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Dive into the research topics where George Tonn is active.

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Featured researches published by George Tonn.


PLOS ONE | 2011

AMG 837: A Novel GPR40/FFA1 Agonist that Enhances Insulin Secretion and Lowers Glucose Levels in Rodents

Daniel C.-H. Lin; Jane Zhang; Run Zhuang; Frank Li; Kathy Nguyen; Michael Chen; Thanhvien Tran; Edwin Lopez; Jenny Ying-Lin Lu; Xiaoyan Nina Li; Liang Tang; George Tonn; Gayathri Swaminath; Jeff D. Reagan; Jin-Long Chen; Hui Tian; Yi-Jyun Lin; Jonathan B. Houze; Jian Luo

Agonists of GPR40 (FFA1) have been proposed as a means to treat type 2 diabetes. Through lead optimization of a high throughput screening hit, we have identified a novel GPR40 agonist called AMG 837. The objective of these studies was to understand the preclinical pharmacological properties of AMG 837. The activity of AMG 837 on GPR40 was characterized through GTPγS binding, inositol phosphate accumulation and Ca2+ flux assays. Activity of AMG 837 on insulin release was assessed on isolated primary mouse islets. To determine the anti-diabetic activity of AMG 837 in vivo, we tested AMG 837 using a glucose tolerance test in normal Sprague-Dawley rats and obese Zucker fatty rats. AMG 837 was a potent partial agonist in the calcium flux assay on the GPR40 receptor and potentiated glucose stimulated insulin secretion in vitro and in vivo. Acute administration of AMG 837 lowered glucose excursions and increased glucose stimulated insulin secretion during glucose tolerance tests in both normal and Zucker fatty rats. The improvement in glucose excursions persisted following daily dosing of AMG 837 for 21-days in Zucker fatty rats. Preclinical studies demonstrated that AMG 837 was a potent GPR40 partial agonist which lowered post-prandial glucose levels. These studies support the potential utility of AMG 837 for the treatment of type 2 diabetes.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Imidazo-pyrazine derivatives as potent CXCR3 antagonists

Xiaohui Du; Darin Gustin; Xiaoqi Chen; Jason Duquette; Lawrence R. McGee; Zhulun Wang; Karen Ebsworth; Kirk Henne; Bryan Lemon; Ji Ma; Shichang Miao; Emmanuel Sabalan; Timothy J. Sullivan; George Tonn; Tassie L. Collins; Julio C. Medina

A general way of improving the potency of CXCR3 antagonists with fused hetero-bicyclic cores was identified. Optimization efforts led to the discovery of a series of imidazo-pyrazine derivatives with improved pharmacokinetic properties in addition to increased potency. The efficacy of the lead compound 21 is evaluated in a mouse lung inflammation model.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Optimization of a series of quinazolinone-derived antagonists of CXCR3.

Jiwen Liu; Zice Fu; An-Rong Li; Michael Johnson; Liusheng Zhu; Andrew P. Marcus; Jay Danao; Timothy J. Sullivan; George Tonn; Tassie L. Collins; Julio C. Medina

The evaluation of the CXCR3 antagonist AMG 487 in clinic trials was complicated due to the formation of an active metabolite. In this Letter, we will discuss the further optimization of the quinazolinone series that led to the discovery of compounds devoid of the formation of the active metabolite that was seen with AMG 487. In addition, these compounds also feature increased potency and good pharmacokinetic properties. We will also discuss the efficacy of the lead compound 34 in a mouse model of cellular recruitment induced by bleomycin.


Drug Metabolism and Disposition | 2009

An Inhibitory Metabolite Leads to Dose- and Time-Dependent Pharmacokinetics of (R)-N-{1-(3-(4-Ethoxy-phenyl)-4-oxo-3,4- dihydro-pyrido(2,3-d)pyrimidin-2-yl)-ethyl}-N-pyridin-3-yl-methyl-2- (4-trifluoromethoxy-phenyl)-acetamide (AMG 487) in Human Subjects After Multiple Dosing

George Tonn; Simon G. Wong; Sylvia C. Wong; Michael G. Johnson; Ji Ma; Robert Cho; Leslie C. Floren; Kathryn Kersey; Karen Berry; Andrew P. Marcus; Xuemei Wang; Bettina Van Lengerich; Julio C. Medina; Paul G. Pearson; Bradley K. Wong

(R)-N-{1-[3-(4-Ethoxy-phenyl)-4-oxo-3,4-dihydro-pyrido[2,3-d]-pyrimidin-2-yl]-ethyl}-N-pyridin-3-yl-methyl-2-(4-trifluoromethoxyphenyl)-acetamide (AMG 487) is a potent and selective orally bioavailable chemokine (C-X-C motif) receptor 3 (CXCR3) antagonist that displays dose- and time-dependent pharmacokinetics in human subjects after multiple oral dosing. Although AMG 487 exhibited linear pharmacokinetics on both days 1 and 7 at the 25-mg dose, dose- and time-dependent kinetics were evident at the two higher doses. Nonlinear kinetics were more pronounced after multiple dosing. Area under the plasma concentration-time curve from 0 to 24 h [AUC(0–24 h)] increased 96-fold with a 10-fold increase in dose on day 7 compared with a 28-fold increase in AUC(0–24 h) on day 1. These changes were correlated with time- and dose-dependent decreases in the metabolite to parent plasma concentrations, suggesting that these changes result from a decrease in the oral clearance (CL) of AMG 487 (e.g., intestinal/hepatic first-pass metabolism and systemic CL). The biotransformation of AMG 487 is dependent on CYP3A and results in the formation of two primary metabolites, a pyridyl N-oxide AMG 487 (M1) and an O-deethylated AMG 487 (M2). One of these metabolites, M2, undergoes further metabolism by CYP3A. M2 has also been demonstrated to inhibit CYP3A in a competitive (Ki = 0.75 μM) manner as well as via mechanism-based inhibition (unbound KI = 1.4 μM, kinact = 0.041 min–1). Data from this study implicate M2-mediated CYP3A mechanism-based inhibition as the proximal cause for the time-dependent pharmacokinetics of AMG 487. However, the sequential metabolism of M2, nonlinear AMG 487 pharmacokinetics, and the inability to accurately determine the role of intestinal AMG 487 metabolism complicates the correlation between M2 plasma concentrations and the time-dependent AMG 487 pharmacokinetic changes.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Discovery and optimization of CRTH2 and DP dual antagonists

Jiwen Liu; Zice Fu; Yingcai Wang; M.J. Schmitt; Alan Huang; Derek Marshall; George Tonn; Lisa Seitz; Timothy J. Sullivan; H. Lucy Tang; Tassie L. Collins; Julio C. Medina

A series of phenylacetic acid derivatives was discovered as CRTH2 antagonists. Modification of the series led to compounds that are also antagonists of DP. Since activation of CRTH2 and DP are believed to play key roles in mediating responses of asthma and other immune diseases, this series was optimized to increase the dual antagonistic activities and improve pharmacokinetic properties. These efforts led to selection of AMG 009 as a clinical candidate.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2014

Optimization of GPR40 Agonists for Type 2 Diabetes

Jiwen Liu; Yingcai Wang; Zhihua Ma; M.J. Schmitt; Liusheng Zhu; Sean P. Brown; Paul John Dransfield; Rajiv Sharma; Qi Guo; Run Zhuang; Jane Zhang; Jian Luo; George Tonn; Simon Wong; Gayathri Swaminath; Julio C. Medina; Daniel C.-H. Lin; Jonathan B. Houze

GPR40 (FFA1 and FFAR1) has gained significant interest as a target for the treatment of type 2 diabetes. TAK-875 (1), a GPR40 agonist, lowered hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) and lowered both postprandial and fasting blood glucose levels in type 2 diabetic patients in phase II clinical trials. We optimized phenylpropanoic acid derivatives as GPR40 agonists and identified AMG 837 (2) as a clinical candidate. Here we report our efforts in searching for structurally distinct back-ups for AMG 837. These efforts led to the identification of more polar GPR40 agonists, such as AM-4668 (10), that have improved potency, excellent pharmacokinetic properties across species, and minimum central nervous system (CNS) penetration.


Drug Metabolism and Disposition | 2012

Sequential Metabolism of AMG 487, a Novel CXCR3 Antagonist, Results in Formation of Quinone Reactive Metabolites That Covalently Modify CYP3A4 Cys239 and Cause Time-Dependent Inhibition of the Enzyme

Kirk R. Henne; Thuy Tran; Brooke M. VandenBrink; Dan A. Rock; Divesh Aidasani; Raju Subramanian; Andrew K. Mason; David M. Stresser; Yohannes Teffera; Simon Wong; Michael G. Johnson; Xiaoqi Chen; George Tonn; Bradley K. Wong

CYP3A4-mediated biotransformation of (R)-N-(1-(3-(4-ethoxyphenyl)-4-oxo-3,4-dihydropyrido[2,3-d]pyrimidin-2-yl)ethyl)-N-(pyridin-3-ylmethyl)-2-(4-(trifluoromethoxy)phenyl)acetamide (AMG 487) was previously shown to generate an inhibitory metabolite linked to dose- and time-dependent pharmacokinetics in humans. Although in vitro activity loss assays failed to demonstrate CYP3A4 time-dependent inhibition (TDI) with AMG 487, its M2 phenol metabolite readily produced TDI when remaining activity was assessed using either midazolam or testosterone (KI = 0.73–0.74 μM, kinact = 0.088–0.099 min−1). TDI investigations using an IC50 shift method successfully produced inhibition attributable to AMG 487, but only when preincubations were extended from 30 to 90 min. The shift magnitude was ∼3× for midazolam activity, but no shift was observed for testosterone activity. Subsequent partition ratio determinations conducted for M2 using recombinant CYP3A4 showed that inactivation was a relatively inefficient process (r = 36). CYP3A4-mediated biotransformation of [3H]M2 in the presence of GSH led to identification of two new metabolites, M4 and M5, which shifted focus away from M2 being directly responsible for TDI. M4 (hydroxylated M2) was further metabolized to form reactive intermediates that, upon reaction with GSH, produced isomeric adducts, collectively designated M5. Incubations conducted in the presence of [18O]H2O confirmed incorporation of oxygen from O2 for the majority of M4 and M5 formed (>75%). Further evidence of a primary role for M4 in CYP3A4 TDI was generated by protein labeling and proteolysis experiments, in which M4 was found to be covalently bound to Cys239 of CYP3A4. These investigations confirmed a primarily role for M4 in CYP3A4 inactivation, suggesting that a more complex metabolic pathway was responsible for generation of inhibitory metabolites affecting AMG 487 human pharmacokinetics.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Design and synthesis of brain penetrant selective JNK inhibitors with improved pharmacokinetic properties for the prevention of neurodegeneration.

Simeon Bowers; Anh P. Truong; R. Jeffrey Neitz; Jennifer Sealy; Gary D. Probst; David A. Quincy; Brian Peterson; Wayman Chan; Robert A. Galemmo; Andrei W. Konradi; Hing L. Sham; Gergely Toth; Hu Pan; May Lin; Nanhua Yao; Dean R. Artis; Heather Zhang; Linda Chen; Mark Dryer; Bhushan Samant; Wes Zmolek; Karina Wong; Colin Lorentzen; Erich Goldbach; George Tonn; Kevin P. Quinn; John-Michael Sauer; Sarah Wright; Kyle Powell; Lany Ruslim

The SAR of a series of brain penetrant, trisubstituted thiophene based JNK inhibitors with improved pharmacokinetic properties is described. These compounds were designed based on information derived from metabolite identification studies which led to compounds such as 42 with lower clearance, greater brain exposure and longer half life compared to earlier analogs.


Drug Metabolism and Disposition | 2008

An Inhibitory Metabolite Leads To Dose- And Time-Dependent Pharmacokinetics Of AMG 487 In Human Subjects Following Multiple Dosing

George Tonn; Simon Wong; Sylvia C. Wong; Michael G. Johnson; Ji Ma; Robert Cho; Leslie C. Floren; Kathryn Kersey; Karen Berry; Andrew P. Marcus; Xuemei Wang; Bettina Van Lengerich; Julio C. Medina; Paul G. Pearson; Bradley K. Wong

(R)-N-{1-[3-(4-Ethoxy-phenyl)-4-oxo-3,4-dihydro-pyrido[2,3-d]-pyrimidin-2-yl]-ethyl}-N-pyridin-3-yl-methyl-2-(4-trifluoromethoxyphenyl)-acetamide (AMG 487) is a potent and selective orally bioavailable chemokine (C-X-C motif) receptor 3 (CXCR3) antagonist that displays dose- and time-dependent pharmacokinetics in human subjects after multiple oral dosing. Although AMG 487 exhibited linear pharmacokinetics on both days 1 and 7 at the 25-mg dose, dose- and time-dependent kinetics were evident at the two higher doses. Nonlinear kinetics were more pronounced after multiple dosing. Area under the plasma concentration-time curve from 0 to 24 h [AUC(0–24 h)] increased 96-fold with a 10-fold increase in dose on day 7 compared with a 28-fold increase in AUC(0–24 h) on day 1. These changes were correlated with time- and dose-dependent decreases in the metabolite to parent plasma concentrations, suggesting that these changes result from a decrease in the oral clearance (CL) of AMG 487 (e.g., intestinal/hepatic first-pass metabolism and systemic CL). The biotransformation of AMG 487 is dependent on CYP3A and results in the formation of two primary metabolites, a pyridyl N-oxide AMG 487 (M1) and an O-deethylated AMG 487 (M2). One of these metabolites, M2, undergoes further metabolism by CYP3A. M2 has also been demonstrated to inhibit CYP3A in a competitive (Ki = 0.75 μM) manner as well as via mechanism-based inhibition (unbound KI = 1.4 μM, kinact = 0.041 min–1). Data from this study implicate M2-mediated CYP3A mechanism-based inhibition as the proximal cause for the time-dependent pharmacokinetics of AMG 487. However, the sequential metabolism of M2, nonlinear AMG 487 pharmacokinetics, and the inability to accurately determine the role of intestinal AMG 487 metabolism complicates the correlation between M2 plasma concentrations and the time-dependent AMG 487 pharmacokinetic changes.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2016

Discovery of the imidazole-derived GPR40 agonist AM-3189

Zhihua Ma; Daniel C.-H. Lin; Rajiv Sharma; Jinqian Liu; Liusheng Zhu; An-Rong Li; Todd J. Kohn; Yingcai Wang; Jiwen Liu; Michael D. Bartberger; Julio C. Medina; Run Zhuang; Frank Li; Jane Zhang; Jian Luo; Simon Wong; George Tonn; Jonathan B. Houze

As a follow-up to the GPR40 agonist AMG 837, which was evaluated in clinical trials for the treatment of type II diabetes, further optimization led to the discovery of AM-3189 (13k). AM-3189 is representative of a new class of compounds with minimal CNS penetration, superior pharmacokinetic properties and in vivo efficacy comparable to AMG 837.

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