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Publication
Featured researches published by Haolun Jin.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2009
Gregg S. Jones; Fang Yu; Ameneh Zeynalzadegan; Joseph Hesselgesser; Xiaowu Chen; James K. Chen; Haolun Jin; Choung U. Kim; Matthew Blake Wright; Romas Geleziunas; Manuel Tsiang
ABSTRACT GS-9160 is a novel and potent inhibitor of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) integrase (IN) that specifically targets the process of strand transfer. It is an authentic inhibitor of HIV-1 integration, since treatment of infected cells results in an elevation of two-long terminal repeat circles and a decrease of integration junctions. GS-9160 has potent and selective antiviral activity in primary human T lymphocytes producing a 50% effective concentration (EC50) of ∼2 nM, with a selectivity index (50% cytotoxic concentration/EC50) of ∼2,000. The antiviral potency of GS-9160 decreased by 6- to 10-fold in the presence of human serum. The antiviral activity of GS-9160 is synergistic in combination with representatives from three different classes of antiviral drugs, namely HIV-1 protease inhibitors, nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, and nucleotide reverse transcriptase inhibitors. Viral resistance selections performed with GS-9160 yielded a novel pattern of mutations within the catalytic core domain of IN; E92V emerged initially, followed by L74M. While E92V as a single mutant conferred 12-fold resistance against GS-9160, L74M had no effect as a single mutant. Together, these mutations conferred 67-fold resistance to GS-9160, indicating that L74M may potentiate the resistance caused by E92V. The pharmacokinetic profile of GS-9160 in healthy human volunteers revealed that once-daily dosing was not likely to achieve antiviral efficacy; hence, the clinical development of this compound was discontinued.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2016
Manuel Tsiang; Gregg S. Jones; Joshua Goldsmith; Andrew S. Mulato; Derek Hansen; Elaine Kan; Luong Tsai; Rujuta A. Bam; George Stepan; Kirsten M. Stray; Anita Niedziela-Majka; Stephen R. Yant; Helen Yu; George Kukolj; Tomas Cihlar; Scott E. Lazerwith; Kirsten L. White; Haolun Jin
ABSTRACT Bictegravir (BIC; GS-9883), a novel, potent, once-daily, unboosted inhibitor of HIV-1 integrase (IN), specifically targets IN strand transfer activity (50% inhibitory concentration [IC50] of 7.5 ± 0.3 nM) and HIV-1 integration in cells. BIC exhibits potent and selective in vitro antiretroviral activity in both T-cell lines and primary human T lymphocytes, with 50% effective concentrations ranging from 1.5 to 2.4 nM and selectivity indices up to 8,700 relative to cytotoxicity. BIC exhibits synergistic in vitro antiviral effects in pairwise combinations with tenofovir alafenamide, emtricitabine, or darunavir and maintains potent antiviral activity against HIV-1 variants resistant to other classes of antiretrovirals. BIC displayed an in vitro resistance profile that was markedly improved compared to the integrase strand transfer inhibitors (INSTIs) raltegravir (RAL) and elvitegravir (EVG), and comparable to that of dolutegravir (DTG), against nine INSTI-resistant site-directed HIV-1 mutants. BIC displayed statistically improved antiviral activity relative to EVG, RAL, and DTG against a panel of 47 patient-derived HIV-1 isolates with high-level INSTI resistance; 13 of 47 tested isolates exhibited >2-fold lower resistance to BIC than DTG. In dose-escalation experiments conducted in vitro, BIC and DTG exhibited higher barriers to resistance than EVG, selecting for HIV-1 variants with reduced phenotypic susceptibility at days 71, 87, and 20, respectively. A recombinant virus with the BIC-selected M50I/R263K dual mutations in IN exhibited only 2.8-fold reduced susceptibility to BIC compared to wild-type virus. All BIC-selected variants exhibited low to intermediate levels of cross-resistance to RAL, DTG, and EVG (<8-fold) but remained susceptible to other classes of antiretrovirals. A high barrier to in vitro resistance emergence for both BIC and DTG was also observed in viral breakthrough studies in the presence of constant clinically relevant drug concentrations. The overall virologic profile of BIC supports its ongoing clinical investigation in combination with other antiretroviral agents for both treatment-naive and -experienced HIV-infected patients.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008
Haolun Jin; Matthew Blake Wright; Richard Pastor; Michael R. Mish; Sammy Metobo; Salman Y. Jabri; Rachael Lansdown; Ruby Cai; Peter Pyun; Manuel Tsiang; Xiaowu Chen; Choung U. Kim
A series of C5-aza tricyclic HIV integrase inhibitors was prepared. A highly potent and orally bioavailable compound (compound 9) was identified and selected for development.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014
Barton W Phillips; Ruby Cai; William E. Delaney; Zhimin Du; Mingzhe Ji; Haolun Jin; Johnny Lee; Jiayao Li; Anita Niedziela-Majka; Michael R. Mish; Hyung-Jung Pyun; Joe Saugier; Neeraj Tirunagari; Jianhong Wang; Huiling Yang; Qiaoyin Wu; Chris Sheng; Catalin Zonte
The exploration of novel inhibitors of the HCV NS4B protein that are based on a 2-oxadiazoloquinoline scaffold is described. Optimization to incorporate activity across genotypes led to a potent new series with broad activity, of which inhibitor 1 displayed the following EC50 values: 1a, 0.08 nM; 1b, 0.10 nM; 2a, 3 nM; 2b, 0.6 nM, 3a, 3.7 nM; 4a, 0.9 nM; 6a, 3.1 nM.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009
Haolun Jin; Sammy Metobo; Salman Y. Jabri; Michael R. Mish; Rachael Lansdown; Xiaowu Chen; Manuel Tsiang; Matthew Blake Wright; Choung U. Kim
SAR studies on the para-fluorobenzyl moiety of tricyclic HIV integrase inhibitors are discussed and lead compounds with potency and PK properties comparable to raltegravir were identified.
Advances in Antiviral Drug Design | 2003
Haolun Jin; Choung U. Kim
Publisher Summary Among respiratory diseases influenza remains the major cause of mortality and morbidity. There have been only two options available to reduce the impact of the influenza virus. The first one is vaccines. The influenza vaccines currently in use are inactivated subunit vaccines containing hemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA) obtained from various strains of cultured flu virus. They are reasonably effective against the strain used to make the vaccine and are cost-effective. The introduction of the novel NA inhibitors provided humankind with the opportunity to control the influenza epidemics, a disease sometimes causing fatal consequences. The use of both oseltamivir and zanamivir in clinics has proved that influenza NA is a valid target, and the significance of viral resistance is yet to be seen. These drugs can be widely used in both prophylaxis and treatment of human influenza virus infections.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2018
Richard L. Mackman; Victoria Alexandra Steadman; David Kenneth Dean; Petr Jansa; Karine G. Poullennec; Todd C. Appleby; Carol Austin; Caroline A Blakemore; Ruby Cai; Carina E. Cannizzaro; Gregory Chin; Jean-Yves Christophe Chiva; Neil Andrew Dunbar; Hans Fliri; Adrian J. Highton; Hon C. Hui; Mingzhe Ji; Haolun Jin; Kapil Karki; Andrew John Keats; Linos Lazarides; Yu-Jen Lee; Albert Liclican; Michael R. Mish; Bernard P. Murray; Simon B. Pettit; Peter Pyun; Michael Sangi; Rex Santos; Jonathan Sanvoisin
Cyclophilins are a family of peptidyl-prolyl isomerases that are implicated in a wide range of diseases including hepatitis C. Our aim was to discover through total synthesis an orally bioavailable, non-immunosuppressive cyclophilin (Cyp) inhibitor with potent anti-hepatitis C virus (HCV) activity that could serve as part of an all oral antiviral combination therapy. An initial lead 2 derived from the sanglifehrin A macrocycle was optimized using structure based design to produce a potent and orally bioavailable inhibitor 3. The macrocycle ring size was reduced by one atom, and an internal hydrogen bond drove improved permeability and drug-like properties. 3 demonstrates potent Cyp inhibition ( Kd = 5 nM), potent anti-HCV 2a activity (EC50 = 98 nM), and high oral bioavailability in rat (100%) and dog (55%). The synthetic accessibility and properties of 3 support its potential as an anti-HCV agent and for interrogating the role of Cyp inhibition in a variety of diseases.
Archive | 2003
Murty N. Arimilli; Mark M. Becker; Gabriel Birkus; Clifford Bryant; James M. Chen; Xiaowu Chen; Tomas Cihlar; Azar Dastgah; Eugene J. Eisenberg; Maria Fardis; Marcos Hatada; Gong-Xin He; Haolun Jin; Choung U. Kim; William A. Lee; Christopher P. Lee; Kuei-Ying Lin; Hongtao Liu; Richard L. Mackman; Martin McDermott; Michael L. Mitchell; Peter H. Nelson; Hyung-Jung Pyun; Tanisha D. Rowe; Mark Sparacino; Sundaramoorthi Swaminathan; James D. Tario; Jianying Wang; Matthew A. Williams; Lianhong Xu
Archive | 2003
Murty N. Arimili; Xiaowu Chen; Maria Fardis; Gong-Xin He; Haolun Jin; Choung U. Kim; William A. Lee; Kuei-Ying Lin; Hongtao Liu; Richard L. Mackman; Michael L. Mitchell; Hyung-Jung Pyun; Mark L. Sparacino; Sundaramoorthi Swaminathan; Jianying Wang; Matthew A. Williams; Lianhong Xu; Zheng-Yu Yang; Richard H. Yu; Jiancun Zhang; Lijun Zhang
Archive | 2006
Zhenhong R. Cai; Salman Y. Jabri; Haolun Jin; Choung U. Kim; Rachael Lansdown; Samuel E. Metobo; Michael R. Mish; Richard Pastor