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Dive into the research topics where Gulrez Fazal is active.

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Featured researches published by Gulrez Fazal.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 1998

Peptide-based inhibitors of the hepatitis C virus serine protease

Montse Llinas-Brunet; Murray D. Bailey; Gulrez Fazal; Sylvie Goulet; Ted Halmos; Steven R. LaPlante; Roger Maurice; Martin Poirier; Marc-André Poupart; Diane Thibeault; Dominik Wernic; Daniel Lamarre

Hexapeptide DDIVPC-OH is a competitive inhibitor of the hepatitis C virus (HCV) NS3 protease complexed with NS4A cofactor peptide. This hexapeptide corresponds to the N-terminal cleavage product of an HCV dodecapeptide substrate derived from the NS5A/5B cleavage site. Structure-activity studies on Ac-DDIVPC-OH revealed that side chains of the P4, P3 and P1 residues contribute the most to binding and that the introduction of a D-amino acid at the P5 position improves potency considerably. Furthermore, there is a strong preference for cysteine at the P1 position and conservative replacements, such as serine, are not well tolerated.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 1998

Studies on the C-terminal of hexapeptide inhibitors of the hepatitis C virus serine protease

Montse Llinas-Brunet; Murray D. Bailey; Robert Deziel; Gulrez Fazal; Vida Gorys; Sylvie Goulet; Ted Halmos; Roger Maurice; Martin Poirier; Marc-André Poupart; Jean Rancourt; Diane Thibeault; Dominik Wernic; Daniel Lamarre

Replacement of the C-terminal carboxylic acid functionality of peptide inhibitors of hepatitis C virus (HCV) NS3 protease (complexed with NS4A peptide cofactor) by activated carbonyl groups does not produce any substantial increase in potency. These latter inhibitors also inhibit a variety of other serine and cysteine proteases whereas the carboxylic acids are specific. Norvaline was identified as a chemically stable replacement for the P1 residue of Ac-DDIVPC-OH which was also compatible with activated carbonyl functionalities.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2000

Highly potent and selective peptide-based inhibitors of the hepatitis C virus serine protease : Towards smaller inhibitors

Montse Llinas-Brunet; Murray D. Bailey; Gulrez Fazal; Elise Ghiro; Vida Gorys; Sylvie Goulet; Ted Halmos; Roger Maurice; Martin Poirier; Marc-André Poupart; Jean Rancourt; Diane Thibeault; Dominik Wernic; Daniel Lamarre

Structure-activity studies on a hexapeptide N-terminal cleavage product of a dodecamer substrate led to the identification of very potent and highly specific inhibitors of the HCV NS3 protease/NS4A cofactor peptide complex. The largest increase in potency was accomplished by the introduction of a (4R)-naphthalen-1-yl-4-methoxy substituent to the P2 proline. N-Terminal truncation resulted in tetrapeptides containing a C-terminal carboxylic acid, which exhibited low micromolar activity against the HCV serine protease.


Journal of Virology | 2005

Inhibitors of Respiratory Syncytial Virus Replication Target Cotranscriptional mRNA Guanylylation by Viral RNA-Dependent RNA Polymerase

Michel Liuzzi; Stephen W. Mason; Mireille Cartier; Carole Lawetz; Robert S. McCollum; Nathalie Dansereau; Gordon Bolger; Nicole Lapeyre; Yvon Gaudette; Lisette Lagacé; Marie-Josée Massariol; Florence Dô; Paul Whitehead; Lynne Lamarre; Erika Scouten; Josée Bordeleau; Serge Landry; Jean Rancourt; Gulrez Fazal; Bruno Simoneau

ABSTRACT Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a major cause of respiratory illness in infants, immunocompromised patients, and the elderly. New antiviral agents would be important tools in the treatment of acute RSV disease. RSV encodes its own RNA-dependent RNA polymerase that is responsible for the synthesis of both genomic RNA and subgenomic mRNAs. The viral polymerase also cotranscriptionally caps and polyadenylates the RSV mRNAs at their 5′ and 3′ ends, respectively. We have previously reported the discovery of the first nonnucleoside transcriptase inhibitor of RSV polymerase through high-throughput screening. Here we report the design of inhibitors that have improved potency both in vitro and in antiviral assays and that also exhibit activity in a mouse model of RSV infection. We have isolated virus with reduced susceptibility to this class of inhibitors. The mutations conferring resistance mapped to a novel motif within the RSV L gene, which encodes the catalytic subunit of RSV polymerase. This motif is distinct from the catalytic region of the L protein and bears some similarity to the nucleotide binding domain within nucleoside diphosphate kinases. These findings lead to the hypothesis that this class of inhibitors may block synthesis of RSV mRNAs by inhibiting guanylylation of viral transcripts. We show that short transcripts produced in the presence of inhibitor in vitro do not contain a 5′ cap but, instead, are triphosphorylated, confirming this hypothesis. These inhibitors constitute useful tools for elucidating the molecular mechanism of RSV capping and represent valid leads for the development of novel anti-RSV therapeutics.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 1999

Discovery of non-peptidic P2-P3 butanediamide renin inhibitors with high oral efficacy.

Bruno Simoneau; Pierre Lavallee; Paul C. Anderson; Murray D. Bailey; Gary W. Bantle; Sylvie Berthiaume; Catherine Chabot; Gulrez Fazal; Ted Halmos; William W. Ogilvie; Marc-André Poupart; Bounkham Thavonekham; Zhili Xin; Diane Thibeault; Gordon Bolger; Maret Panzenbeck; Raymond J. Winquist; Grace Jung

A new series of non-peptidic renin inhibitors having a 2-substituted butanediamide moiety at the P2 and P3 positions has been identified. The optimized inhibitors have IC50 values of 0.8 to 1.4 nM and 2.5 to 7.6 nM in plasma renin assays at pH 6.0 and 7.4, respectively. When evaluated in the normotensive cynomolgus monkey model, two of the most potent inhibitors were orally active at a dose as low as 3 mg/kg. These potent renin inhibitors are characterized by oral bioavailabilities of 40 and 89% in the cynomolgus monkey. Inhibitor 3z (BILA 2157 BS) was selected as candidate for pre-development.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

Structure-based design of novel HCV NS5B thumb pocket 2 allosteric inhibitors with submicromolar gt1 replicon potency: Discovery of a quinazolinone chemotype

Pierre L. Beaulieu; René Coulombe; Jianmin Duan; Gulrez Fazal; Cédrickx Godbout; Oliver Hucke; Araz Jakalian; Marc-André Joly; Olivier Lepage; Montse Llinas-Brunet; Julie Naud; Martin Poirier; Nathalie Rioux; Bounkham Thavonekham; George Kukolj; Timothy Stammers

We describe the structure-based design of a novel lead chemotype that binds to thumb pocket 2 of HCV NS5B polymerase and inhibits cell-based gt1 subgenomic reporter replicons at sub-micromolar concentrations (EC50<200nM). This new class of potent thumb pocket 2 inhibitors features a 1H-quinazolin-4-one scaffold derived from hybridization of a previously reported, low affinity thiazolone chemotype with our recently described anthranilic acid series. Guided by X-ray structural information, a key NS5B-ligand interaction involving the carboxylate group of anthranilic acid based inhibitors was replaced by a neutral two-point hydrogen bonding interaction between the quinazolinone scaffold and the protein backbone. The in vitro ADME and in vivo rat PK profile of representative analogs are also presented and provide areas for future optimization of this new class of HCV polymerase inhibitors.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

Discovery of a novel series of non-nucleoside thumb pocket 2 HCV NS5B polymerase inhibitors.

Timothy Stammers; René Coulombe; Jean Rancourt; Bounkham Thavonekham; Gulrez Fazal; Sylvie Goulet; Araz Jakalian; Dominic Wernic; Youla S. Tsantrizos; Marc-André Poupart; Michael Bös; Ginette McKercher; Louise Thauvette; George Kukolj; Pierre L. Beaulieu

A novel series of non-nucleoside thumb pocket 2 HCV NS5B polymerase inhibitors were derived from a fragment-based approach using information from X-ray crystallographic analysis of NS5B-inhibitor complexes and iterative rounds of parallel synthesis. Structure-based drug design strategies led to the discovery of potent sub-micromolar inhibitors 11a-c and 12a-c from a weak-binding fragment-like structure 1 as a starting point.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Discovery of BI 207524, an indole diamide NS5B thumb pocket 1 inhibitor with improved potency for the potential treatment of chronic hepatitis C virus infection.

Pierre L. Beaulieu; Paul C. Anderson; Richard C. Bethell; Michael Bös; Yves Bousquet; Christian Brochu; Michael G. Cordingley; Gulrez Fazal; Michel Garneau; James Gillard; Stephen H. Kawai; Martin Marquis; Ginette McKercher; Marc-André Poupart; Timothy Stammers; Bounkham Thavonekham; Dominik Wernic; Jianmin Duan; George Kukolj

The development of interferon-free regimens for the treatment of chronic HCV infection constitutes a preferred option that is expected in the future to provide patients with improved efficacy, better tolerability, and reduced risk for emergence of drug-resistant virus. We have pursued non-nucleoside NS5B polymerase allosteric inhibitors as combination partners with other direct acting antivirals (DAAs) having a complementary mechanism of action. Herein, we describe the discovery of a potent follow-up compound (BI 207524, 27) to the first thumb pocket 1 NS5B inhibitor to demonstrate antiviral activity in genotype 1 HCV infected patients, BILB 1941 (1). Cell-based replicon potency was significantly improved through electronic modulation of the pKa of the carboxylic acid function of the lead molecule. Subsequent ADME-PK optimization lead to 27, a predicted low clearance compound in man. The preclinical profile of inhibitor 27 is discussed, as well as the identification of a genotoxic metabolite that led to the discontinuation of the development of this compound.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

Anthranilic acid-based Thumb Pocket 2 HCV NS5B polymerase inhibitors with sub-micromolar potency in the cell-based replicon assay.

Timothy Stammers; René Coulombe; Martin Duplessis; Gulrez Fazal; Alexandre Gagnon; Michel Garneau; Sylvie Goulet; Araz Jakalian; Steven R. LaPlante; Jean Rancourt; Bounkham Thavonekham; Dominik Wernic; George Kukolj; Pierre L. Beaulieu

Optimization efforts on the anthranilic acid-based Thumb Pocket 2 HCV NS5B polymerase inhibitors 1 and 2 resulted in the identification of multiple structural elements that contributed to improved cell culture potency. The additive effect of these elements resulted in compound 46, an inhibitor with enzymatic (IC50) and cell culture (EC50) potencies of less than 100 nanomolar.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

Design, synthesis and biological evaluation of novel aminothiazoles as antiviral compounds acting against human rhinovirus.

Anne Decor; Chantal Grand-Maitre; Oliver Hucke; Jeff O’Meara; Cyrille Kuhn; Léa Constantineau Forget; Christian Brochu; Eric Malenfant; Megan Bertrand-Laperle; Josée Bordeleau; Elise Ghiro; Marc Pesant; Gulrez Fazal; Vida Gorys; Michael Little; Colette Boucher; Sylvain Bordeleau; Pascal Turcotte; Tim Guo; Michel Garneau; Catherine Spickler; Annick Gauthier

We describe here the design, synthesis and biological evaluation of antiviral compounds acting against human rhinovirus (HRV). A series of aminothiazoles demonstrated pan-activity against the HRV genotypes screened and productive structure-activity relationships. A comprehensive investigational library was designed and performed allowing the identification of potent compounds with lower molecular weight and improved ADME profile. 31d-1, 31d-2, 31f showed good exposures in CD-1 mice. The mechanism of action was discovered to be a host target: the lipid kinase phosphatidylinositol 4-kinase III beta (PI4KIIIß). The identification of the pan-HRV active compound 31f combined with a structurally distinct literature compound T-00127-HEV1 allowed the assessment of target related tolerability of inhibiting this kinase for a short period of time in order to prevent HRV replication.

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