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Dive into the research topics where Harvey E. Fries is active.

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Featured researches published by Harvey E. Fries.


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2008

An excitatory role for peripheral EP3 receptors in bladder afferent function

Xin Su; Erin S. R. Lashinger; Lisa A. Leon; Bryan E. Hoffman; J. Paul Hieble; Scott D. Gardner; Harvey E. Fries; Richard M. Edwards; Jun Li; Nicholas J. Laping

The excitatory roles of EP3 receptors at the peripheral afferent nerve innervating the rat urinary bladder have been evaluated by using the selective EP3 antagonist (2E)-3-[1-[(2,4-dichlorophenyl)methyl]-5-fluoro-3-methyl-1H-indol-7-yl]-N-[(4,5-dichloro-2-thienyl)sulfonyl]-2-propenamide (DG-041). The bladder rhythmic contraction model and a bladder pain model measuring the visceromotor reflex (VMR) to urinary bladder distension (UBD) have been used to evaluate DG-041 in female rats. In addition, male rats [spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR), Wistar-Kyoto (WKY), and Sprague-Dawley (SD)] were anesthetized with pentobarbital sodium, and primary afferent fibers in the L6 dorsal root were isolated for recording the inhibitory response to UBD following intravenous injection of DG-041. Intravenous injection of DG-041 (10 mg/kg), a peripherally restricted EP3 receptor antagonist, significantly reduced the frequency of bladder rhythmic contraction and inhibited the VMR response to bladder distension. The magnitude of reduction of the VMR response was not different in the different strains of rats (SD, SHR, and WKY). Furthermore, quantitative characterization of the mechanosensitive properties of bladder afferent nerves in SHR, WKY, and SD rats did not show the SHR to be supersensitive to bladder distension. DG-041 selectively attenuated responses of mechanosensitive afferent nerves to UBD, with strong suppression on the slow-conducting, high-threshold afferent fibers, with equivalent activity in the three strains. We conclude that sensitization of afferent nerve activity was not one of the mechanisms of bladder hypersensitivity in SHR. EP3 receptors are involved in the regulation of bladder micturition and bladder nociception at the peripheral level.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Discovery of novel aminothiadiazole amides as selective EP3 receptor antagonists

Mark A. Hilfiker; Ning Wang; Xiaoping Hou; Zhimin Du; Mark Pullen; Melanie Nord; Rakesh Nagilla; Harvey E. Fries; Charlene W. Wu; Anthony C. Sulpizio; Jon-Paul Jaworski; Dwight M. Morrow; Richard M. Edwards; Jian Jin

This Letter discloses a series of 2-aminothiadiazole amides as selective EP(3) receptor antagonists. SAR optimization resulted in compounds with excellent functional activity in vitro. In addition, efforts to optimize DMPK properties in the rat are discussed. These efforts have resulted in the identification of potent, selective EP(3) receptor antagonists with excellent DMPK properties suitable for in vivo studies.


British Journal of Pharmacology | 2009

Palosuran inhibits binding to primate UT receptors in cell membranes but demonstrates differential activity in intact cells and vascular tissues

David J. Behm; John J. McAtee; Jason W. Dodson; Michael J. Neeb; Harvey E. Fries; Christopher Evans; R R Hernandez; K D Hoffman; Stephen M. Harrison; J M Lai; C Wu; Nambi Aiyar; Eliot H. Ohlstein; Stephen A. Douglas

The recent development of the UT ligand palosuran (1‐[2‐(4‐benzyl‐4‐hydroxy‐piperidin‐1‐yl)‐ethyl]‐3‐(2‐methyl‐
quinolin‐4‐yl)‐urea sulphate salt) has led to the proposition that urotensin‐II (U‐II) plays a significant pathological role in acute and chronic renal injury in the rat.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Novel 3-Oxazolidinedione-6-aryl-pyridinones as Potent, Selective, and Orally Active EP3 Receptor Antagonists.

Jian Jin; Ángel I. Morales-Ramos; Patrick M. Eidam; John S. Mecom; Yue Li; Carl Brooks; Mark A. Hilfiker; David Zhang; Ning Wang; Dongchuan Shi; Pei-San Tseng; Karen Wheless; Brian Budzik; Karen A. Evans; Jon-Paul Jaworski; Jack Jugus; Lisa A. Leon; Charlene Wu; Mark Pullen; Bhumika Karamshi; Parvathi Rao; Emma Ward; Nicholas J. Laping; Christopher Evans; Colin Leach; Dennis A. Holt; Xin Su; Dwight M. Morrow; Harvey E. Fries; Kevin S. Thorneloe

High-throughput screening and subsequent optimization led to the discovery of novel 3-oxazolidinedione-6-aryl-pyridinones exemplified by compound 2 as potent and selective EP3 antagonists with excellent pharmacokinetic properties. Compound 2 was orally active and showed robust in vivo activities in overactive bladder models. To address potential bioactivation liabilities of compound 2, further optimization resulted in compounds 9 and 10, which maintained excellent potency, selectivity, and pharmacokinetic properties and showed no bioactivation liability in glutathione trapping studies. These highly potent, selective, and orally active EP3 antagonists are excellent tool compounds for investigating and validating potential therapeutic benefits from selectively inhibiting the EP3 receptor.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Synthesis and SAR of amino acid-derived heterocyclic progesterone receptor full and partial agonists

Marlys Hammond; Jaclyn R. Patterson; Sharada Manns; Tram H. Hoang; David G. Washburn; Walter Trizna; Lindsay E. Glace; Eugene T. Grygielko; Rakesh Nagilla; Melanie Nord; Harvey E. Fries; Douglas J. Minick; Nicholas J. Laping; Jeffrey D. Bray; Scott K. Thompson

Two classes of amino acid-derived heterocyclic progesterone receptor ligands were developed to address the metabolic issues posed by the dimethyl amide functionality of the lead compound (1). The tetrazole-derived ligands behaved as potent partial agonists, while the 1,2,4-triazole ligands behaved as potent full agonists.


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.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015

Identification of Purines and 7-Deazapurines as Potent and Selective Type I Inhibitors of Troponin I-Interacting Kinase (TNNI3K).

Brian G. Lawhorn; Joanne Philp; Yongdong Zhao; Christopher Louer; Marlys Hammond; Mui Cheung; Harvey E. Fries; Alan P. Graves; Lisa M. Shewchuk; Liping Wang; Joshua E. Cottom; Hongwei Qi; Huizhen Zhao; Rachel Totoritis; Guofeng Zhang; Benjamin J. Schwartz; Hu Li; Sharon Sweitzer; Dennis Alan Holt; Gregory J. Gatto; Lara S. Kallander

A series of cardiac troponin I-interacting kinase (TNNI3K) inhibitors arising from 3-((9H-purin-6-yl)amino)-N-methyl-benzenesulfonamide (1) is disclosed along with fundamental structure-function relationships that delineate the role of each element of 1 for TNNI3K recognition. An X-ray structure of 1 bound to TNNI3K confirmed its Type I binding mode and is used to rationalize the structure-activity relationship and employed to design potent, selective, and orally bioavailable TNNI3K inhibitors. Identification of the 7-deazapurine heterocycle as a superior template (vs purine) and its elaboration by introduction of C4-benzenesulfonamide and C7- and C8-7-deazapurine substituents produced compounds with substantial improvements in potency (>1000-fold), general kinase selectivity (10-fold improvement), and pharmacokinetic properties (>10-fold increase in poDNAUC). Optimal members of the series have properties suitable for use in in vitro and in vivo experiments aimed at elucidating the role of TNNI3K in cardiac biology and serve as leads for developing novel heart failure medicines.


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

Structure-activity relationship studies of novel 3-oxazolidinedione-6-naphthyl-2-pyridinones as potent and orally bioavailable EP3 receptor antagonists.

Ángel I. Morales-Ramos; Yue H. Li; Mark A. Hilfiker; John S. Mecom; Patrick M. Eidam; Dongchuan Shi; Pei-San Tseng; Carl Brooks; David Zhang; Ning Wang; Jon-Paul Jaworski; Dwight M. Morrow; Harvey E. Fries; Richard M. Edwards; Jian Jin

Multiple regions of the 3-oxazolidinedione-6-naphthyl-pyridinone series identified via high throughput screening were explored. SAR studies of these regions including the left-hand side oxazolidinedione moiety, α-substituent on the oxazolidinedione ring, central pyridinone core, and substituents on the central pyridinone core led to the discovery of potent EP(3) receptor antagonists such as compound 29 which possesses outstanding rat pharmacokinetic properties. Synthesis and SAR of these novel compounds and DMPK properties of representative compounds are discussed.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

3-Urea-1-(phenylmethyl)-pyridones as novel, potent, and selective EP3 receptor antagonists.

Yue H. Li; Pei-San Tseng; Karen A. Evans; Jon-Paul Jaworski; Dwight M. Morrow; Harvey E. Fries; Charlene W. Wu; Richard M. Edwards; Jian Jin

A series of 3-urea-1-(phenylmethyl)-pyridones was discovered as novel EP(3) antagonists via high-throughput screening and subsequent optimization. The synthesis, structure-activity relationships, and optimization of the initial hit that resulted in potent and selective EP(3) receptor antagonists such as 11g are described.

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Jian Jin

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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