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Dive into the research topics where Istvan J. Enyedy is active.

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Featured researches published by Istvan J. Enyedy.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2003

Pharmacophore-Based discovery of substituted pyridines as novel dopamine transporter inhibitors

Istvan J. Enyedy; Sukumar Sakamuri; Wahiduz A. Zaman; Kenneth M. Johnson; Shaomeng Wang

Abnormal dopamine signaling in brain has been implicated in several conditions such as cocaine abuse, Parkinsons disease and depression. Potent and selective dopamine transporter inhibitors may be useful as pharmacological tools and therapeutic agents. Simple substituted pyridines were discovered as novel dopamine transporter (DAT) inhibitors through pharmacophore-based 3D-database search. The most potent compound 18 has a K(i) value of 79 nM in inhibition of WIN35,248 binding to dopamine transporter and 255 nM in inhibition of dopamine reuptake, respectively, as potent as cocaine. Preliminary structure-activity relationship studies show that the geometry and the nature of the substituents on the pyridine ring determine the inhibitory activity and selectivity toward the three monoamine transporters. The substituted pyridines described herein represent a class of novel DAT inhibitors with simple chemical structures and their discovery provides additional insights into the binding site of DAT.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2001

Pharmacophore-based discovery of 3,4-disubstituted pyrrolidines as a novel class of monoamine transporter inhibitors.

Istvan J. Enyedy; Wahiduz A. Zaman; Sukumar Sakamuri; Alan P. Kozikowski; Kenneth M. Johnson; Shaomeng Wang

3,4-Disubstituted pyrrolidines were discovered as a novel class of monoamine transporter inhibitors through 3-D database pharmacophore searching using a new pharmacophore model. The most potent analogue 12 has Ki values of 0.084 microM in [3H]mazindol binding, 0.20, 0.23, and 0.031 microM in inhibition of dopamine (DA), serotonin (SER), and norepinephrine (NE) reuptake, respectively. Functional antagonism testing in vitro showed that 11 and 12 are weak cocaine antagonists.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Identification of Orally Available Naphthyridine Protein Kinase D Inhibitors

Erik Meredith; Ophelia Ardayfio; Kimberly Beattie; Markus Dobler; Istvan J. Enyedy; Christoph Gaul; Vinayak Hosagrahara; Charles Jewell; Keith A. Koch; Wendy Lee; Hansjoerg Lehmann; Timothy A. McKinsey; Karl Miranda; Nikos Pagratis; Margaret R. Pancost; Anup Patnaik; Dillon Phan; Craig F. Plato; Ming Qian; Vasumathy Rajaraman; Chang Rao; Olga Rozhitskaya; Thomas Ruppen; Jie Shi; Sarah Siska; Clayton Springer; Maurice J. van Eis; Richard B. Vega; Anette Von Matt; Lihua Yang

A novel 2,6-naphthyridine was identified by high throughput screen (HTS) as a dual protein kinase C/D (PKC/PKD) inhibitor. PKD inhibition in the heart was proposed as a potential antihypertrophic mechanism with application as a heart failure therapy. As PKC was previously identified as the immediate upstream activator of PKD, PKD vs PKC selectivity was essential to understand the effect of PKD inhibition in models of cardiac hypertrophy and heart failure. The present study describes the modification of the HTS hit to a series of prototype pan-PKD inhibitors with routine 1000-fold PKD vs PKC selectivity. Example compounds inhibited PKD activity in vitro, in cells, and in vivo following oral administration. Their effects on heart morphology and function are discussed herein.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Identification of Potent and Selective Amidobipyridyl Inhibitors of Protein Kinase D

Erik Meredith; Kimberly Beattie; Robin Burgis; Michael Paul Capparelli; Joseph A. Chapo; Lucian DiPietro; Gabriel G. Gamber; Istvan J. Enyedy; David B. Hood; Vinayak Hosagrahara; Charles Jewell; Keith A. Koch; Wendy Lee; Douglas D. Lemon; Timothy A. McKinsey; Karl Miranda; Nikos Pagratis; Dillon Phan; Craig F. Plato; Chang Rao; Olga Rozhitskaya; Nicolas Soldermann; Clayton Springer; Maurice J. van Eis; Richard B. Vega; Wanlin Yan; Qingming Zhu; Lauren G. Monovich

The synthesis and biological evaluation of potent and selective PKD inhibitors are described herein. The compounds described in the present study selectively inhibit PKD among other putative HDAC kinases. The PKD inhibitors of the present study blunt phosphorylation and subsequent nuclear export of HDAC4/5 in response to diverse agonists. These compounds further establish the central role of PKD as an HDAC4/5 kinase and enhance the current understanding of cardiac myocyte signal transduction. The in vivo efficacy of a representative example compound on heart morphology is reported herein.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

EC144 Is a Potent Inhibitor of the Heat Shock Protein 90.

Jiandong Shi; Ryan Van de Water; Kevin Hong; Ryan Lamer; Kenneth W. Weichert; Cristina M. Sandoval; Srinivas Rao Kasibhatla; Marcus F. Boehm; Jianhua Chao; Karen Lundgren; Noelito Timple; Rachel Lough; Gerardo Ibanez; Christina Boykin; Francis Burrows; Marilyn R. Kehry; Theodore J. Yun; Erin K. Harning; Christine Ambrose; Jeffrey Thompson; Sarah A. Bixler; Anthone W. Dunah; Pamela A. Snodgrass-Belt; Joseph W. Arndt; Istvan J. Enyedy; Ping Li; Victor Hong; Andres McKenzie; Marco Biamonte

Alkyne 40, 5-(2-amino-4-chloro-7-((4-methoxy-3,5-dimethylpyridin-2-yl)methyl)-7H-pyrrolo[2,3-d]pyrimidin-5-yl)-2-methylpent-4-yn-2-ol (EC144), is a second generation inhibitor of heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90) and is substantially more potent in vitro and in vivo than the first generation inhibitor 14 (BIIB021) that completed phase II clinical trials. Alkyne 40 is more potent than 14 in an Hsp90α binding assay (IC(50) = 1.1 vs 5.1 nM) as well as in its ability to degrade Her-2 in MCF-7 cells (EC(50) = 14 vs 38 nM). In a mouse model of gastric tumors (N87), 40 stops tumor growth at 5 mg/kg and causes partial tumor regressions at 10 mg/kg (po, qd × 5). Under the same conditions, 14 stops tumor growth only at 120 mg/kg, and does not induce partial regressions. Thus, alkyne 40 is approximately 20-fold more efficacious than 14 in mice.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2001

Pharmacophore-based discovery, synthesis, and biological evaluation of 4-phenyl-1-arylalkyl piperidines as dopamine transporter inhibitors.

Sukumar Sakamuri; Istvan J. Enyedy; Alan P. Kozikowski; Wahiduz A. Zaman; Kenneth M. Johnson; Shaomeng Wang

Pharmacophore-based discovery, synthesis, and structure activity relationship (SAR) of a series of 4-phenyl-1-arylalkyl piperidines are disclosed. These compounds have been evaluated for their ability to inhibit reuptake of dopamine (DA) into striatal nerve endings (synaptosomes). The lead compound 5 and the most potent analogue 43 were found to have significant functional antagonism.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2001

Molecular modeling, structure--activity relationships and functional antagonism studies of 4-hydroxy-1-methyl-4-(4-methylphenyl)-3-piperidyl 4-methylphenyl ketones as a novel class of dopamine transporter inhibitors.

Shaomeng Wang; Sukumar Sakamuri; Istvan J. Enyedy; Alan P. Kozikowski; Wahiduz A. Zaman; Kenneth M. Johnson

We previously disclosed the discovery of 4-hydroxy-1-methyl-4-(4-methylphenyl)-3-piperidyl 4-methylphenyl ketone (3) as a novel class of dopamine transporter (DAT) inhibitors and showed that (+/-)-3 has a significant functional antagonism against cocaine in vitro. Our previous preliminary structure-activity relationship study led to identification of a more potent DAT inhibitor [(+/-)-4] but this compound failed to show any significant functional antagonism. To search for more potent analogues than 3 but still displaying significant functional antagonism, further SARs, molecular modeling studies and in vitro pharmacological evaluation of this novel class of DAT inhibitors were performed. Sixteen new analogues were synthesized in racemic form and evaluated as DAT inhibitors. It was found that seven new analogues are reasonably potent DAT inhibitors with K(i) values of 0.041--0.30 and 0.052--0.16 microM in [(3)H]mazindol binding and inhibition of DA reuptake. Chiral isomers of several potent DAT inhibitors were obtained through chiral HPLC separation and evaluated as inhibitors at all the three monoamine transporter sites. In general, the (-)-isomer is more active than the (+)-isomer in inhibition of DA reuptake and all the (-)-isomers are selective inhibitors at the DAT site. Evaluation of cocaines effect on dopamine uptake in the presence and absence of (+)-3 and (-)-3 showed that (-)-3 is responsible for the functional antagonism obtained with the original lead (+/-)-3. Out of the new compounds synthesized, analogue (+/-)-20, which is 8- and 3-fold more potent than (+/-)-3 in binding and inhibition of DA reuptake, appeared to have improved functional antagonism as compared to (+/-)-3.


Tetrahedron Letters | 2000

Synthesis of 2-alkyl-3-aryl-substituted quinuclidines as novel dopamine transporter inhibitors

Sukumar Sakamuri; Istvan J. Enyedy; Alan P. Kozikowski; Shaomeng Wang

Abstract The synthesis of 2-alkyl-3-aryl-substituted quinuclidines was accomplished in a simple synthetic sequence. The separation of enantiomers was carried out using chiral HPLC.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2002

Discovery of substituted 3,4-diphenyl-thiazoles as a novel class of monoamine transporter inhibitors through 3-D pharmacophore search using a new pharmacophore model derived from mazindol.

Istvan J. Enyedy; Jiansuo Wang; Wahiduz A. Zaman; Kenneth M. Johnson; Shaomeng Wang

Substituted 3,4-diphenyl-1,3-thiazols were identified as a class of novel and potent monoamine transporter inhibitors through a 3-D pharmacophore search using a new pharmacophore model derived from mazindol. The most potent compound (13) has K(i) values of 24 and 23 nM in binding to dopamine transporter and inhibition of dopamine reuptake, respectively.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2003

2,3-Disubstituted quinuclidines as a novel class of dopamine transporter inhibitors.

Sukumar Sakamuri; Istvan J. Enyedy; Wahiduz A. Zaman; Srihari R. Tella; Alan P. Kozikowski; Judith L. Flippen-Anderson; Tivadar Farkas; Kenneth M. Johnson; Shaomeng Wang

There is considerable interest in developing dopamine transporter (DAT) inhibitors as potential therapies for the treatment of cocaine abuse. We report herein our pharmacophore-based discovery and molecular modeling-assisted rational design of 2,3-disubstituted quinuclidines as potent DAT inhibitors with a novel chemical scaffold. Through 3-D-database pharmacophore searching, compound 12 was identified as a very weak DAT inhibitor with K(i) values of 7.3 and 8.9 microM in [3H]mazindol binding and in inhibition of dopamine reuptake, respectively. Molecular modeling-assisted rational design and chemical modifications led to identification of potent analogues (-)-29 and 34 with K(i) values of 14 and 32 nM for both compounds in binding affinity and inhibition of dopamine reuptake, respectively. Behavioral pharmacological evaluations in rodents showed that 34 has a profile very different from cocaine. While 34 is substantially more potent than cocaine as a DAT inhibitor, it is approximately four times less potent than cocaine in mimicking the discriminative stimulus properties of cocaine in rat. On the other hand, 34 (3-30 mg/kg) lacks either the locomotor stimulant or stereotypic properties of cocaine in mice. Importantly, 34 blocks locomotor stimulant activity induced by 20 mg/kg cocaine in mice, with an estimated ED(50) of 19 mg/kg. Taken together, our data suggest that 34 represents a class of potent DAT inhibitors with a novel chemical scaffold and a behavioral pharmacological profile different from that of cocaine in rodents. Thus, 34 may serve as a novel lead compound in the ultimate development of therapeutic entities for cocaine abuse and/or addiction.

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Alan P. Kozikowski

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Kenneth M. Johnson

University of Texas Medical Branch

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Wahiduz A. Zaman

University of Texas Medical Branch

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Robert B. Dickson

Georgetown University Medical Center

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Dajun Yang

University of Michigan

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Sheau-Ling Lee

Georgetown University Medical Center

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Patricia S. Lorenzo

National Institutes of Health

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