Janet Marie Forst
AstraZeneca
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Featured researches published by Janet Marie Forst.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2003
Dean G. Brown; Rebecca Urbanek; Thomas Michael Bare; Frances M. Mclaren; Carey Horchler; Megan Murphy; Gary Steelman; James Empfield; Janet Marie Forst; Keith J. Herzog; Wenhua Xiao; Martin C. Dyroff; Chi-Ming C. Lee; Shephali Trivedi; Kathy L. Neilson; Richard Alan Keith
Several members of the 7-chloro-2,3-dihydro-2-[1-(pyridinyl)alkyl]-pyridazino[4,5-b]quinoline-1,4,10(5H)-triones (2) have been identified as being potent and selective NMDA glycine-site antagonists. Increasing size of the alkyl substituent on the alpha-carbon led to a progressive decrease in binding affinity. Some of these analogues possess improved drug-like properties such as cellular permeability, solubility and oral absorption.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010
Jeffrey G. Varnes; Janet Marie Forst; Tiffany N. Hoerter; Christopher R. Holmquist; Deidre E. Wilkins; Gaochao Tian; Gerald Jonak; Xia Wang; William Potts; Michael W. Wood; Cristobal Alhambra; Todd Andrew Brugel; Jeffrey S. Albert
A novel series of glycine transporter 1 (GlyT1) inhibitors is described. Scoping of the heterocycle moiety of hit 4-chlorobenzenesulfonamide 1 led to replacement of the piperidine with an azepane for a modest increase in potency. Phenyl sulfonamides proved superior to alkyl and non-phenyl aromatic sulfonamides, while subsequent ortho substitution of the 2-(azepan-1-yl)-2-phenylethanamine aromatic ring yielded 39 (IC(50) 37 nM, solubility 14 microM), the most potent GlyT1 inhibitor in this series. Favorable brain-plasma ratios were observed for select compounds in pharmacokinetic studies to evaluate CNS penetration.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2016
Jeffrey G. Varnes; Stefan Geschwindner; Christopher R. Holmquist; Janet Marie Forst; Xia Wang; Niek Dekker; Clay W Scott; Gaochao Tian; Michael W. Wood; Jeffrey S. Albert
Fragment-based drug design (FBDD) relies on direct elaboration of fragment hits and typically requires high resolution structural information to guide optimization. In fragment-assisted drug discovery (FADD), fragments provide information to guide selection and design but do not serve as starting points for elaboration. We describe FADD and high-throughput screening (HTS) campaign strategies conducted in parallel against PDE10A where fragment hit co-crystallography was not available. The fragment screen led to prioritized fragment hits (IC50s ∼500μM), which were used to generate a hypothetical core scaffold. Application of this scaffold as a filter to HTS output afforded a 4μM hit, which, after preparation of a small number of analogs, was elaborated into a 16nM lead. This approach highlights the strength of FADD, as fragment methods were applied despite the absence of co-crystallographical information to efficiently identify a lead compound for further optimization.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2018
Jeffrey G. Varnes; Hui Xiong; Janet Marie Forst; Christopher R. Holmquist; Glen Ernst; William Frietze; Bruce T. Dembofsky; Don Andisik; William E. Palmer; Lindsay Hinkley; Gary Steelman; Deidre E. Wilkins; Gaochao Tian; Gerald Jonak; William Potts; Xia Wang; Todd Andrew Brugel; Cristobal Alhambra; Michael W. Wood; Chris Allan Veale; Jeffrey S. Albert
A series of isoquinuclidine benzamides as glycine uptake inhibitors for the treatment of schizophrenia are described. Potency, lipophilicity, and intrinsic human microsomal clearance were parameters for optimization. Potency correlated with the nature of the ortho substituents of the benzamide ring, and reductions in lipophilicity could be achieved through heteroatom incorporation in the benzamide and pendant phenyl moieties. Improvements in human CLint were achieved through changes in ring size and the N-alkyl group of the isoquinuclidine itself, with des-alkyl derivatives (40-41, 44) demonstrating the most robust microsomal stability. Dimethylbenzamide 9 was tested in a mouse MK801 LMA assay and had a statistically significant attenuation of locomotor activity at 3 and 10 μmol/kg compared to control.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 1996
Cyrus John Ohnmacht; Keith Russell; James Roy Empfield; C.A. Frank; Keith Hopkinson Gibson; Daniel Ray Mayhugh; Frances M. Mclaren; Howard S. Shapiro; Frederick Jeffrey Brown; Diane Amy Trainor; Christopher Ceccarelli; Margaret M. Lin; Brian B. Masek; Janet Marie Forst; Robert Joseph Harris; James Hulsizer; Joseph James Lewis; Stuart M. Silverman; Reed W. Smith; Paul James Warwick; Sen T. Kau; Alexa L. Chun; Thomas L. Grant; Burton B. Howe; Jack H. Li; Shephali Trivedi; Tracy J. Halterman; Christopher Yochim; Martin C. Dyroff; M. Kirkland
Archive | 1993
Cyrus John Ohnmacht; Diane Amy Trainor; Janet Marie Forst; Mark M. Stein; Robert Joseph Harris
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2007
Thomas M. Bare; Dean G. Brown; Carey Horchler; Megan Murphy; Rebecca Urbanek; Vernon Alford; Christine Barlaam; Martin C. Dyroff; James B. Empfield; Janet Marie Forst; Keith J. Herzog; Richard Alan Keith; Alan S. Kirschner; Chi-Ming C. Lee; Joseph James Lewis; Frances M. Mclaren; Kathy L. Neilson; Gary Steelman; Shephali Trivedi; Edward P. Vacek; Wenhua Xiao
Archive | 1996
Thomas M. Bare; James Roy Empfield; Janet Marie Forst; Keith J. Herzog; Richard Bruce Sparks
Archive | 1999
Deborah Weng Chun Chen; Janet Marie Forst
Archive | 2010
Jeffrey S. Albert; Cristobal Alhambra; Todd Andrew Brugel; Janet Marie Forst; Christopher R. Holmquist; Jeffrey G. Varnes; Xia Wang