Jason Brubaker
Merck & Co.
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Jason Brubaker.
Organic Letters | 2010
Philip J. Hamzik; Jason Brubaker
The oxetane ring is useful in drug discovery as a bioisostere for both the geminal dimethyl group and the carbonyl group. A convenient, straightforward approach to access structurally diverse 3-aminooxetanes through the reactivity of oxetan-3-tert-butylsulfinimine and the corresponding sulfinylaziridine is described.
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015
Jongwon Lim; Michael D. Altman; James R. Baker; Jason Brubaker; Hongmin Chen; Yiping Chen; Thierry O. Fischmann; Craig R. Gibeau; Melanie A. Kleinschek; Erica Leccese; Charles A. Lesburg; John Maclean; Lily Y. Moy; Erin F. Mulrooney; Jeremy Presland; Larissa Rakhilina; Graham F. Smith; Dietrich Steinhuebel; Ruojing Yang
Interleukin-1 receptor associated kinase 4 (IRAK4) is an essential signal transducer downstream of the IL-1R and TLR superfamily, and selective inhibition of the kinase activity of the protein represents an attractive target for the treatment of inflammatory diseases. A series of 5-amino-N-(1H-pyrazol-4-yl)pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidine-3-carboxamides was developed via sequential modifications to the 5-position of the pyrazolopyrimidine ring and the 3-position of the pyrazole ring. Replacement of substituents responsible for poor permeability and improvement of physical properties guided by cLogD led to the identification of IRAK4 inhibitors with excellent potency, kinase selectivity, and pharmacokinetic properties suitable for oral dosing.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015
Jongwon Lim; Michael D. Altman; James A. Baker; Jason Brubaker; Hongmin Chen; Yiping Chen; Melanie A. Kleinschek; Chaomin Li; Duan Liu; John Maclean; Erin F. Mulrooney; Larissa Rakhilina; Graham F. Smith; Ruojing Yang
IRAK4 plays a critical role in the IL-1R and TLR signalling, and selective inhibition of the kinase activity of the protein represents an attractive target for the treatment of inflammatory diseases. A series of permeable N-(1H-pyrazol-4-yl)carboxamides was developed by introducing lipophilic bicyclic cores in place of the polar pyrazolopyrimidine core of 5-amino-N-(1H-pyrazol-4-yl)pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidine-3-carboxamides. Replacement of the pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidine core with the pyrrolo[2,1-f][1,2,4]triazine, the pyrrolo[1,2-b]pyridazine, and thieno[2,3-b]pyrazine cores guided by cLogD led to the identification of highly permeable IRAK4 inhibitors with excellent potency and kinase selectivity.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017
Tony Siu; Jason Brubaker; Peter Fuller; Luis Torres; Hongbo Zeng; Joshua Close; Dawn M. Mampreian; Feng Shi; Duan Liu; Xavier Fradera; Kevin Johnson; Nathan Bays; Elma Kadic; Fang He; Peter Goldenblatt; Lynsey Shaffer; Sangita B. Patel; Charles A. Lesburg; Carla Alpert; Lauren Dorosh; Sujal V. Deshmukh; Hongshi Yu; Joel A. Klappenbach; Fiona Elwood; Christopher J. Dinsmore; Rafael Fernández; Lily Y. Moy; Jonathan R. Young
The discovery of a potent selective low dose Janus kinase 1 (JAK1) inhibitor suitable for clinical evaluation is described. As part of an overall goal to minimize dose, we pursued a medicinal chemistry strategy focused on optimization of key parameters that influence dose size, including lowering human Clint and increasing intrinsic potency, bioavailability, and solubility. To impact these multiple parameters simultaneously, we used lipophilic ligand efficiency as a key metric to track changes in the physicochemical properties of our analogs, which led to improvements in overall compound quality. In parallel, structural information guided advancements in JAK1 selectivity by informing on new vector space, which enabled the discovery of a unique key amino acid difference between JAK1 (Glu966) and JAK2 (Asp939). This difference was exploited to consistently produce analogs with the best balance of JAK1 selectivity, efficacy, and projected human dose, ultimately culminating in the discovery of compound 28.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2017
Graham F. Smith; Michael D. Altman; Brian M. Andresen; James A. Baker; Jason Brubaker; Hongmin Chen; Yiping Chen; Matthew Lloyd Childers; Anthony Donofrio; Heidi Ferguson; Christian Fischer; Thierry O. Fischmann; Craig R. Gibeau; Alexander Hicks; Sue Jin; Sam Kattar; Melanie A. Kleinschek; Erica Leccese; Charles A. Lesburg; Chaomin Li; Jongwon Lim; Duan Liu; John Maclean; Faruk Mansoor; Lilly Y. Moy; Erin F. Mulrooney; Antoaneta S. Necheva; Larissa Rakhilina; Ruojing Yang; Luis Torres
Interleukin-1 receptor associated kinase 4 (IRAK4) has been implicated in IL-1R and TLR based signaling. Therefore selective inhibition of the kinase activity of this protein represents an attractive target for the treatment of inflammatory diseases. Medicinal chemistry optimization of high throughput screening (HTS) hits with the help of structure based drug design led to the identification of orally-bioavailable quinazoline based IRAK4 inhibitors with excellent pharmacokinetic profile and kinase selectivity. These highly selective IRAK4 compounds show activity in vivo via oral dosing in a TLR7 driven model of inflammation.
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2018
Xianhai Huang; Jason Brubaker; Wei Zhou; Purakkattle J. Biju; Li Xiao; Ning Shao; Ying Huang; Li Dong; Zhidan Liu; Rema Bitar; Alexei V. Buevich; Joon Jung; Scott L. Peterson; John W. Butcher; Joshua Close; Michelle Martinez; Rachel N. Maccoss; Hongjun Zhang; Scott Crawford; Kevin D. Mccormick; Robert G. Aslanian; Ravi P. Nargund; Craig Correll; François G. Gervais; Hongchen Qiu; Xiaoxin Yang; Charles G. Garlisi; Diane Rindgen; Kevin M. Maloney; Phieng Siliphaivanh
A novel series of tricyclic tetrahydroquinolines were identified as potent and selective CRTh2 receptor antagonists. The agonism and antagonism switch was achieved through structure-based drug design (SBDD) using a CRTh2 receptor homologue model. The challenge of very low exposures in pharmacokinetic studies was overcome by exhaustive medicinal chemistry lead optimization through focused SAR studies on the tricyclic core. Further optimization resulted in the identification of the preclinical candidate 4-(cyclopropyl((3aS,9R,9aR)-7-fluoro-4-(4-(trifluoromethoxy)benzoyl)-2,3,3a,4,9,9a-hexahydro-1H-cyclopenta[b]quinolin-9-yl)amino)-4-oxobutanoic acid (15c, MK-8318) with potent and selective CRTh2 antagonist activity and a favorable PK profile suitable for once daily oral dosing for potential treatment of asthma.
Archive | 2011
Neville J. Anthony; Jason Brubaker; Carolyn Michele Cammarano; Christopher J. Dinsmore; David J. Guerin; Dawn Marie Mampreian Hoffman; Philip Jones; Joon Jung; Michelle Martinez; Mark E. Scott; Hyun Chong Woo
Archive | 2012
Jason Brubaker; Christopher J. Dinsmore; Dawn Marie Mampreian Hoffman; Joon Jung; Duan Liu; Scott L. Peterson; Tony Siu; Luis Torres; Hongjun Zhang; Zhongyong Wei; Feng Shi
Archive | 2014
Matthew Lloyd Childers; Christopher J. Dinsmore; Peter Fuller; David J. Guerin; Jason D. Katz; Qinglin Pu; Mark E. Scott; Christopher F. Thompson; Hongjun Zhang; Danielle Falcone; Luis Torres; Jason Brubaker; Hongbo Zeng; Jiaqiang Cai; Xiaoxing Du; Chonggang Wang; Yunfeng Bai; Norman Kong; Yumei Liu; Zhixiang Zheng
Archive | 2012
Xianhai Huang; Jason Brubaker; Scott L. Peterson; John W. Butcher; Joshua Close; Michelle Martinez; Rachel N. Maccoss; Joon Jung; Phieng Siliphaivanh; Hongjun Zhang; Robert Aslanian; Purakkattle Biju; Li Dong; Ying Huang; Kevin D. McCormick; Anandan Palani; Ning Shao; Wei Zhou