Douglas Bruce Kitchen
American Cyanamid
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Publication
Featured researches published by Douglas Bruce Kitchen.
Biochemical Pharmacology | 1999
Carolyn Discafani; Marion L. Carroll; M. Brawner Floyd; Irwin Hollander; Zaheed Husain; Bernard D. Johnson; Douglas Bruce Kitchen; Michael K. May; Madhu S. Malo; Albert A. Minnick; Ramaswamy Nilakantan; Ru Shen; Yu-Fen Wang; Allan Wissner; Lee M. Greenberger
It has been shown previously that 4-anilino quinazolines compete with the ability of ATP to bind the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGF-R), inhibit EGF-stimulated autophosphorylation of tyrosine residues in EGF-R, and block EGF-mediated growth. Since millimolar concentrations of ATP in cells could reduce the efficacy of 4-anilino quinazolines in cells and the activity of these compounds would not be sustained once they were removed from the body, we reasoned that irreversible inhibitors of EGF-R might improve the activity of this series of compounds in animals. Molecular modeling of the EGF-R kinase domain was used to design irreversible inhibitors. We herein describe one such inhibitor: N-[4-[(3-bromophenyl)amino]-6-quinazolinyl]2-butynamide, known as CL-387,785. This compound covalently bound to EGF-R. It also specifically inhibited kinase activity of the protein (IC50 = 370+/-120 pM), blocked EGF-stimulated autophosphorylation of the receptor in cells (ic50 approximately 5 nM), inhibited cell proliferation (IC50 = 31-125 nM) primarily in a cytostatic manner in cell lines that overexpress EGF-R or c-erbB-2, and profoundly blocked the growth of a tumor that overexpresses EGF-R in nude mice (when given orally at 80 mg/kg/day for 10 days, daily). We conclude that CL-387,785 is useful for studying the interaction of small molecules with EGF-R and may have clinical utility.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014
Christopher L. Cioffi; Nicoleta Dobri; Emily Freeman; Michael Conlon; Ping Chen; Douglas G. Stafford; Daniel Schwarz; Kathy C. Golden; Lei Zhu; Douglas Bruce Kitchen; Keith Douglas Barnes; Boglarka Racz; Qiong Qin; Enrique Michelotti; Charles L. Cywin; William H. Martin; Paul G. Pearson; Graham Johnson; Konstantin Petrukhin
Accumulation of lipofuscin in the retina is associated with pathogenesis of atrophic age-related macular degeneration and Stargardt disease. Lipofuscin bisretinoids (exemplified by N-retinylidene-N-retinylethanolamine) seem to mediate lipofuscin toxicity. Synthesis of lipofuscin bisretinoids depends on the influx of retinol from serum to the retina. Compounds antagonizing the retinol-dependent interaction of retinol-binding protein 4 (RBP4) with transthyretin in the serum would reduce serum RBP4 and retinol and inhibit bisretinoid formation. We recently showed that A1120 (3), a potent carboxylic acid based RBP4 antagonist, can significantly reduce lipofuscin bisretinoid formation in the retinas of Abca4–/– mice. As part of the NIH Blueprint Neurotherapeutics Network project we undertook the in vitro exploration to identify novel conformationally flexible and constrained RBP4 antagonists with improved potency and metabolic stability. We also demonstrate that upon acute and chronic dosing in rats, 43, a potent cyclopentyl fused pyrrolidine antagonist, reduced circulating plasma RBP4 protein levels by approximately 60%.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015
Christopher L. Cioffi; Boglarka Racz; Emily Freeman; Michael Conlon; Ping Chen; Douglas G. Stafford; Daniel Schwarz; Lei Zhu; Douglas Bruce Kitchen; Keith Douglas Barnes; Nicoleta Dobri; Enrique Michelotti; Charles L. Cywin; William H. Martin; Paul G. Pearson; Graham Johnson; Konstantin Petrukhin
Antagonists of retinol-binding protein 4 (RBP4) impede ocular uptake of serum all-trans retinol (1) and have been shown to reduce cytotoxic bisretinoid formation in the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE), which is associated with the pathogenesis of both dry age-related macular degeneration (AMD) and Stargardt disease. Thus, these agents show promise as a potential pharmacotherapy by which to stem further neurodegeneration and concomitant vision loss associated with geographic atrophy of the macula. We previously disclosed the discovery of a novel series of nonretinoid RBP4 antagonists, represented by bicyclic [3.3.0]-octahydrocyclopenta[c]pyrrolo analogue 4. We describe herein the utilization of a pyrimidine-4-carboxylic acid fragment as a suitable isostere for the anthranilic acid appendage of 4, which led to the discovery of standout antagonist 33. Analogue 33 possesses exquisite in vitro RBP4 binding affinity and favorable drug-like characteristics and was found to reduce circulating plasma RBP4 levels in vivo in a robust manner (>90%).
Archive | 1998
Allan Wissner; Bernard D. Johnson; Marvin F. Reich; Middleton Brawner Floyd; Douglas Bruce Kitchen; Hwei-Ru Tsou
Archive | 1997
Allan Wissner; Bernard D. Johnson; Middleton Brawner Floyd; Douglas Bruce Kitchen
Archive | 1997
Allan Wissner; Bernard D. Johnson; Middleton Brawner Floyd; Douglas Bruce Kitchen
Archive | 2001
Semiramis Ayral-Kaloustian; Douglas Bruce Kitchen; Andrei Shavnya
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2000
Suresh B. Singh; Michael S. Malamas; Thomas C. Hohman; Ramaswamy Nilakantan; Deborah Carper; Douglas Bruce Kitchen
Archive | 1997
Michael P. Trova; Nan Zhang; Douglas Bruce Kitchen
Archive | 2000
James D. Crapo; Brian J. Day; Michael P. Trova; Polivini Jolicia F. Gauunm; Douglas Bruce Kitchen; Irwin Fridovich; Ines Batinic-Haberle