Dongguang Qin
University of Michigan
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Publication
Featured researches published by Dongguang Qin.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008
Sanjeev Shangary; Dongguang Qin; Donna McEachern; Meilan Liu; Rebecca Miller; Su Qiu; Zaneta Nikolovska-Coleska; Ke Ding; Guoping Wang; Jianyong Chen; Denzil Bernard; Jian Zhang; Yipin Lu; Qingyang Gu; Rajal B. Shah; Kenneth J. Pienta; Xiaolan Ling; Sanmao Kang; Ming Guo; Yi Sun; Dajun Yang; Shaomeng Wang
We have designed MI-219 as a potent, highly selective and orally active small-molecule inhibitor of the MDM2–p53 interaction. MI-219 binds to human MDM2 with a Ki value of 5 nM and is 10,000-fold selective for MDM2 over MDMX. It disrupts the MDM2–p53 interaction and activates the p53 pathway in cells with wild-type p53, which leads to induction of cell cycle arrest in all cells and selective apoptosis in tumor cells. MI-219 stimulates rapid but transient p53 activation in established tumor xenograft tissues, resulting in inhibition of cell proliferation, induction of apoptosis, and complete tumor growth inhibition. MI-219 activates p53 in normal tissues with minimal p53 accumulation and is not toxic to animals. MI-219 warrants clinical investigation as a new agent for cancer treatment.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009
Shanghai Yu; Dongguang Qin; Sanjeev Shangary; Jianyong Chen; Guoping Wang; Ke Ding; Donna McEachern; Su Qiu; Zaneta Nikolovska-Coleska; Rebecca Miller; Sanmao Kang; Dajun Yang; Shaomeng Wang
We report herein the design of potent and orally active small-molecule inhibitors of the MDM2-p53 interaction. Compound 5 binds to MDM2 with a K(i) of 0.6 nM, activates p53 at concentrations as low as 40 nM, and potently and selectively inhibits cell growth in tumor cells with wild-type p53 over tumor cells with mutated/deleted p53. Compound 5 has a good oral bioavailability and effectively inhibits tumor growth in the SJSA-1 xenograft model.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2006
Yipin Lu; Zaneta Nikolovska-Coleska; Xueliang Fang; Wei Gao; Sanjeev Shangary; Su Qiu; Dongguang Qin; Shaomeng Wang
An integrated, virtual database screening strategy has led to 7-[anilino(phenyl)methyl]-2-methyl-8-quinolinol (4, NSC 66811) as a novel inhibitor of the murine double minute 2 (MDM2)-p53 interaction. This quinolinol binds to MDM2 with a Ki of 120 nM and activates p53 in cancer cells with a mechanism of action consistent with targeting the MDM2-p53 interaction. It mimics three p53 residues critical in the binding to MDM2 and represents a promising new class of non-peptide inhibitors of the MDM2-p53 interaction.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008
Haiying Sun; Jeanne A. Stuckey; Zaneta Nikolovska-Coleska; Dongguang Qin; Jennifer L. Meagher; Su Qiu; Jianfeng Lu; Chao Yie Yang; Naoyuki G. Saito; Shaomeng Wang
Small molecules designed to mimic the binding of Smac protein to X-linked inhibitor of apoptosis protein (XIAP) are being pursued as a promising new class of anticancer drugs. Herein, we report the design, synthesis, and comprehensive structure-activity relationship studies of a series of conformationally constrained bicyclic Smac mimetics. Our studies led to the discovery of a number of highly potent and cell-permeable Smac mimetics and yielded important new insights into their structure-activity relationship for their binding to XIAP and for their activity in inhibition of cancer cell growth. Determination of the crystal structure of one potent Smac mimetic, compound 21, in complex with XIAP BIR3 provides the structural basis for its high-affinity binding to XIAP and for the design of highly potent Smac mimetics.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009
Wei Sun; Zaneta Nikolovska-Coleska; Dongguang Qin; Haiying Sun; Chao Yie Yang; Longchuang Bai; Su Qiu; You Wang; Dawei Ma; Shaomeng Wang
A series of new Smac mimetics have been designed, synthesized, and evaluated. The most potent compound 10 binds to XIAP, cIAP-1, and cIAP-2 BIR3 proteins with K(i) of 3.9, 0.37, and 0.25 nM, respectively. Compound 10 antagonizes XIAP in a cell-free functional assay and induces rapid cIAP-1 degradation in cancer cells. Compound 10 inhibits cell growth in the MDA-MB-231 cancer cell line with an IC(50) of 8.9 nM.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016
Jinhong Bai; Chenzhong Liao; Yanghan Liu; Xiaochu Qin; Jiaxuan Chen; Yatao Qiu; Dongguang Qin; Zheng Li; Zheng Chao Tu; Sheng Jiang
Inhibition of nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase (NAMPT) has the potential to directly limit NAD production in cancer cells and is an effective strategy for cancer treatment. Using a structure-based strategy, we have designed a new class of potent small-molecule inhibitors of NAMPT. Several designed compounds showed promising antiproliferative activities in vitro. (E)-N-(5-((4-(((2-(1H-Indol-3-yl)ethyl)(isopropyl)amino)methyl)phenyl)amino)pentyl)-3-(pyridin-3-yl)acrylamide, 30, bearing an indole moiety, has an IC50 of 25.3 nM for binding to the NAMPT protein and demonstrated promising inhibitory activities in the nanomolar range against several cancer cell lines (MCF-7 GI50 = 0.13 nM; MDA-MB-231 GI50 = 0.15 nM). Triple-negative breast cancer is the most malignant subtype of breast cancer with no effective targeted treatments currently available. Significant antitumor efficacy of compound 30 was achieved (TGI was 73.8%) in an orthotopic MDA-MB-231 triple-negative breast cancer xenograft tumor model. This paper reports promising lead molecules for the inhibition of NAMPT which could serve as a basis for further investigation.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2006
Ke Ding; Yipin Lu; Zaneta Nikolovska-Coleska; Guoping Wang; Su Qiu; Sanjeev Shangary; Wei Gao; Dongguang Qin; Jeanne A. Stuckey; Krzysztof Krajewski; Peter P. Roller; Shaomeng Wang
Archive | 2006
Shaomeng Wang; Ke Ding; Yipin Lu; Zaneta Nikolovska-Coleska; Su Qiu; Guoping Wang; Dongguang Qin; Sanjeev Kumar
Analytical Biochemistry | 2008
Zaneta Nikolovska-Coleska; Jennifer L. Meagher; Sheng Jiang; Steven A. Kawamoto; Wei Gao; Han Yi; Dongguang Qin; Peter P. Roller; Jeanne A. Stuckey; Shaomeng Wang
Archive | 2007
Shaomeng Wang; Haiying Sun; Dongguang Qin; Zaneta Nikolovska-Coleska; Jianfeng Lu; Su Qiu; Yuefeng Peng; Qian Cai