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Featured researches published by James A. Southers.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Synthesis and SAR of 1,2,3,4-tetrahydroisoquinolin-1-ones as novel G-protein-coupled receptor 40 (GPR40) antagonists.

Paul S. Humphries; John William Benbow; Paul D. Bonin; David Boyer; Shawn D. Doran; Richard K. Frisbie; David W. Piotrowski; Gayatri Balan; Bruce M. Bechle; Edward L. Conn; Kenneth J. DiRico; Robert M. Oliver; Walter C. Soeller; James A. Southers; Xiaojing Yang

The development of a series of novel 1,2,3,4-tetrahydroisoquinolin-1-ones as antagonists of G protein-coupled receptor 40 (GPR40) is described. The synthesis, in vitro inhibitory values for GPR40, in vitro microsomal clearance and rat in vivo clearance data are discussed. Initial hits displayed high rat in vivo clearances that were higher than liver blood flow. Optimization of rat in vivo clearance was achieved and led to the identification of 15i, whose rat oral pharmacokinetic data is reported.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

The discovery of novel calcium sensing receptor negative allosteric modulators.

Gayatri Balan; Jonathan N. Bauman; Shoml Bhattacharya; Castrodad M; David R. Healy; Michael Herr; Peter Humphries; Jennings S; Amit S. Kalgutkar; Brendon Kapinos; Khot; Lazarra K; Madeleine H. Li; Y Li; Constantin Neagu; Robert M. Oliver; David W. Piotrowski; David A. Price; Hong Qi; Simmons Ha; James A. Southers; Liuqing Wei; Yingxin Zhang; Vishwas M. Paralkar

The design and profile of a series of zwitterionic calcium sensing receptor negative allosteric modulators is described. Evaluation of key analogues using a rat model demonstrate a robust response, significantly improved potency over ronacaleret and have the potential as an oral, anabolic treatment for osteoporosis.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Decreasing the Rate of Metabolic Ketone Reduction in the Discovery of a Clinical Acetyl-CoA Carboxylase Inhibitor for the Treatment of Diabetes

David A. Griffith; Daniel W. Kung; William Esler; Paul Amor; Scott W. Bagley; Carine Beysen; Santos Carvajal-Gonzalez; Shawn D. Doran; Chris Limberakis; Alan M. Mathiowetz; Kirk McPherson; David A. Price; Eric Ravussin; Gabriele Sonnenberg; James A. Southers; Laurel Sweet; Scott M. Turner; Felix Vajdos

Acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC) inhibitors offer significant potential for the treatment of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), hepatic steatosis, and cancer. However, the identification of tool compounds suitable to test the hypothesis in human trials has been challenging. An advanced series of spirocyclic ketone-containing ACC inhibitors recently reported by Pfizer were metabolized in vivo by ketone reduction, which complicated human pharmacology projections. We disclose that this metabolic reduction can be greatly attenuated through introduction of steric hindrance adjacent to the ketone carbonyl. Incorporation of weakly basic functionality improved solubility and led to the identification of 9 as a clinical candidate for the treatment of T2DM. Phase I clinical studies demonstrated dose-proportional increases in exposure, single-dose inhibition of de novo lipogenesis (DNL), and changes in indirect calorimetry consistent with increased whole-body fatty acid oxidation. This demonstration of target engagement validates the use of compound 9 to evaluate the role of DNL in human disease.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Spirolactam-Based Acetyl-CoA Carboxylase Inhibitors: Toward Improved Metabolic Stability of a Chromanone Lead Structure

David A. Griffith; Robert L. Dow; Kim Huard; David J. Edmonds; Scott W. Bagley; Jana Polivkova; Dongxiang Zeng; Carmen N. Garcia-Irizarry; James A. Southers; William Esler; Paul Amor; Kathrine Loomis; Kirk McPherson; Kevin B. Bahnck; Cathy Préville; Tereece Banks; Dianna E. Moore; Alan M. Mathiowetz; Elnaz Menhaji-Klotz; Aaron Smith; Shawn D. Doran; David A. Beebe; Matthew F. Dunn

Acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC) catalyzes the rate-determining step in de novo lipogenesis and plays a crucial role in the regulation of fatty acid oxidation. Alterations in lipid metabolism are believed to contribute to insulin resistance; thus inhibition of ACC offers a promising option for intervention in type 2 diabetes mellitus. Herein we disclose a series of ACC inhibitors based on a spirocyclic pyrazololactam core. The lactam series has improved chemical and metabolic stability relative to our previously reported pyrazoloketone series, while retaining potent inhibition of ACC1 and ACC2. Optimization of the pyrazole and amide substituents led to quinoline amide 21, which was advanced to preclinical development.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2012

Synthesis of 7-Oxo-dihydrospiro[indazole-5,4′-piperidine] Acetyl-CoA Carboxylase Inhibitors

Scott W. Bagley; James A. Southers; Shawn Cabral; Colin R. Rose; David J. Bernhardson; David J. Edmonds; Jana Polivkova; Xiaojing Yang; Daniel W. Kung; David A. Griffith; Scott Bader

Synthesis of oxo-dihydrospiroindazole-based acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC) inhibitors is reported. The dihydrospiroindazoles were assembled in a regioselective manner in six steps from substituted hydrazines and protected 4-formylpiperidine. Enhanced regioselectivity in the condensation between a keto enamine and substituted hydrazines was observed when using toluene as the solvent, leading to selective formation of 1-substituted spiroindazoles. The 2-substituted spiroindazoles were formed selectively from alkyl hydrazones by ring closure with Vilsmeier reagent. The key step in the elaboration to the final products is the conversion of an intermediate olefin to the desired ketone through elimination of HBr from an O-methyl bromohydrin. This methodology enabled the synthesis of each desired regioisomer on 50-75 g scale with minimal purification. Acylation of the resultant spirocyclic amines provided potent ACC inhibitors.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Metabolism-guided design of short-acting calcium-sensing receptor antagonists.

James A. Southers; Jonathan N. Bauman; David A. Price; Paul S. Humphries; Gayatri Balan; John F. Sagal; Tristan S. Maurer; Yan Zhang; Robert M. Oliver; Michael Herr; David R. Healy; Mei Li; Brendon Kapinos; Gwendolyn Fate; Keith Riccardi; Vishwas M. Paralkar; Thomas A. Brown; Amit S. Kalgutkar

As part of a strategy to deliver short-acting calcium-sensing receptor (CaSR) antagonists, the metabolically labile thiomethyl functionality was incorporated into the zwitterionic amino alcohol derivative 3 with the hope of increasing human clearance through oxidative metabolism, while delivering a pharmacologically inactive sulfoxide metabolite. The effort led to the identification of thioanisoles 22 and 23 as potent and orally active CaSR antagonists with a rapid onset of action and short pharmacokinetic half-lives, which led to a rapid and transient stimulation of parathyroid hormone in a dose-dependent fashion following oral administration to rats. On the basis of the balance between target pharmacology, safety, and human disposition profiles, 22 and 23 were advanced as clinical candidates for the treatment of osteoporosis.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

Identification of novel series of pyrazole and indole-urea based DFG-out PYK2 inhibitors.

Samit Kumar Bhattacharya; Gary E. Aspnes; Scott W. Bagley; Markus Boehm; Arthur D. Brosius; Leonard Buckbinder; Jeanne S. Chang; Joseph DiBrino; Heather Eng; Kosea S. Frederick; David A. Griffith; Matthew C. Griffor; Cristiano R. W. Guimarães; Angel Guzman-Perez; Seungil Han; Amit S. Kalgutkar; Jacquelyn Klug-McLeod; Carmen N. Garcia-Irizarry; Jianke Li; Blaise Lippa; David A. Price; James A. Southers; Daniel P. Walker; Liuqing Wei; Jun Xiao; Michael P. Zawistoski; Xumiao Zhao

Previous drug discovery efforts identified classical PYK2 kinase inhibitors such as 2 and 3 that possess selectivity for PYK2 over its intra-family isoform FAK. Efforts to identify more kinome-selective chemical matter that stabilize a DFG-out conformation of the enzyme are described herein. Two sub-series of PYK2 inhibitors, an indole carboxamide-urea and a pyrazole-urea have been identified and found to have different binding interactions with the hinge region of PYK2. These leads proved to be more selective than the original classical inhibitors.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2016

The Synthesis of Methyl-Substituted Spirocyclic Piperidine-Azetidine (2,7-Diazaspiro[3.5]nonane) and Spirocyclic Piperidine-Pyrrolidine (2,8-Diazaspiro[4.5]decane) Ring Systems

Aaron Smith; Shawn Cabral; Daniel W. Kung; Colin R. Rose; James A. Southers; Carmen N. Garcia-Irizarry; David B. Damon; Scott W. Bagley; David A. Griffith

The synthesis of a series of pharmaceutically important N-protected methyl-substituted spirocyclic piperidine-azetidine (2,7-diazaspiro[3.5]nonane) and spirocyclic piperidine-pyrrolidine (2,8-diazaspiro[4.5]decane) ring systems was developed. These motifs contain two differentiated sites (protected secondary amines) to allow for further functionalization via reductive amination, amidation, or other chemistry. The methyl-substituted spiroazetidine ring systems were accessed using nitrile lithiation/alkylation chemistry while the methyl-substituted spiropyrrolidines were synthesized by 1,4-addition reactions with nitroalkanes, followed by reduction and cyclization. These conditions were then scaled for the synthesis of 1-methyl spirocyclic piperidine-pyrrolidine with a classical resolution of the product using a tartaric acid derivative to isolate a single enantiomer.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015

Discovery of spirocyclic-diamine inhibitors of mammalian acetyl CoA-carboxylase.

Daniel W. Kung; David A. Griffith; William P. Esler; Felix Vajdos; Alan M. Mathiowetz; Shawn D. Doran; Paul Amor; Scott W. Bagley; Tereece Banks; Shawn Cabral; Kristen Ford; Carmen N. Garcia-Irizarry; Margaret S. Landis; Kathrine Loomis; Kirk McPherson; Mark Niosi; Kristin L. Rockwell; Colin R. Rose; Aaron Smith; James A. Southers; Susan Tapley; Meihua Tu; James J. Valentine

A novel series of spirocyclic-diamine based, isoform non-selective inhibitors of acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC) is described. These spirodiamine derivatives were discovered by design of a library to mimic the structural rigidity and hydrogen-bonding pattern observed in the co-crystal structure of spirochromanone inhibitor I. The lead compound 3.5.1 inhibited de novo lipogenesis in rat hepatocytes, with an IC50 of 0.30 μM.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2012

Synthesis of Spiropiperidine Lactam Acetyl-CoA Carboxylase Inhibitors

Kim Huard; Scott W. Bagley; Elnaz Menhaji-Klotz; Cathy Préville; James A. Southers; Aaron Smith; David J. Edmonds; John C. Lucas; Matthew F. Dunn; Nigel M. Allanson; Emma L. Blaney; Carmen N. Garcia-Irizarry; Jeffrey T. Kohrt; David A. Griffith; Robert L. Dow

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