao; Dennis Colussi; Carolyn Bailey; Michele Bosserman; Christine Burlein; Stephen J. Gardell; Steven S. Carroll

Carboxypeptidases catalyze the removal of the C-terminal amino acid residues in peptides and proteins and exert important biological functions. Assays for carboxypeptidase activity that rely on change of absorbance generally suffer from low sensitivity and are difficult to adapt to high-throughput screening. We have developed a sensitive, robust assay for basic carboxypeptidase activity that makes use of electrochemiluminescent (ECL) detection of reaction product. In this assay, a peptide substrate contains the epitope for antibody (G2-10) binding which is masked by a C-terminal arginine. Carboxypeptidase activity exposes the epitope, allowing the binding of ruthenylated G2-10 which is then detected using ECL. High sensitivity allowed detection limits of 1-2 pM enzyme for carboxypeptidase B and activated thrombin-activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor (TAFIa). The inhibition of several basic carboxypeptidases by commercially available inhibitors was studied. This antibody-based method can be extended to other sensitive detection techniques such as amplified luminescent proximity homogeneous assay. The high sensitivity of the assay allowed the determination of the activatable levels of TAFI in human and other animal plasma in the presence of epsilon -aminocaproic acid, an active-site inhibitor that stabilizes TAFIa. A method to isolate in situ activated TAFIa from human serum in the presence of epsilon -aminocaproic acid was also developed.


ChemMedChem | 2007

Design and Synthesis of 2,3,5-Substituted Imidazolidin-4-one Inhibitors of BACE-1

James C. Barrow; Kenneth E. Rittle; Phung L. Ngo; Harold G. Selnick; Samuel L. Graham; Steven M. Pitzenberger; Georgia B. McGaughey; Dennis Colussi; Ming Tain Lai; Qian Huang; Katherine Tugusheva; Amy S. Espeseth; Adam J. Simon; Sanjeev Munshi; Joseph P. Vacca

Alzheimer’s disease is a slowly progressing neurodegenerative condition that is increasing in prevalence because of the ageing population and is a significant healthcare burden. Although the pathophysiology of the disease has not been completely elucidated, abnormal production and/or clearance of a small peptide called Ab has been implicated from genetic and other studies. The Ab peptide arises from proteolytic processing of the APP protein, first by b-secretase followed by g-secretase. Based on these observations, b-secretase (BACE-1) has been identified as a promising drug target for disease-modifying therapy and has attracted significant attention from the medicinal chemistry community. BACE-1 is an aspartyl protease with a site of action inside the CNS and thus represents a challenging target. Hydroxyethylamine (HEA) transition state isosteres are well-known inhibitory motifs for aspartyl proteases, and prior work from these laboratories identified 1 (Figure 1) as a potent inhibitor of BACE-1. Whereas this compound has good enzyme potency (IC50=11 nm) and cell activity (sAPPb_NF= 29 nm), molecular weight is still high (578 Daltons) and the compound is a P-glycoprotein transporter (PGP) substrate with poor brain penetration. To improve brain-penetration properties, truncation of the structure and removal of hydrogen bond donors and acceptors was deemed necessary. One approach is to further optimize the P3-P1 portion and eliminate the hydroxyethyl amine. The work described in this report instead focuses on prime side modifications with the goal of improving potency sufficiently to allow removal of the P2P3 portion of the inhibitor. Closer examination of the X-ray crystal structure of 1 in the BACE-1 active site shows that the basic amine makes hydrogen-bond contacts to both Asp228 and the Gly34 carbonyl (Figure 2), and SAR studies have shown that primary and secondary amines are preferred over tertiary amines in this posi-


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

Discovery of pyrrolidine-based β-secretase inhibitors: Lead advancement through conformational design for maintenance of ligand binding efficiency

Shawn J. Stachel; Thomas G. Steele; Alessia Petrocchi; Sharie J. Haugabook; Georgia B. McGaughey; M. Katharine Holloway; Timothy J. Allison; Sanjeev Munshi; Paul Zuck; Dennis Colussi; Katherine Tugasheva; Abigail Wolfe; Samuel L. Graham; Joseph P. Vacca

We have developed a novel series of pyrrolidine derived BACE-1 inhibitors. The potency of the weak initial lead structure was enhanced using library-based SAR methods. The series was then further advanced by rational design while maintaining a minimal ligand binding efficiency threshold. Ultimately, the co-crystal structure was obtained revealing that these inhibitors interacted with the enzyme in a unique fashion. In all, the potency of the series was enhanced by 4 orders of magnitude from the HTS lead with concomitant increases in physical properties needed for series advancement. The progression of these developments in a systematic fashion is described.

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Adam J. Simon

United States Military Academy

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Georgia B. McGaughey

United States Military Academy

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Joseph P. Vacca

United States Military Academy

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Beth Pietrak

United States Military Academy

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Samuel L. Graham

United States Military Academy

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Hemaka A. Rajapakse

United States Military Academy

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