Jack D. Leber
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Featured researches published by Jack D. Leber.
Cancer Research | 2008
Nelson Rhodes; Dirk A. Heerding; Derek R. Duckett; Derek J. Eberwein; Victoria B. Knick; Timothy J. Lansing; Randy T. McConnell; Tona M. Gilmer; Shu-Yun Zhang; Kimberly Robell; Jason Kahana; Robert S. Geske; Elena Kleymenova; Anthony E. Choudhry; Zhihong Lai; Jack D. Leber; Elisabeth A. Minthorn; Susan L. Strum; Edgar R. Wood; Pearl S. Huang; Robert A. Copeland; Rakesh Kumar
Akt kinases 1, 2, and 3 are important regulators of cell survival and have been shown to be constitutively active in a variety of human tumors. GSK690693 is a novel ATP-competitive, low-nanomolar pan-Akt kinase inhibitor. It is selective for the Akt isoforms versus the majority of kinases in other families; however, it does inhibit additional members of the AGC kinase family. It causes dose-dependent reductions in the phosphorylation state of multiple proteins downstream of Akt, including GSK3 beta, PRAS40, and Forkhead. GSK690693 inhibited proliferation and induced apoptosis in a subset of tumor cells with potency consistent with intracellular inhibition of Akt kinase activity. In immune-compromised mice implanted with human BT474 breast carcinoma xenografts, a single i.p. administration of GSK690693 inhibited GSK3 beta phosphorylation in a dose- and time-dependent manner. After a single dose of GSK690693, >3 micromol/L drug concentration in BT474 tumor xenografts correlated with a sustained decrease in GSK3 beta phosphorylation. Consistent with the role of Akt in insulin signaling, treatment with GSK690693 resulted in acute and transient increases in blood glucose level. Daily administration of GSK690693 produced significant antitumor activity in mice bearing established human SKOV-3 ovarian, LNCaP prostate, and BT474 and HCC-1954 breast carcinoma xenografts. Immunohistochemical analysis of tumor xenografts after repeat dosing with GSK690693 showed reductions in phosphorylated Akt substrates in vivo. These results support further evaluation of GSK690693 as an anticancer agent.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008
Dirk A. Heerding; Nelson Rhodes; Jack D. Leber; Tammy J. Clark; Richard M. Keenan; Louis Vincent Lafrance; Mei Li; Igor G. Safonov; Dennis T. Takata; Joseph W. Venslavsky; Dennis S. Yamashita; Anthony E. Choudhry; Robert A. Copeland; Zhihong Lai; Michael D. Schaber; Peter J. Tummino; Susan L. Strum; Edgar R. Wood; Derek R. Duckett; Derek J. Eberwein; Victoria B. Knick; Timothy J. Lansing; Randy T. McConnell; Shu-Yun Zhang; Elisabeth A. Minthorn; Nestor O. Concha; Gregory L. Warren; Rakesh Kumar
Overexpression of AKT has an antiapoptotic effect in many cell types, and expression of dominant negative AKT blocks the ability of a variety of growth factors to promote survival. Therefore, inhibitors of AKT kinase activity might be useful as monotherapy for the treatment of tumors with activated AKT. Herein, we describe our lead optimization studies culminating in the discovery of compound 3g (GSK690693). Compound 3g is a novel ATP competitive, pan-AKT kinase inhibitor with IC 50 values of 2, 13, and 9 nM against AKT1, 2, and 3, respectively. An X-ray cocrystal structure was solved with 3g and the kinase domain of AKT2, confirming that 3g bound in the ATP binding pocket. Compound 3g potently inhibits intracellular AKT activity as measured by the inhibition of the phosphorylation levels of GSK3beta. Intraperitoneal administration of 3g in immunocompromised mice results in the inhibition of GSK3beta phosphorylation and tumor growth in human breast carcinoma (BT474) xenografts.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2007
Robert A. Stavenger; Haifeng Cui; Sarah E. Dowdell; Robert G. Franz; Dimitri Gaitanopoulos; Krista B. Goodman; Mark A. Hilfiker; Robert L. Ivy; Jack D. Leber; Joseph P. Marino; Hye-Ja Oh; Andrew Q. Viet; Weiwei Xu; Guosen Ye; Daohua Zhang; Yongdong Zhao; Larry J. Jolivette; Martha S. Head; Simon F. Semus; Patricia A. Elkins; Robert B. Kirkpatrick; Edward Dul; Sanjay S. Khandekar; Tracey Yi; David K. Jung; Lois L. Wright; Gary K. Smith; David J. Behm; Christopher P. Doe; Ross Bentley
Archive | 2002
Kelly Aubart; Siegfried B. Christensen; Jack D. Leber
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 1993
William D. Kingsbury; Israil Pendrak; Jack D. Leber; Jeffery C. Boehm; Brenda Mallet; Henry M. Sarau; James J. Foley; Dulcie B. Schmidt; Robert A. Daines
Archive | 2010
Louis Vincent Lafrance; Jack D. Leber; Mei Li; Sharad K. Verma
Archive | 2007
Dirk A. Heerding; Tammy J. Clark; Jack D. Leber; Igor G. Safonov
Cancer Research | 2011
Sharad K. Verma; Jack D. Leber; Louis Vincent Lafrance; Mei Li; Celine Duquenne; Guanglei Cui; William H. Miller
Cancer Research | 2007
Dirk Heerding; Nelson Rhodes; Jack D. Leber; Anthony Choudhry; Tammy Clark; Nestor O. Concha; Derek Duckett; Derek J. Eberwein; Robert S. Geske; Tona M. Gilmer; Pearl S. Huang; Jason Kahana; Richard M. Keenan; Elena Kleymenova; Victoria B. Knick; Louis Vincent Lafrance; Zhihong Lai; Timothy J. Lansing; Mei Li; Elisabeth Minthorn; Kimberly Robell; David W. Rusnak; Igor Safonov; Edgar R. Wood; Rakesh Kumar
Archive | 2002
Ajita Bhat; Iv Siegfried B. Christensen; James S. Frazee; Martha S. Head; Jack D. Leber; Mei Li