Jill Nunez
Novartis
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jill Nunez.
Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2011
Jonathan E. Grob; Jill Nunez; Lawrence G. Hamann
The efficient preparation of heterocycles with a range of substitutions ortho to heteroatoms remains as a challenge in organic synthesis, particularly relevant to the construction of druglike molecules due to the ubiquitous presence of such moieties in that chemical space. Modular installation of heterocyclic building blocks using Suzuki-Miyaura cross-coupling is a conceptually useful strategy to address this challenge, though this has historically been met with technical difficulty due to issues of inaccessibility and instability of the requisite heterocyclic boronates. Herein we report a mild and highly regioselective cycloaddition approach which affords convenient access to stable MIDA boronate-functionalized isoxazoles and triazoles and their subsequent efficient Suzuki-Miyaura cross-coupling. This methodology is then further applied to a set of druglike compounds in an efficient one-pot telescoped sequence in line with green chemistry principles.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008
Jason Shaoyun Xiang; Zhao-Kui Wan; Huan-Qiu Li; Manus Ipek; Eva Binnun; Jill Nunez; Lihren Chen; John C. McKew; Tarek S. Mansour; Xin Xu; Vipin Suri; May Tam; Yuzhe Xing; Xiangping Li; Seung Hahm; James Tobin; Eddine Saiah
11beta-Hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1 (11beta-HSD1) is the enzyme that converts cortisone to cortisol. Evidence suggests that selective inhibition of 11beta-HSD1 could treat diabetes and metabolic syndrome. Presented herein are the synthesis, structure-activity relationship, and in vivo evaluation of piperazine sulfonamides as 11beta-HSD1 inhibitors. Through modification of our initial lead 5a, we have identified potent and selective 11beta-HSD1 inhibitors such as 13q and 13u with good pharmacokinetic properties.
Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2011
Jonathan E. Grob; Jill Nunez; Lawrence G. Hamann
Formyl-substituted aryl and heteroaryl MIDA boronates were prepared by a DMSO-free method and used in the first reported one-pot reductive amination-Suzuki-Miyaura cross-coupling sequence. This sequence was then carried out in parallel array format, using microwave-assisted in situ release cross-coupling of MIDA boronates to generate a library with diversity along two axes, affording rapid and convenient access to an array of druglike molecules.
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2014
Stefan Peukert; Richard Hughes; Jill Nunez; Guo He; Zhao Yan; Rishi K. Jain; Luis Llamas; Sarah J Luchansky; Adam Carlson; Guiqing Liang; Vidya Kunjathoor; Mike Pietropaolo; Jeffrey Shapiro; Anja Castellana; Xiaoping Wu; Avirup Bose
The identification of highly potent and orally bioavailable GPR39 agonists is reported. Compound 1, found in a phenotypic screening campaign, was transformed into compound 2 with good activity on both the rat and human GPR39 receptor. This compound was further optimized to improve ligand efficiency and pharmacokinetic properties to yield GPR39 agonists for the potential oral treatment of type 2 diabetes. Thus, compound 3 is the first potent GPR39 agonist (EC50s ≤ 1 nM for human and rat receptor) that is orally bioavailable in mice and robustly induced acute GLP-1 levels.
MedChemComm | 2011
Stefan Peukert; Jill Nunez; Feng He; Miao Dai; Naeem Yusuff; Alan Dipesa; Karen Miller-Moslin; Rajesh Karki; Bharat Lagu; Chris Harwell; Yalin Zhang; Daniel Bauer; Joseph F. Kelleher; William Egan
The energy difference between the frontier-orbital HOMO–LUMO gaps calculated for the ground state of marketed oral drugs correlated with their observed phototoxicity. This molecular descriptor, together with their maximal molar absorptivity for UV light above 290 nm, can be used to predict phototoxicity risks. This is demonstrated for the phototoxicity mitigation of 1-piperazinyl phthalazines, a class of smoothened inhibitors.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017
Grazia Piizzi; David Thomas Parker; Yunshan Peng; Markus Dobler; Anup Patnaik; Som Wattanasin; Eugene Liu; Francois Lenoir; Jill Nunez; John E. Kerrigan; David McKenney; Colin P. Osborne; Donghui Yu; Leanne Lanieri; Jade Bojkovic; JoAnn Dzink-Fox; Maria-Dawn Lilly; Elizabeth R. Sprague; Yipin Lu; Hongming Wang; Srijan Ranjitkar; Lili Xie; Bing Wang; Meir Glick; Lawrence G. Hamann; Ruben Tommasi; Xia Yang; Charles R. Dean
Over the past several decades, the frequency of antibacterial resistance in hospitals, including multidrug resistance (MDR) and its association with serious infectious diseases, has increased at alarming rates. Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a leading cause of nosocomial infections, and resistance to virtually all approved antibacterial agents is emerging in this pathogen. To address the need for new agents to treat MDR P. aeruginosa, we focused on inhibiting the first committed step in the biosynthesis of lipid A, the deacetylation of uridyldiphospho-3-O-(R-hydroxydecanoyl)-N-acetylglucosamine by the enzyme LpxC. We approached this through the design, synthesis, and biological evaluation of novel hydroxamic acid LpxC inhibitors, exemplified by 1, where cytotoxicity against mammalian cell lines was reduced, solubility and plasma-protein binding were improved while retaining potent anti-pseudomonal activity in vitro and in vivo.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2018
George Scott Tria; Tinya Abrams; Jason Baird; Heather Elizabeth Burks; Brant Firestone; L. Alex Gaither; Lawrence G. Hamann; Guo He; Christina A. Kirby; Sunkyu Kim; Franco Lombardo; Kaitlin Macchi; Donald P. McDonnell; Yuji Mishina; John D. Norris; Jill Nunez; Clayton Springer; Yingchuan Sun; Noel Marie-France Thomsen; Chunrong Wang; Jianling Wang; Bing Yu; Choi-Lai Tiong-Yip; Stefan Peukert
In breast cancer, estrogen receptor alpha (ERα) positive cancer accounts for approximately 74% of all diagnoses, and in these settings, it is a primary driver of cell proliferation. Treatment of ERα positive breast cancer has long relied on endocrine therapies such as selective estrogen receptor modulators, aromatase inhibitors, and selective estrogen receptor degraders (SERDs). The steroid-based anti-estrogen fulvestrant (5), the only approved SERD, is effective in patients who have not previously been treated with endocrine therapy as well as in patients who have progressed after receiving other endocrine therapies. Its efficacy, however, may be limited due to its poor physicochemical properties. We describe the design and synthesis of a series of potent benzothiophene-containing compounds that exhibit oral bioavailability and preclinical activity as SERDs. This article culminates in the identification of LSZ102 (10), a compound in clinical development for the treatment of ERα positive breast cancer.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017
Heather Elizabeth Burks; Tinya Abrams; Christina A. Kirby; Jason Baird; Alexander Fekete; Lawrence G. Hamann; Sunkyu Kim; Franco Lombardo; Alice Loo; Danuta Lubicka; Kaitlin Macchi; Donald P. McDonnell; Yuji Mishina; John D. Norris; Jill Nunez; Chitra Saran; Yingchuan Sun; Noel Marie-France Thomsen; Chunrong Wang; Jianling Wang; Stefan Peukert
Tetrahydroisoquinoline 40 has been identified as a potent ERα antagonist and selective estrogen receptor degrader (SERD), exhibiting good oral bioavailability, antitumor efficacy, and SERD activity in vivo. We outline the discovery and chemical optimization of the THIQ scaffold leading to THIQ 40 and showcase the racemization of the scaffold, pharmacokinetic studies in preclinical species, and the in vivo efficacy of THIQ 40 in a MCF-7 human breast cancer xenograft model.
Archive | 2015
Heather Elizabeth Burks; Rajeshri Ganesh Karki; Christina A. Kirby; Jill Nunez; Stefan Peukert; Clayton Springer; Yingchuan Sun; Noel Marie-France Thomsen
Archive | 2014
Heather Elizabeth Burks; Guo He; Jill Nunez; Stefan Peukert; Clayton Springer; Yingchuan Sun; Noel Marie-France Thomsen; George Scott Tria; Bing Yu