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Dive into the research topics where Gren Z. Wang is active.

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Featured researches published by Gren Z. Wang.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

Potent, Selective and Orally Bioavailable Dihydropyrimidine Inhibitors of Rho Kinase (ROCK1) as Potential Therapeutic Agents for Cardiovascular Diseases

Clark A. Sehon; Gren Z. Wang; Andrew Q. Viet; Krista B. Goodman; Sarah E. Dowdell; Patricia A. Elkins; Simon F. Semus; Christopher Evans; Larry J. Jolivette; Robert B. Kirkpatrick; Edward Dul; Sanjay S. Khandekar; Tracey Yi; Lois L. Wright; Gary K. Smith; David J. Behm; Ross Bentley; Christopher P. Doe; Erding Hu; Dennis Lee

Recent studies using known Rho-associated kinase isoform 1 (ROCK1) inhibitors along with cellular and molecular biology data have revealed a pivotal role of this enzyme in many aspects of cardiovascular function. Here we report a series of ROCK1 inhibitors which were originally derived from a dihydropyrimidinone core 1. Our efforts focused on the optimization of dihydropyrimidine 2, which resulted in the identification of a series of dihydropyrimidines with improved pharmacokinetics and P450 properties.


British Journal of Pharmacology | 2010

GSK1562590, a slowly dissociating urotensin‐II receptor antagonist, exhibits prolonged pharmacodynamic activity ex vivo

David J. Behm; Nambi Aiyar; Alan R. Olzinski; John J. McAtee; Mark A. Hilfiker; Jason W. Dodson; Sarah E. Dowdell; Gren Z. Wang; Krista B. Goodman; Clark A. Sehon; Harpel; Robert N. Willette; Michael J. Neeb; Ca Leach; Stephen A. Douglas

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Recently identified antagonists of the urotensin–II (U‐II) receptor (UT) are of limited utility for investigating the (patho)physiological role of U‐II due to poor potency and limited selectivity and/or intrinsic activity.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008

Aminomethylpiperazines as selective urotensin antagonists.

Mark A. Hilfiker; Daohua Zhang; Sarah E. Dowdell; Krista B. Goodman; John J. McAtee; Jason W. Dodson; Andrew Q. Viet; Gren Z. Wang; Clark A. Sehon; David J. Behm; Zining Wu; Luz H. Carballo; Stephen A. Douglas; Michael J. Neeb

Aminomethylpiperazines, reported previously as being kappa-opioid receptor agonists, were identified as lead compounds in the development of selective urotensin receptor antagonists. Optimized substitution of the piperazine moiety has provided high affinity urotensin receptor antagonists with greater than 100-fold selectivity over the kappa-opioid receptor. Select compounds were found to inhibit urotensin-induced vasoconstriction in isolated rat aortic rings consistent with the hypothesis that an urotensin antagonist may be useful for the treatment of hypertension.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008

Development of potent and selective small-molecule human Urotensin-II antagonists.

John J. McAtee; Jason W. Dodson; Sarah E. Dowdell; Gerald R. Girard; Krista B. Goodman; Mark A. Hilfiker; Clark A. Sehon; Deyou Sha; Gren Z. Wang; Ning Wang; Andrew Q. Viet; Daohua Zhang; Nambi Aiyar; David J. Behm; Luz H. Carballo; Christopher Evans; Harvey E. Fries; Rakesh Nagilla; Theresa J. Roethke; Xiaoping Xu; Catherine C.K. Yuan; Stephen A. Douglas; Michael J. Neeb

This work describes the development of potent and selective human Urotensin-II receptor antagonists starting from lead compound 1, (3,4-dichlorophenyl)methyl{2-oxo-2-[3-phenyl-2-(1-pyrrolidinylmethyl)-1-piperidinyl]ethyl}amine. Several problems relating to oral bioavailability, cytochrome P450 inhibition, and off-target activity at the kappa opioid receptor and cardiac sodium channel were addressed during lead development. hUT binding affinity relative to compound 1 was improved by more than 40-fold in some analogs, and a structural modification was identified which significantly attenuated both off-target activities.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008

Potent and selective small-molecule human urotensin-II antagonists with improved pharmacokinetic profiles.

John J. McAtee; Jason W. Dodson; Sarah E. Dowdell; Karl F. Erhard; Gerald R. Girard; Krista B. Goodman; Mark A. Hilfiker; Jian Jin; Clark A. Sehon; Deyou Sha; Dongchuan Shi; Feng Wang; Gren Z. Wang; Ning Wang; Yonghui Wang; Andrew Q. Viet; Catherine C.K. Yuan; Daohua Zhang; Nambi Aiyar; David J. Behm; Luz H. Carballo; Christopher Evans; Harvey E. Fries; Rakesh Nagilla; Theresa J. Roethke; Xiaoping Xu; Stephen A. Douglas; Michael J. Neeb

Lead compound 1 was successfully redesigned to provide compounds with improved pharmacokinetic profiles for this series of human urotensin-II antagonists. Replacement of the 2-pyrrolidinylmethyl-3-phenyl-piperidine core of 1 with a substituted N-methyl-2-(1-pyrrolidinyl)ethanamine core as in compound 7 resulted in compounds with improved oral bioavailability in rats. The relationship between stereochemistry and selectivity for hUT over the kappa-opioid receptor was also explored.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

CCR2 receptor antagonists: Optimization of biaryl sulfonamides to increase activity in whole blood

Gren Z. Wang; Pamela A. Haile; Tom Daniel; Benjamin Belot; Andrew Q. Viet; Krista B. Goodman; Deyou Sha; Sarah E. Dowdell; Norbert Varga; Xuan Hong; Subhas J. Chakravorty; Christine L. Webb; Carla A. Cornejo; Alan R. Olzinski; Roberta E. Bernard; Christopher Evans; Amanda Emmons; Jacques Briand; Chun-wa Chung; Ruben Quek; Dennis Lee; Peter J. Gough; Clark A. Sehon

A series of biarylsulfonamides was identified as hCCR2 receptor antagonist but suffered from high plasma protein binding resulting in a >100 fold shift in activity in a functional GTPγS assay run in tandem in the presence and absence of human serum albumin. Introduction of an aryl amide with ethylenediamine linker led to compounds with reduced shifts and improved activity in whole blood.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2018

Identification of Quinoline-Based RIP2 Kinase Inhibitors with an Improved Therapeutic Index to the hERG Ion Channel

Pamela A. Haile; Linda N. Casillas; Michael Jonathan Bury; John F. Mehlmann; Robert R. Singhaus; Adam Kenneth Charnley; Terry Vincent Hughes; Michael P. DeMartino; Gren Z. Wang; Joseph J. Romano; Xiaoyang Dong; Nikolay V. Plotnikov; Ami S. Lakdawala; Bartholomew J. Votta; David B. Lipshutz; Biva Desai; Barbara Swift; Carol Capriotti; Scott B. Berger; Mukesh K. Mahajan; Michael Reilly; Elizabeth J. Rivera; Helen H. Sun; Rakesh Nagilla; Carol LePage; Michael T. Ouellette; Rachel Totoritis; Brian T. Donovan; Barry S. Brown; Khuram W. Chaudhary

RIP2 kinase was recently identified as a therapeutic target for a variety of autoimmune diseases. We have reported previously a selective 4-aminoquinoline-based RIP2 inhibitor GSK583 and demonstrated its effectiveness in blocking downstream NOD2 signaling in cellular models, rodent in vivo models, and human ex vivo disease models. While this tool compound was valuable in validating the biological pathway, it suffered from activity at the hERG ion channel and a poor PK/PD profile thereby limiting progression of this analog. Herein, we detail our efforts to improve both this off-target liability as well as the PK/PD profile of this series of inhibitors through modulation of lipophilicity and strengthening hinge binding ability. These efforts have led to inhibitor 7, which possesses high binding affinity for the ATP pocket of RIP2 (IC50 = 1 nM) and inhibition of downstream cytokine production in human whole blood (IC50 = 10 nM) with reduced hERG activity (14 μM).


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2007

Development of dihydropyridone indazole amides as selective Rho-kinase inhibitors.

Krista B. Goodman; Haifeng Cui; Sarah E. Dowdell; Dimitri Gaitanopoulos; Robert L. Ivy; Clark A. Sehon; Robert A. Stavenger; Gren Z. Wang; Andrew Q. Viet; Weiwei Xu; Guosen Ye; Simon F. Semus; Christopher Evans; Harvey E. Fries; Larry J. Jolivette; Robert B. Kirkpatrick; Edward Dul; Sanjay S. Khandekar; Tracey Yi; David K. Jung; Lois L. Wright; Gary K. Smith; David J. Behm; Ross Bentley; Christopher P. Doe; Erding Hu; Dennis Lee


Archive | 2005

Novel Inhibitors of Rho-Kinases

Clark A. Sehon; Dennis Lee; Krista B. Goodman; Gren Z. Wang; Andrew Q. Viet


Archive | 2011

Imidazolyl-imidazoles as kinase inhibitors

Vera Q. Bodmer; Linda N. Casillas; Michael P. DeMartino; Bryan W. King; Shah Ami Lakdawala; Lara Kathryn Leister; Gren Z. Wang; David D. Wisnoski; Philip A. Harris; Joshi M. Ramanjulu; Joseph J. Romano; Matthew A. Wilson

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