Gloria Biddlecome
Amgen
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Publication
Featured researches published by Gloria Biddlecome.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008
Christopher M. Tegley; Vellarkad N. Viswanadhan; Kaustav Biswas; Michael J. Frohn; Tanya Peterkin; Catherine H. Chang; Roland W. Bürli; Jennifer Dao; Henrike Veith; Norma Rogers; Sean C. Yoder; Gloria Biddlecome; Philip Tagari; Jennifer R. Allen; Randall W. Hungate
Inhibition of the PHD2 enzyme has been associated with increased red blood cell levels. From a screening hit, a series of novel hydroxyl-thiazoles were developed as potent PHD2 inhibitors.
Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2007
Paul J. Kostenuik; Serge Livio Ferrari; Dominique D. Pierroz; Mary L. Bouxsein; Sean Morony; Kelly Warmington; Steven Adamu; Zhaopo Geng; Mario Grisanti; Victoria Shalhoub; Steve Martin; Gloria Biddlecome; Grant Shimamoto; Tom Boone; Victor Shen; David L. Lacey
Skeletal anabolism with PTH is achieved through daily injections that result in brief exposure to the peptide. We hypothesized that similar anabolic effects could be achieved with less frequent but more sustained exposures to PTH. A PTH‐Fc fusion protein with a longer half‐life than PTH(1–34) increased cortical and cancellous BMD and bone strength with once‐ or twice‐weekly injections.
ACS Combinatorial Science | 2010
Justin K. Murray; Chenera Balan; Alan Allgeier; Annie Kasparian; Vellarkad N. Viswanadhan; Christopher Wilde; Jennifer R. Allen; Sean C. Yoder; Gloria Biddlecome; Randall W. Hungate; Les P. Miranda
Intracellular levels of the hypoxia-inducible transcription factor (HIF) are regulated under normoxic conditions by prolyl hydroxylases (PHD1, 2, and 3). Treatment of cells with PHD inhibitors stabilizes HIF-1α, eliciting an artificial hypoxic response that includes the transcription of genes involved in erythropoiesis, angiogenesis, and glycolysis. The different in vivo roles of the three PHD isoforms are not yet known, making a PHD-selective inhibitor useful as a biological tool. Although several chemical series of PHD inhibitors have been described, significant isoform selectivity has not been reported. Here we report the synthesis and activity of dipeptidyl analogues derived from a potent but non-selective quinolone scaffold. The compounds were prepared by Pd-catalyzed reductive carbonylation of the 6-iodoquinolone derivative to form the aldehyde directly, which was then attached to a solid support via reductive amination. Amino acids were coupled, and the resulting dipeptidyl-quinolone derivatives were screened, revealing retention of PHD inhibitory activity but an altered PHD1, 2, and 3 selectivity profile. The compounds were found to be ∼10-fold more potent against PHD1 and PHD3 than against PHD2, whereas the specific parent compound had shown no appreciable selectivity among the different PHD isoforms.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008
Mike Frohn; Vellarkad N. Viswanadhan; Alexander J. Pickrell; Jennifer E. Golden; Kristine M. Muller; Roland W. Bürli; Gloria Biddlecome; Sean C. Yoder; Norma Rogers; Jennifer Dao; Randall W. Hungate; Jennifer R. Allen
We report the structure-based design and synthesis of a novel series of aza-benzimidazoles as PHD2 inhibitors. These efforts resulted in compound 22, which displayed highly potent inhibition of PHD2 function in vitro.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008
Kaustav Biswas; Toshihiro Aya; Wenyuan Qian; Tanya Peterkin; Jian Jeffrey Chen; Jason Brooks Human; Randall W. Hungate; Gondi Kumar; Leyla Arik; Dianna Lester-Zeiner; Gloria Biddlecome; Barton H. Manning; Hong Sun; Hong Dong; Ming Huang; Richard Loeloff; Eileen Johnson; Benny C. Askew
We report the development of aryl sulfones as Bradykinin B1 receptor antagonists. Variation of the linker region identified diol 23 as a potent B1 antagonist, while modifications of the aryl moiety led to compound 26, both of which were efficacious in rabbit biochemical challenge and pain models.
Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2006
Yulong Hong; Brian L. Webb; Sadashiva Pai; Ann M. Ferrie; Jinlin Peng; Fang Lai; Joydeep Lahiri; Gloria Biddlecome; Brian Rasnow; Michael Johnson; Hosung Min; Ye Fang; John Salon
Conventional assay methods for discovering and profiling drug-target interactions are typically developed on a target-by-target basis and hence can be cumbersome to enable and orchestrate. Herein the authors report a solid-state ligand-binding assay that operates in a multiplexed mode to report compound activity against a micorarray-configured panel of G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) targets. The pharmacological fidelity of the system is high, and its miniaturized “plug-and-play” format provides improved efficiency both in terms of execution time and reagent consumption. Taken together, these features make the system ideally suited to explore the structure-activity relationship of compounds across a broad region of target class space.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010
Qingyian Liu; Wenyuan Qian; Aiwen Li; Kaustav Biswas; Jian Jeffrey Chen; Christopher Fotsch; Nianhe Han; Chester Chenguang Yuan; Leyla Arik; Gloria Biddlecome; Eileen Johnson; Gondi Kumar; Dianna Lester-Zeiner; Gordon Ng; Randall W. Hungate; Benny C. Askew
The bradykinin B1 receptor has been shown to mediate pain response and is rapidly induced upon injury. Blocking this receptor may provide a promising treatment for inflammation and pain. We previously reported tetralin benzyl amines as potent B1 antagonists. Here we describe the synthesis and SAR of B1 receptor antagonists with homobenzylic amines. The SAR of different linkers led to the discovery of tetralin allylic amines as potent and selective B1 receptor antagonists (hB1 IC(50)=1.3 nM for compound 16). Some of these compounds showed modest oral bioavailability in rats.
Kidney International | 2017
Serafim Kiriakidis; Simon Hoer; Natalie Burrows; Gloria Biddlecome; Moddasar N. Khan; Cyrille C. Thinnes; Christopher J. Schofield; Norma Rogers; Marina Botto; Ewa Paleolog; Patrick H. Maxwell
Complement C1q is part of the C1 macromolecular complex that mediates the classical complement activation pathway: a major arm of innate immune defense. C1q is composed of A, B, and C chains that require post-translational prolyl 4-hydroxylation of their N-terminal collagen-like domain to enable the formation of the functional triple helical multimers. The prolyl 4-hydroxylase(s) that hydroxylate C1q have not previously been identified. Recognized prolyl 4-hydroxylases include collagen prolyl-4-hydroxylases (CP4H) and the more recently described prolyl hydroxylase domain (PHD) enzymes that act as oxygen sensors regulating hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF). We show that several small-molecule prolyl hydroxylase inhibitors that activate HIF also potently suppress C1q secretion by human macrophages. However, reducing oxygenation to a level that activates HIF does not compromise C1q hydroxylation. In vitro studies showed that a C1q A chain peptide is not a substrate for PHD2 but is a substrate for CP4H1. Circulating levels of C1q did not differ between wild-type mice or mice with genetic deficits in PHD enzymes, but were reduced by prolyl hydroxylase inhibitors. Thus, C1q is hydroxylated by CP4H, but not the structurally related PHD hydroxylases. Hence, reduction of C1q levels may be an important off-target side effect of small molecule PHD inhibitors developed as treatments for renal anemia.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2007
Kaustav Biswas; Aiwen Li; Jian Jeffrey Chen; Derin C. D'amico; Christopher Fotsch; Nianhe Han; Jason Brooks Human; Qingyian Liu; Mark H. Norman; Bobby Riahi; Chester Chenguang Yuan; Hideo Suzuki; David A. Mareska; James Zhan; David E. Clarke; Andras Toro; Robert Groneberg; Laurence E. Burgess; Dianna Lester-Zeiner; Gloria Biddlecome; Barton H. Manning; Leyla Arik; Hong Dong; Ming Huang; Augustus Kamassah; Richard J. Loeloff; Hong Sun; Feng-Yin Hsieh; Gondi Kumar; Gordon Ng
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2007
Derin C. D'amico; Toshi Aya; Jason Brooks Human; Christopher Fotsch; Jian Jeffrey Chen; Kaustav Biswas; Bobby Riahi; Mark H. Norman; Christopher A. Willoughby; Randall W. Hungate; Paul J. Reider; Gloria Biddlecome; Dianna Lester-Zeiner; Carlo Van Staden; Eileen Johnson; Augustus Kamassah; Leyla Arik; Judy Wang; Vellarkad N. Viswanadhan; Robert Groneberg; James Zhan; Hideo Suzuki; Andras Toro; David A. Mareska; David E. Clarke; Darren Harvey; Laurence E. Burgess; Ellen R. Laird; Benny C. Askew; Gordon Ng