Eileen L. Considine
Eli Lilly and Company
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Publication
Featured researches published by Eileen L. Considine.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2003
Thomas A. Engler; Kelly Wayne Furness; Sushant Malhotra; Concha Sanchez-Martinez; Chuan Shih; Walter Xie; Guoxin Zhu; Xun Zhou; Scott Eugene Conner; Margaret M. Faul; Kevin A. Sullivan; Stanley P. Kolis; Harold B. Brooks; Bharvin Patel; Richard M. Schultz; Tammy B. DeHahn; Kashif Kirmani; Charles D. Spencer; Scott A. Watkins; Eileen L. Considine; Jack Dempsey; Catherine A. Ogg; Nancy B. Stamm; Bryan D. Anderson; Robert M. Campbell; Vasu Vasudevan; Michelle L. Lytle
The synthesis and CDK inhibitory properties of a series of indolo[6,7-a]pyrrolo[3,4-c]carbazoles is reported. In addition to their potent CDK activity, the compounds display antiproliferative activity against two human cancer cell lines. These inhibitors also effect strong G1 arrest in these cell lines and inhibit Rb phosphorylation at Ser780 consistent with inhibition of cyclin D1/CDK4.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2003
Concha Sanchez-Martinez; Chuan Shih; Margaret M. Faul; Guoxin Zhu; Michael Paal; Carmen Somoza; Tiechao Li; Christine A. Kumrich; Leonard L. Winneroski; Zhou Xun; Harold B. Brooks; Bharvin Patel; Richard M. Schultz; Tammy B. DeHahn; Charles D. Spencer; Scott A. Watkins; Eileen L. Considine; Jack Dempsey; Catherine A. Ogg; Robert M. Campbell; Bryan A. Anderson; Jill R. Wagner
The synthesis of new analogues of Arcyriaflavin A in which one indole ring is replaced by an aryl or heteroaryl ring is described. These new series of aryl[a]pyrrolo[3,4-c]carbazoles were evaluated as inhibitors of Cyclin D1-CDK4. A potent and selective D1-CDK4 inhibitor, 7a (D1-CDK4 IC(50)=45 nM), has been identified. The potency, selectivity profile against other kinases, and structure-activity relationship (SAR) trends of this class of compounds are discussed.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2003
Guoxin Zhu; Scott Eugene Conner; Xun Zhou; Chuan Shih; Harold B. Brooks; Eileen L. Considine; Jack Dempsey; Cathy Ogg; Bharvin Patel; Richard M. Schultz; Charles D. Spencer; Beverly Teicher; Scott A. Watkins
A novel series of pyrrolo[3,4-c] carbazoles fused with a quinolinyl/isoquinolinyl moiety were synthesized and their D1/CDK4 inhibitory and antiproliferative activity were evaluated. Compound 8H, 14H-isoquinolinyl[6,5-a]-pyrrolo[3,4-c]carbazole-7,9-dione (1d) was found to be a highly potent D1/CDK4 inhibitor with an IC(50) of 69 nM. Compound 1d also inhibited tumor cell growth, arrested tumor cells in G1 phase and inhibited pRb phosphorylation.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2003
Concha Sanchez-Martinez; Chuan Shih; Guoxin Zhu; Tiechao Li; Harold B. Brooks; Bharvin Patel; Richard M. Schultz; Tammy B. DeHahn; Charles D. Spencer; Scott A. Watkins; Catherine A. Ogg; Eileen L. Considine; Jack Dempsey; Faming Zhang
A series of indolo[2,3-a]pyrrolo[3,4-c]carbazoles and their bis-indolylmaleimides precursors have been prepared in order to compare their activity as D1-CDK4 inhibitors. Both enzymatic and antiproliferative assays have shown that the structurally more constrained indolo[2,3-a]pyrrolo[3,4-c]carbazoles are consistently more active (8-42-fold) in head-to-head comparison with their bis-indolylmaleimides counterparts. Cell-cycle analysis using flow cytometry have also shown that the indolocarbazoles are selective G1 blockers while the bis-indolylmaleimides arrest cells in the G2/M phase.
Investigational New Drugs | 2012
Timothy Paul Burkholder; Joshua Ryan Clayton; Mark Edward Rempala; James Robert Henry; John Monte Knobeloch; David Mendel; Johnathan Alexander Mclean; Yan Hao; David Anthony Barda; Eileen L. Considine; Mark T. Uhlik; Yuefeng Chen; Liandong Ma; Laura J. Bloem; Jacqueline K Akunda; Denis J. McCann; Manuel Sanchez-Felix; David K. Clawson; Michael Lahn; James J. Starling
SummaryLY2457546 is a potent and orally bioavailable inhibitor of multiple receptor tyrosine kinases involved in angiogenic and tumorigenic signalling. In biochemical and cellular assays, LY2457546 demonstrates potent activity against targets that include VEGFR2 (KDR), PDGFRβ, FLT-3, Tie-2 and members of the Eph family of receptors. With activities against both Tie2 and Eph receptors, LY2457546 possesses an activity profile that distinguishes it from multikinase inhibitors. When compared head to head with sunitinib, LY2457546 was more potent for inhibition of endothelial tube formation in an in vitro angiogenesis co-culture model with an intermittent treatment design. In vivo, LY2457546 inhibited VEGF-driven autophosphorylation of lung KDR in the mouse and rat in a dose and concentration dependent manner. LY2457546 was well tolerated and exhibited efficacy in a 13762 syngeneic rat mammary tumor model in both once and twice daily continuous dosing schedules and in mouse human tumor xenograft models of lung, colon, and prostate origin. Additionally, LY2457546 caused complete regression of well-established tumors in an acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) FLT3-ITD mutant xenograft tumor model. The observed efficacy that was displayed by LY2457546 in the AML FLT3-ITD mutant tumor model was superior to sunitinib when both were evaluated using equivalent doses normalized to in vivo inhibition of pKDR in mouse lung. LY2457546 was well tolerated in non-clinical toxicology studies conducted in rats and dogs. The majority of the toxicities observed were similar to those observed with other multi-targeted anti-angiogenic kinase inhibitors (MAKs) and included bone marrow hypocellularity, hair and skin depigmentation, cartilage dysplasia and lymphoid organ degeneration and necrosis. Thus, the unique spectrum of target activity, potent in vivo anti-tumor efficacy in a variety of rodent and human solid tumor models, exquisite potency against a clinically relevant model of AML, and non-clinical safety profile justify the advancement of LY2457546 into clinical testing.
Cancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology | 2002
Beverly A. Teicher; Enrique Alvarez; Krishna Menon; Michail A. Esterman; Eileen L. Considine; Chuan Shih; Margaret M. Faul
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2003
Guoxin Zhu; Scott Eugene Conner; Xun Zhou; Chuan Shih; Tiechao Li; Bryan D. Anderson; Harold B. Brooks; Robert M. Campbell; Eileen L. Considine; Jack Dempsey; Margaret M. Faul; Cathy Ogg; Bharvin Patel; Richard M. Schultz; Charles D. Spencer; Beverly A. Teicher; Scott A. Watkins
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2004
Karen Lynn Lobb; Philip Arthur Hipskind; James A. Aikins; Enrique Alvarez; § Yiu-Yin Cheung; Eileen L. Considine; Alfonso De Dios; Gregory L. Durst; Rafael Ferritto; Cora Sue Grossman; Deborah D. Giera; Beth A. Hollister; Zhongping Huang; Philip W. Iversen; Kevin L. Law; Tiechao Li; Ho-Shen Lin; Beatriz López; Jose Eduardo Lopez; Luisa M. Martín Cabrejas; Denis J. McCann; Victoriano Molero; John Reilly; Michael Enrico Richett; Chuan Shih; Beverly A. Teicher; James H. Wikel; and Wesley T. White; Mary M. Mader
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2004
Guoxin Zhu; Scott Eugene Conner; Xun Zhou; Ho-Kit Chan; Chuan Shih; Thomas A. Engler; Rima S. Al-awar; Harold B. Brooks; Scott A. Watkins; Charles D. Spencer; Richard M. Schultz; Jack Dempsey; Eileen L. Considine; Bharvin Patel; Catherine A. Ogg; Vasu Vasudevan; Michelle L. Lytle
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2005
Mary M. Mader; Chuan Shih; Eileen L. Considine; Alfonso De Dios; Cora Sue Grossman; Philip Arthur Hipskind; Ho-Shen Lin; Karen Lynn Lobb; Beatriz López; Jose Eduardo Lopez; Luisa M. Martín Cabrejas; Michael Enrico Richett; Wesley White; § Yiu-Yin Cheung; Zhongping Huang; John Reilly; Sean R. Dinn