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Dive into the research topics where Jeffrey T. Kohrt is active.

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Featured researches published by Jeffrey T. Kohrt.


Nature | 2016

Oxidative diversification of amino acids and peptides by small-molecule iron catalysis

Thomas J. Osberger; Donald C. Rogness; Jeffrey T. Kohrt; Antonia F. Stepan; M. Christina White

Secondary metabolites synthesized by non-ribosomal peptide synthetases display diverse and complex topologies and possess a range of biological activities. Much of this diversity derives from a synthetic strategy that entails pre- and post-assembly oxidation of both the chiral amino acid building blocks and the assembled peptide scaffolds. The vancomycin biosynthetic pathway is an excellent example of the range of oxidative transformations that can be performed by the iron-containing enzymes involved in its biosynthesis. However, because of the challenges associated with using such oxidative enzymes to carry out chemical transformations in vitro, chemical syntheses guided by these principles have not been fully realized in the laboratory. Here we report that two small-molecule iron catalysts are capable of facilitating the targeted C–H oxidative modification of amino acids and peptides with preservation of α-centre chirality. Oxidation of proline to 5-hydroxyproline furnishes a versatile intermediate that can be transformed to rigid arylated derivatives or flexible linear carboxylic acids, alcohols, olefins and amines in both monomer and peptide settings. The value of this C–H oxidation strategy is demonstrated in its capacity for generating diversity: four ‘chiral pool’ amino acids are transformed to twenty-one chiral unnatural amino acids representing seven distinct functional group arrays; late-stage C–H functionalizations of a single proline-containing tripeptide furnish eight tripeptides, each having different unnatural amino acids. Additionally, a macrocyclic peptide containing a proline turn element is transformed via late-stage C–H oxidation to one containing a linear unnatural amino acid.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2011

Activation of the G-protein-coupled receptor 119: a conformation-based hypothesis for understanding agonist response.

Kim F. McClure; Etzer Darout; Cristiano R. W. Guimarães; Michael Paul Deninno; Vincent Mascitti; Michael John Munchhof; Ralph P. Robinson; Jeffrey T. Kohrt; Anthony R. Harris; Dianna E. Moore; Bryan Li; Lacey Samp; Bruce Allen Lefker; Kentaro Futatsugi; Daniel Kung; Paul D. Bonin; Peter Cornelius; Ruduan Wang; Eben Salter; Sam Hornby; Amit S. Kalgutkar; Yue Chen

The synthesis and properties of the bridged piperidine (oxaazabicyclo) compounds 8, 9, and 11 are described. A conformational analysis of these structures is compared with the representative GPR119 ligand 1. These results and the differences in agonist pharmacology are used to formulate a conformation-based hypothesis to understand activation of the GPR119 receptor. We also show for these structures that the agonist pharmacology in rat masks the important differences in human pharmacology.


Angewandte Chemie | 2016

Fluorodecarboxylation for the Synthesis of Trifluoromethyl Aryl Ethers

Qing‐Wei Zhang; Andrew T. Brusoe; Vincent Mascitti; Kevin D. Hesp; David C. Blakemore; Jeffrey T. Kohrt; John F. Hartwig

The synthesis of mono-, di-, and trifluoromethyl aryl ethers by fluorodecarboxylation of the corresponding carboxylic acids is reported. AgF2 induces decarboxylation of aryloxydifluoroacetic acids, and AgF, either generated in situ or added separately, serves as a source of fluorine to generate the fluorodecarboxylation products. The addition of 2,6-difluoropyridine increased the reactivity of AgF2 , thereby increasing the range of functional groups and electronic properties of the aryl groups that are tolerated. The reaction conditions used for the formation of trifluoromethyl aryl ethers also served to form difluoromethyl and monofluoromethyl aryl ethers.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

Identification of potent, selective, CNS-targeted inverse agonists of the ghrelin receptor

Kim F. McClure; Margaret Jackson; Kimberly O'keefe Cameron; Daniel W. Kung; David Austen Perry; Suvi T. M. Orr; Yingxin Zhang; Jeffrey T. Kohrt; Meihua Tu; Hua Gao; Dilinie P. Fernando; Ryan Jones; Noe Erasga; Guoqiang Wang; Jana Polivkova; Wenhua Jiao; Roger Swartz; Hirokazu Ueno; Samit Kumar Bhattacharya; Ingrid A. Stock; Sam Varma; Victoria Bagdasarian; Sylvie Perez; Dawn Kelly-Sullivan; Ruduan Wang; Jimmy Kong; Peter Cornelius; Laura Michael; Eunsun Lee; Ann M. Janssen

The optimization for selectivity and central receptor occupancy for a series of spirocyclic azetidine-piperidine inverse agonists of the ghrelin receptor is described. Decreased mAChR muscarinic M2 binding was achieved by use of a chiral indane in place of a substituted benzylic group. Compounds with desirable balance of human in vitro clearance and ex vivo central receptor occupancy were discovered by incorporation of heterocycles. Specifically, heteroaryl rings with nitrogen(s) vicinal to the indane linkage provided the most attractive overall properties.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

Novel and selective spiroindoline-based inhibitors of sky kinase

Noel A. Powell; Jeffrey T. Kohrt; Kevin J. Filipski; Michael Kaufman; Derek James Sheehan; Jeremy E. Edmunds; Amy Delaney; Yuli Wang; Francis Bourbonais; Doh-Yeel Lee; Frank Schwende; Fang Sun; Pat McConnell; Cornel Catana; Huifen Chen; Jeff Ohren; Lisa A. Perrin

We report the discovery of a novel series of spiroindoline-based inhibitors of Sky kinase that bind in the ATP-binding site and exhibit high levels of kinome selectivity through filling the Ala571-subpocket. These inhibitors exhibit moderate oral bioavailability in the rat due to low absorption across the gut wall.


Chemical Research in Toxicology | 2011

Intrinsic electrophilicity of a 4-substituted-5-cyano-6-(2-methylpyridin-3-yloxy)pyrimidine derivative: structural characterization of glutathione conjugates in vitro.

Amit S. Kalgutkar; Vincent Mascitti; Raman Sharma; Gregory W. Walker; Tim Ryder; Thomas S. McDonald; Yue Chen; Cathy Préville; Arindrajit Basak; Kim F. McClure; Jeffrey T. Kohrt; Ralph P. Robinson; Michael John Munchhof; Peter Cornelius

Isopropyl 9-anti-[5-cyano-6-(2-methyl-pyridin-3-yloxy)-pyrimidin-4-yloxy]-3-oxa-7-aza-bicyclo[3.3.1]nonane-7-carboxylate (1) represents a prototypic compound from a lead chemical series of G protein-coupled receptor 119 agonists, intended for treatment of type 2 diabetes. When compound 1 was incubated with NADPH-supplemented human liver microsomes in the presence of glutathione, two thioether conjugates M4-1 and M5-1 were observed. Omission of NADPH from the microsomal incubations prevented the formation of M5-1 but not M4-1. The formation of M4-1 was also discerned in incubations of 1 and glutathione with human liver cytosol, partially purified glutathione transferase, and in phosphate buffer at pH 7.4. M4-1 was isolated, and its structure ascertained from LC-MS/MS and NMR analysis. The mass spectral and NMR data suggested that M4-1 was obtained from a nucleophilic displacement of the 6-(2-methylpyridin-3-yloxy) group in 1 by glutathione. In addition, mass spectral studies revealed that M5-1 was derived from an analogous displacement reaction on a monohydroxylated metabolite of 1; the regiochemistry of hydroxylation was established to be on the isopropyl group. Of great interest were the findings that replacement of the 5-cyano group in 1 with a 5-methyl group resulted in 2, which was practically inert toward reaction with glutathione. This observation suggests that the electron-withdrawing potential of the C5 cyano group serves to increase the electrophilicity of the C6 carbon (via stabilization of the transition state) and favors reaction with the nucleophilic thiol. The mechanistic insights gained from these studies should assist medicinal chemistry efforts toward the design of analogs that retain primary pharmacology but are latent toward reaction with biological nucleophiles, thus mitigating the potential for toxicological outcome due to adduction with glutathione or proteins.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2009

Exploration of 4,4-disubstituted pyrrolidine-1,2-dicarboxamides as potent, orally active Factor Xa inhibitors with extended duration of action.

Chad A. Van Huis; Agustin Casimiro-Garcia; Christopher F. Bigge; Wayne L. Cody; Danette Andrea Dudley; Kevin J. Filipski; Ronald J. Heemstra; Jeffrey T. Kohrt; Robert J. Leadley; Lakshmi Narasimhan; Thomas McClanahan; Igor Mochalkin; Michael Pamment; J. Thomas Peterson; Vaishali Sahasrabudhe; Robert P. Schaum; Jeremy J. Edmunds

Aiming to improve upon previously disclosed Factor Xa inhibitors, a series of 4,4-disubstituted pyrrolidine-1,2-dicarboxamides were explored with the intent of increasing the projected human half-life versus 5 (projected human t(1/2)=6 h). A stereospecific route to compounds containing a 4-aryl-4-hydroxypyrrolidine scaffold was developed, resulting in several compounds that demonstrated an increase in the half-life as well as an increase in the in vitro potency compared to 5. Reported herein is the discovery of 26, containing a (2R,4S)-4-hydroxy-4-(2,4-difluorophenyl)-pyrrolidine scaffold, which is a selective, orally bioavailable, efficacious Factor Xa inhibitor that appears suitable for a once-daily dosing (projected human t(1/2)=23 h).


Chemical Biology & Drug Design | 2007

Structure-based Drug Design of Pyrrolidine-1, 2-dicarboxamides as a Novel Series of Orally Bioavailable Factor Xa Inhibitors

Chad A. Van Huis; Christopher F. Bigge; Agustin Casimiro-Garcia; Wayne L. Cody; Danette Andrea Dudley; Kevin J. Filipski; Ronald J. Heemstra; Jeffrey T. Kohrt; Lakshmi Narasimhan; Robert P. Schaum; Erli Zhang; John W. Bryant; Staci Haarer; Nancy Janiczek; Robert J. Leadley; Thomas McClanahan; J. Thomas Peterson; Kathleen M. Welch; Jeremy J. Edmunds

A novel series of pyrrolidine‐1,2‐dicarboxamides was discovered as factor Xa inhibitors using structure‐based drug design. This series consisted of a neutral 4‐chlorophenylurea P1, a biphenylsulfonamide P4 and a d‐proline scaffold (1, IC50 = 18 nm). Optimization of the initial hit resulted in an orally bioavailable, subnanomolar inhibitor of factor Xa (13, IC50 = 0.38 nm), which was shown to be efficacious in a canine electrolytic model of thrombosis with minimal bleeding.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

Optimization of highly selective 2,4-diaminopyrimidine-5-carboxamide inhibitors of Sky kinase.

Noel A. Powell; Jennifer K. Hoffman; Fred L. Ciske; Jeffrey T. Kohrt; Sangita M. Baxi; Yun-Wen Peng; Min Zhong; Cornel Catana; Jeff Ohren; Lisa A. Perrin; Jeremy J. Edmunds

Optimization of the ADME properties of a series of 2,4-diaminopyrimidine-5-carboxamide inhibitors of Sky kinase resulted in the identification of highly selective compounds with properties suitable for use as in vitro and in vivo tools to probe the effects of Sky inhibition.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

Highly selective 2,4-diaminopyrimidine-5-carboxamide inhibitors of Sky kinase.

Noel A. Powell; Jennifer K. Hoffman; Fred L. Ciske; Michael Kaufman; Jeffrey T. Kohrt; John Quin; Derek James Sheehan; Amy Delaney; Sangita M. Baxi; Cornel Catana; Patrick McConnell; Jeff Ohren; Lisa A. Perrin; Jeremy J. Edmunds

We report the SAR around a series of 2,4-diaminopyrimidine-5-carboxamide inhibitors of Sky kinase. 2-Aminophenethyl analogs demonstrate excellent potency but moderate kinase selectivity, while 2-aminobenzyl analogs that fill the Ala571 subpocket exhibit good inhibition activity and excellent kinase selectivity.

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