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Dive into the research topics where I-Wu Chen is active.

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Featured researches published by I-Wu Chen.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 1998

L-374,087, an efficacious, orally bioavailable, pyridinone acetamide thrombin inhibitor

Philip E.J. Sanderson; Kellie J. Cutrona; Bruce D. Dorsey; Dona L. Dyer; Colleen McDonough; Adel M. Naylor-Olsen; I-Wu Chen; Zhongguo Chen; Jacquelynn J. Cook; Stephen J. Gardell; Julie A. Krueger; S.Dale Lewis; Jiunn H. Lin; Bobby J. Lucas; Elizabeth A. Lyle; Joseph J. Lynch; Maria T. Stranieri; Kari Vastag; Jules A. Shafer; Joseph P. Vacca

Replacement of the amidinopiperidine P1 group of 3-benzylsulfonylamino-6-methyl-2-pyridinone acetamide thrombin inhibitor L-373,890 (2) with a mildly basic 5-linked 2-amino-6-methylpyridine results in an equipotent compound L-374,087 (5, Ki = 0.5 nM). Compound 5 is highly selective for thrombin over trypsin, is efficacious in the rat ferric chloride model of arterial thrombosis and is orally bioavailable in dogs and cynomolgus monkeys. The structural basis for the critical importance of both methyl groups in 5 was confirmed by X-ray crystallography.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 1998

C6 modification of the pyridinone core of thrombin inhibitor L-374,087 as a means of enhancing its oral absorption.

Richard C.A. Isaacs; Kellie J. Cutrona; Christina L. Newton; Philip E.J. Sanderson; Mark G. Solinsky; Elizabeth P. Baskin; I-Wu Chen; Carolyn M. Cooper; Jacquelynn J. Cook; Stephen J. Gardell; S.Dale Lewis; Robert J. Lucas; Elizabeth A. Lyle; Joseph J. Lynch; Adel M. Naylor-Olsen; Maria T. Stranieri; Kari Vastag; Joseph P. Vacca

1 (L-374,087) is a potent, selective, efficacious, and orally bioavailable thrombin inhibitor that contains a core 3-amino-2-pyridinone moiety. Replacement of the C6 pyridinone methyl group of 1 by a propyl group gave 5 (L-375,052), which retained all the excellent properties of 1, and also yielded higher plasma levels after oral dosing in dogs and rats.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2001

Oxo-piperazine Derivatives of N-Arylpiperazinones as Inhibitors of Farnesyltransferase

Christopher J. Dinsmore; Jeffrey M. Bergman; Donna Wei; C. Blair Zartman; Joseph P. Davide; Ian Greenberg; Dongming Liu; Timothy J. O'Neill; Jackson B. Gibbs; Kenneth S. Koblan; Nancy E. Kohl; Robert B. Lobell; I-Wu Chen; Debra McLoughlin; Timothy V. Olah; Samuel L. Graham; George D. Hartman; Theresa M. Williams

The evaluation of SAR associated with the insertion of carbonyl groups at various positions of N-arylpiperazinone farnesyltransferase inhibitors is described herein. 1-Aryl-2,3-diketopiperazine derivatives exhibited the best balance of potency and pharmacokinetic profile relative to the parent 1-aryl-2-piperazinones.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 1995

Cycloalkylpiperazines as HIV-1 protease inhibitors: enhanced oral absorption

B.Moon Kim; Ben E. Evans; Kevin F. Gilbert; Colleen M. Hanifin; Joseph P. Vacca; Stuart R. Michelson; Paul L. Darke; Joan A. Zugay; Emilio A. Emini; William A. Schleif; Jiunn H. Lin; I-Wu Chen; Kari Vastag; Paul S. Anderson; Joel R. Huff

Abstract A series of HIV-1 protease inhibitors containing various acyclic or cyclic alkylpiperazine derivatives were prepared. They exhibit excellent potency in the enzyme inhibition assay and in a whole cell assay demonstrating the lowest CIC 95 IC 50 ratios observed in the hydroxyethylpiperazine class of inhibitors. Oral pharmacokinetic studies in dogs have been carried out on two compounds in this series and an excellent oral absorption profile was obtained for inhibitor 13 , which possesses a cyclopropylpiperazine unit.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2000

Bicyclic pyridones as potent, efficacious and orally bioavailable thrombin inhibitors.

Craig A. Coburn; Diane Rush; Peter D. Williams; Carl F. Homnick; Elizabeth A. Lyle; S.Dale Lewis; Bobby J. Lucas; Jillian M Di Muzio-Mower; Marylou Juliano; Julie A. Krueger; Kari Vastag; I-Wu Chen; Joseph P. Vacca

A new class of conformationally constrained thrombin inhibitors is described. These compounds contain a unique bicyclic pyridone scaffold which serves as a P3P2 dipeptide surrogate. The synthesis and antithrombotic activity of these inhibitors is reported.


Biochemical Pharmacology | 1998

Metabolite–P450 Complex Formation by Methylenedioxyphenyl HIV Protease Inhibitors in Rat and Human Liver Microsomes

Masato Chiba; Joy A. Nishime; I-Wu Chen; Kari Vastag; Yousif Sahly; Byeong Moon Kim; Bruce D. Dorsey; Joseph P. Vacca; Jiunn H. Lin

P450 complex formation and the unusual pharmacokinetics of methylenedioxyphenyl HIV protease inhibitors were examined by in vitro studies using human and rat liver microsomes and by in vivo oral dosing studies. In vitro spectral studies indicated that the formation of a P450 complex having absorbance maxima at 425 and 456 nm was time and concentration dependent; 27-60% of the total P450 was complexed in dexamethasone-induced rat liver microsomes after a 30-min incubation with 100 microM HIV protease inhibitors. Methoxy substitution on the phenyl ring of the methylenedioxyphenyl moiety increased formation of the P450 complex, whereas chlorine substitution markedly decreased the P450 complexation. Kinetic studies on the P450 complex formation indicated that both methoxy and chlorine substitution affected the maximum complex formation rate (Vmax), while it had little effect on Km values (approximately 10 microM). This complexation in human liver microsomes was inhibited markedly by an anti-CYP3A1 antibody. Furthermore, the P450 complex formation resulted in a time-dependent loss of CYP3A-catalyzed marker activities (testosterone 2beta/6beta-hydroxylase) in both rat and human liver microsomes. Collectively, these results point to the involvement of CYP3A isoforms in P450 complexation by methylenedioxyphenyl HIV protease inhibitors. Additionally, after oral administration to rats, one of these HIV protease inhibitors (Compound I), which complexed P450 to the greatest extent, showed no elimination over a period of 500 min after administration of the highest dose. It is suggested that formation of a quasi-irreversible metabolite-CYP3A complex with methylenedioxyphenyl HIV protease inhibitors was responsible for the CYP3A-selective time-dependent loss of catalytic function and the unusual dose-dependent pharmacokinetics after oral administration.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 1994

Synthesis, antiviral activity, and bioavailability studies of γ-lactam derived HIV protease inhibitors

Randall W. Hungate; Jenny L. Chen; Ken E. Starbuck; Joseph P. Vacca; Stacey L. McDaniel; Rhonda B. Levin; Bruce D. Dorsey; James P. Guare; M. Katharine Holloway; Willie Whitter; Paul L. Darke; Joan A. Zugay; William A. Schleif; Emilio A. Emini; Julio C. Quintero; J Lin; I-Wu Chen; Paul S. Anderson; Joel R. Huff

Incorporation of a gamma-lactam in hydroxyethylene isosteres results in modest inhibitors of HIV-1 protease. Additional structural activity studies have produced significantly more potent inhibitors with the introduction of the trisubstituted cyclopentane (see compound 20) as the optimum substituent for the C-terminus. This new amino acid amide surrogate can be readily prepared in large scale from (R)-pulegone. Optimized compounds (36) and (60) are potent antiviral agents and are well absorbed (15-20%) in a dog model after oral administration.


Xenobiotica | 2003

Interaction with indinavir to enhance systemic exposure of an investigational HIV protease inhibitor in rats, dogs and monkeys

Lixia Jin; I-Wu Chen; Masato Chiba; Jiunn H. Lin

1. The use of a beneficial interaction between indinavir and compound A, a potent investigational HIV protease inhibitor to enhance systemic exposure of compound A, was investigated. 2. When administrated alone, compound A underwent extensive hepatic first-pass metabolism in rats and monkeys, resulting in low oral bioavailability. 3. In vitro studies with liver microsomes revealed that compound A metabolism was mediated exclusively by CYP3A enzymes in rats, dogs and monkeys. Indinavir, which also was metabolized predominantly by CYP3A enzymes, extensively inhibited compound A metabolism in microsomes, whereas compound A showed weak inhibitory potency on indinavir metabolism. 4. Consistent with in vitro observations, co-administration of the two compounds resulted in a 17-fold increase in oral AUC of compound A in rats owing to the inhibition of metabolism of compound A by indinavir, whereas compound A did not affect indinavir metabolism as indicated by the unchanged indinavir AUC. Similarly, the systemic exposure of compound A in dogs and monkeys was increased substantially following oral co-administration with indinavir by 7- and > 50-fold, respectively. 5. Enhancement in compound A systemic exposure by indinavir in humans, as predicted based on the in vivo animal and in vitro human liver microsomal data, was confirmed in subsequent clinical studies.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 1995

Thiophene derivatives as extremely high affinity P3′ ligands for the hydroxyethylpiperazine class of HIV-1 protease inhibitors

B.Moon Kim; James P. Guare; Joseph D. Vacca; Stuart R. Michelson; Paul L. Darke; Joan A. Zugay; Emilio A. Emini; William A. Schleif; Jiunn H. Lin; I-Wu Chen; Kari Vastag; Paul S. Anderson; Joel R. Huff

Abstract A series of hydroxyethylpiperazine HIV-1 protease inhibitors containing various monocyclic or bicyclic thienylmethyl substituents as P3′ ligands were prepared. They were found to exhibit extremely high potency in the enzyme inhibition assay. These inhibitors also proved to be highly effective against viral spread in a whole cell assay. Some representative compounds in this series have been examined for oral bioavailability in dogs and the pharmacokinetic properties were found to be somewhat related to their aqueous solubilities.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 1994

A new hydroxyethylamine class of HIV-1 protease inhibitors with high antiviral potency and oral bioavailability

B.Moon Kim; Joseph P. Vacca; James P. Guare; Colleen M. Hanifin; Stuart R. Michelson; PaulL. Darke; Joan A. Zugay; Emilio A. Emini; William A. Schleif; Jiunn H. Lin; I-Wu Chen; Kari Vastag; Drazen Ostovic; Paul S. Anderson; Joel R. Huff

Abstract A new hydroxyethylamine class of inhibitors was designed combining features from our clinical candidate, L-735,524, along with small heterocyclic P 2 -ligands developed in these laboratories. Highly potent inhibitors possessing subnanomolar IC 50 s have been identified, which exhibit good antiviral potency in cell culture. L-738,872, a representative inhibitor in this class, showed 34% oral bioavailability in dogs.

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Jiunn H. Lin

United States Military Academy

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Kari Vastag

United States Military Academy

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William A. Schleif

United States Military Academy

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Elizabeth A. Lyle

United States Military Academy

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Joel R. Huff

United States Military Academy

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Bobby J. Lucas

United States Military Academy

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Emilio A. Emini

United States Military Academy

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Lixia Jin

United States Military Academy

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