Jay P. Parrish
Scripps Research Institute
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Jay P. Parrish.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014
John O. Link; James Taylor; Lianhong Xu; Michael L. Mitchell; Hongyan Guo; Hongtao Liu; Darryl Kato; Thorsten A. Kirschberg; Jianyu Sun; Neil Squires; Jay P. Parrish; Terry Keller; Zheng-Yu Yang; Chris Yang; Mike Matles; Yujin Wang; Kelly Wang; Guofeng Cheng; Yang Tian; Erik Mogalian; Elsa Mondou; Melanie Cornpropst; Jason K. Perry; Manoj C. Desai
A new class of highly potent NS5A inhibitors with an unsymmetric benzimidazole-difluorofluorene-imidazole core and distal [2.2.1]azabicyclic ring system was discovered. Optimization of antiviral potency and pharmacokinetics led to the identification of 39 (ledipasvir, GS-5885). Compound 39 (GT1a replicon EC50 = 31 pM) has an extended plasma half-life of 37-45 h in healthy volunteers and produces a rapid >3 log viral load reduction in monotherapy at oral doses of 3 mg or greater with once-daily dosing in genotype 1a HCV-infected patients. 39 has been shown to be safe and efficacious, with SVR12 rates up to 100% when used in combination with direct-acting antivirals having complementary mechanisms.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2009
Constantine G. Boojamra; Jay P. Parrish; David Sperandio; Ying Gao; Oleg V. Petrakovsky; Sharon K. Lee; David Y. Markevitch; Jennifer E. Vela; Genevieve Laflamme; James M. Chen; Adrian S. Ray; Abraham C. Barron; Mark Sparacino; Manoj C. Desai; Choung U. Kim; Tomas Cihlar; Richard L. Mackman
A diphosphate of a novel cyclopentyl based nucleoside phosphonate with potent inhibition of HIV reverse transcriptase (RT) (20, IC(50)=0.13 microM) has been discovered. In cell culture the parent phosphonate diacid 9 demonstrated antiviral activity EC(50)=16 microM, within two-fold of GS-9148, a prodrug of which is currently under clinical investigation, and within 5-fold of tenofovir (PMPA). In vitro cellular metabolism studies using 9 confirmed that the active diphosphate metabolite is produced albeit at a lower efficiency relative to GS-9148.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015
Richard L. Mackman; Michael Sangi; David Sperandio; Jay P. Parrish; Eugene J. Eisenberg; Michel Perron; Hon C. Hui; Lijun Zhang; Dustin Siegel; Hai Yang; Oliver L. Saunders; Constantine G. Boojamra; Gary Lee; Dharmaraj Samuel; Kerim Babaoglu; Anne Carey; Brian E. Gilbert; Pedro A. Piedra; Robert G. Strickley; Quynh Iwata; Jaclyn Hayes; Kirsten M. Stray; April Kinkade; Dorothy Agnes Theodore; Robert Jordan; Manoj C. Desai; Tomas Cihlar
GS-5806 is a novel, orally bioavailable RSV fusion inhibitor discovered following a lead optimization campaign on a screening hit. The oral absorption properties were optimized by converting to the pyrazolo[1,5-a]-pyrimidine heterocycle, while potency, metabolic, and physicochemical properties were optimized by introducing the para-chloro and aminopyrrolidine groups. A mean EC50 = 0.43 nM was found toward a panel of 75 RSV A and B clinical isolates and dose-dependent antiviral efficacy in the cotton rat model of RSV infection. Oral bioavailability in preclinical species ranged from 46 to 100%, with evidence of efficient penetration into lung tissue. In healthy human volunteers experimentally infected with RSV, a potent antiviral effect was observed with a mean 4.2 log10 reduction in peak viral load and a significant reduction in disease severity compared to placebo. In conclusion, a potent, once daily, oral RSV fusion inhibitor with the potential to treat RSV infection in infants and adults is reported.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2003
Jay P. Parrish; Frédéric Stauffer; Michael Hedrick; Inkyu Hwang; Dale L. Boger
An extensive series of CBI analogues of the duocarmycins and CC-1065 exploring substituent effects within the first indole DNA binding subunit is detailed. In general, substitution at the indole C5 position led to cytotoxic potency enhancements that can be >/=1000-fold providing simplified analogues containing a single DNA binding subunit that are more potent (IC(50)=2-3 pM) than CBI-TMI, duocarmycin SA, or CC-1065.
Nucleosides, Nucleotides & Nucleic Acids | 2007
Richard L. Mackman; Lijun Zhang; Vidya Prasad; Constantine G. Boojamra; James M. Chen; Janet L. Douglas; Deborah Grant; Genevieve Laflamme; Hon C. Hui; Choung U. Kim; Jay P. Parrish; Antitsa D. Stoycheva; S. Swaminathan; KeYu Wang; Tomas Cihlar
Cyclic phosphonomethoxy pyrimidine nucleosides that are bioisosteres of the monophosphate metabolites of HIV reverse transcriptase (RT) inhibitors AZT, d4T, and ddC have been synthesized. The RT inhibitory activities of the phosphonates were reduced for both dideoxy (dd) and dideoxydidehydro (d4) analogs compared to the nucleosides. Bis-isopropyloxymethylcarbonyl (BisPOC) prodrugs were prepared on selected compounds and provided > 150-fold improvements in antiviral activity.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013
Jay P. Parrish; Leah Tong; Michael Wang; Xiaowu Chen; Eric B. Lansdon; Carina E. Cannizzaro; Xubin Zheng; Manoj C. Desai; Lianhong Xu
A series of nevirapine-based analogues containing the phosphonate functionality were prepared and evaluated in vitro against HIV RT. The effect of the phosphonate was evaluated against the wild type and Y181C HIV replication. An in vivo PK study was performed on a select analogue.
Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2002
Jay P. Parrish; Young Chun Jung; Seung Il Shin; Kyung Woon Jung
Archive | 2009
Aesop Cho; Choung U. Kim; Jay P. Parrish; Jie Xu
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2003
Jay P. Parrish; Scott E. Wolkenberg; Yasuhiro Igarashi; Dale L. Boger
Archive | 2009
Thomas C. Butler; Aesop Cho; Choung U. Kim; Jay P. Parrish; Oliver L. Saunders; Lijun Zhang