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Dive into the research topics where Joel B. Yudkovitz is active.

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Featured researches published by Joel B. Yudkovitz.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2001

Orally bioavailable, indole-based nonpeptide GnRH receptor antagonists with high potency and functional activity

Wallace T. Ashton; Rosemary Sisco; Gerard R. Kieczykowski; Yi Tien Yang; Joel B. Yudkovitz; Jisong Cui; George R. Mount; Rena Ning Ren; Tsuei-Ju Wu; Xiaolan Shen; Kathryn A. Lyons; An-Hua Mao; Josephine R. Carlin; Bindhu V. Karanam; Stella H. Vincent; Kang Cheng; Mark T. Goulet

Stereospecific introduction of a methyl group to the indole-3-side chain enhanced activity in our tryptamine-derived series of GnRH receptor antagonists. Further improvements were achieved by variation of the bicyclic amino moiety of the tertiary amide and by adjustment of the tether length to a pyridine or pyridone terminus. These modifications culminated in analogue 24, which had oral activity in a rat model and acceptable oral bioavailability and half-life in dogs and monkeys.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2000

Potent antagonists of gonadotropin releasing hormone receptors derived from quinolone-6-carboxamides

Thomas F. Walsh; Richard B. Toupence; Jonathan R. Young; Song X. Huang; Feroze Ujjainwalla; Robert J. DeVita; Mark T. Goulet; Matthew J. Wyvratt; Michael H. Fisher; Jane-Ling Lo; Ning Ren; Joel B. Yudkovitz; Yi Tien Yang; Kang Cheng; Roy G. Smith

SAR studies which focused upon the C-6 position of a recently described series of quinolone gonadotropin releasing hormone antagonists are reported. Synthetic access to diverse quinolone-6-carboxamides was achieved via the palladium-catalyzed amino-carbonylation reactions of iodide 4 with various amines. Amides related to 9y were especially potent, functional antagonists of rat and human GnRH receptors.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2001

Substituted indole-5-carboxamides and -acetamides as potent nonpeptide GnRH receptor antagonists.

Wallace T. Ashton; Rosemary Sisco; Yi Tien Yang; Jane-Ling Lo; Joel B. Yudkovitz; Kang Cheng; Mark T. Goulet

The 2-aryltryptamine class of GnRH receptor antagonists has been modified to incorporate carboxamide and acetamide substituents at the indole 5-position. With either a phenol or methanesulfonamide terminus on the N-aralkyl side chain, potent binding affinity to the GnRH receptor was achieved. A functional assay for GnRH antagonism was even more sensitive to structural modification and revealed a strong preference for branched tertiary amides.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2001

Potent nonpeptide GnRH receptor antagonists derived from substituted indole-5-carboxamides and -acetamides bearing a pyridine side-chain terminus

Wallace T. Ashton; Rosemary Sisco; Yi Tien Yang; Jane-Ling Lo; Joel B. Yudkovitz; Patrice H. Gibbons; George R. Mount; Rena Ning Ren; Bridget Butler; Kang Cheng; Mark T. Goulet

A pyridine side-chain terminus has been incorporated into the indole-5-carboxamide and indole-5-acetamide series of GnRH antagonists. Potent activity was observed in binding and functional assays. Certain branched or cyclic tertiary amides were identified as preferred in each series. Alkylation of the side-chain secondary amine had generally unfavorable effects. Variations of the gem-dialkyl substituents in the indole-5-acetamide series were also investigated.


Endocrinology | 2002

Identification and Characterization of a Functionally Distinct Form of Human Estrogen Receptor β

Hilary A. Wilkinson; Johanna Dahllund; Hao Liu; Joel B. Yudkovitz; Sheng-Jian Cai; Stefan Nilsson; James M. Schaeffer; Sudha W. Mitra

Estrogen receptors are important for the development and maintenance of many different tissues in the body including the breast, uterus, brain and bone. There are two known genes encoding estrogen receptors, Estrogen Receptor alpha (ERα) and Estrogen Receptor beta (ERβ). These receptors are transcription factors with distinct functional domains involved in DNA binding, ligand binding and transcriptional regulation. A novel isoform of human ERβ (ERβ548) which includes an extended amino terminal domain has been identified. Isoform specific antibodies confirm the presence of this receptor in human tissue. Transactivation analysis with different estrogenic ligands indicates that ERβ548 is functionally distinct from previously reported forms of ERβ.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2002

2-Arylindoles as gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) antagonists: optimization of the tryptamine side chain

Jonathan R. Young; Song X. Huang; Thomas F. Walsh; Matthew J. Wyvratt; Yi Tien Yang; Joel B. Yudkovitz; Jisong Cui; George R. Mount; Rena Ning Ren; Tsuei-Ju Wu; Xiaolan Shen; Kathryn A. Lyons; An-Hua Mao; Josephine R. Carlin; Bindhu V. Karanam; Stella H. Vincent; Kang Cheng; Mark T. Goulet

A series of 2-arylindoles containing novel heteroaromatic substituents on the tryptamine tether, based on compound 1, was prepared and evaluated for their ability to act as gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) antagonists. Successful modifications of 1 included chain length variation (reduction) and replacement of the pyridine with heteroaromatic groups. These alterations culminated in the discovery of compound 27kk which had excellent in vitro potency and oral efficacy in rodents.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2000

Quinolones as gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) antagonists: simultaneous optimization of the C(3)-aryl and C(6)-substituents

Jonathan R. Young; Song X. Huang; Irene Chen; Thomas F. Walsh; Robert J. DeVita; Matthew J. Wyvratt; Mark T. Goulet; Ning Ren; Jane Lo; Yi Tien Yang; Joel B. Yudkovitz; Kang Cheng; Roy G. Smith

A series of 3-arylquinolones was prepared and evaluated for their ability to act as gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) antagonists. A variety of substitution patterns of the 3-aryl substituent are described. The 3,4,5-trimethylphenyl substituent (23h) was found to be optimal.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2002

Modification of the pyridine moiety of non-peptidyl indole GnRH receptor antagonists

Joseph P. Simeone; Robert L. Bugianesi; Mitree M. Ponpipom; Yi Tien Yang; Jane-Ling Lo; Joel B. Yudkovitz; Jisong Cui; George R. Mount; Rena Ning Ren; Mellissa Creighton; An-Hua Mao; Stella H. Vincent; Kang Cheng; Mark T. Goulet

The synthesis of a number of indole GnRH antagonists is described. Oxidation of the pyridine ring nitrogen, combined with alkylation at the two position, led to a compound with an excellent in vitro activity profile as well as oral bioavailability in both rats and dogs.


Neuropharmacology | 2012

Selective estrogen receptor-beta (SERM-beta) compounds modulate raphe nuclei tryptophan hydroxylase-1 (TPH-1) mRNA expression and cause antidepressant-like effects in the forced swim test

Janet Clark; S. Alves; C. Gundlah; B. Rocha; Elizabeth T. Birzin; S.-J. Cai; Rosemarie Beth Flick; Edward C. Hayes; K. Ho; Sudha Warrier; Lee-Yuh Pai; Joel B. Yudkovitz; R. Fleischer; Lawrence F. Colwell; Susan Li; Hilary A. Wilkinson; James M. Schaeffer; R. Wilkening; E. Mattingly; Milton L. Hammond; Susan P. Rohrer

Estrogen acts through two molecularly distinct receptors termed estrogen receptor alpha (ERα) and estrogen receptor beta (ERβ) which bind estradiol with similar affinities and mediate the effects of estrogen throughout the body. ERα plays a major role in reproductive physiology and behavior, and mediates classic estrogen signaling in such tissues as the uterus, mammary gland, and skeleton. ERβ, however, modulates estrogen signaling in the ovary, the immune system, prostate, gastrointestinal tract, and hypothalamus, and there is some evidence that ERβ can regulate ERα activity. Moreover, ERβ knockout studies and receptor distribution analyses in the CNS suggest that this receptor may play a role in the modulation of mood and cognition. In recent years several ERβ-specific compounds (selective estrogen receptor beta modulators; SERM-beta) have become available, and research suggests potential utility of these compounds in menopausal symptom relief, breast cancer prevention, diseases that have an inflammatory component, osteoporosis, cardiovascular disease, and inflammatory bowel disease, as well as modulation of mood, and anxiety. Here we demonstrate an antidepressant-like effect obtained using two SERM-beta compounds, SERM-beta1 and SERM-beta2. These compounds exhibit full agonist activity at ERβ in a cell based estrogen response element (ERE) transactivation assay. SERM-beta1 and 2 are non-proliferative with respect to breast as determined using the MCF-7 breast cancer cell-based assay and non-proliferative in the uterus as determined by assessing the effects of SERM-beta compounds on immature rat uterine weight and murine uterine weight. In vivo SERM-beta1 and 2 are brain penetrant and display dose dependent efficacy in the murine dorsal raphe assays for induction of tryptophan hydroxylase mRNA and progesterone receptor protein. These compounds show activity in the murine forced swim test and promote hippocampal neurogenesis acutely in rats. Taken together these data suggest that ERβ may play an important role in modulating mood and the ERβ specific compounds described herein will be useful tools for probing the utility of an ERβ agonist for treating neuroendocrine-related mood disturbance and menopausal symptoms.


Tetrahedron Letters | 1991

Synthesis of δ-lactone, oxetane and azetidinone analogs from the naturally occurring β-lactone L-659,699. The preparation of a novel HMG CoA synthase inhibitor.

Kathryn L. Thompson; Michael N. Chang; Yuan-Ching P. Chiang; Shu Shu Yang; John C. Chabala; Byron H. Arison; Michael D. Greenspan; Darlene P. Hanf; Joel B. Yudkovitz

Abstract A series of δ-lactone ( 1 and 2 ), oxetane ( 3 ) and azetidinone ( 4 and 5 ) analogs were prepared from the HMG CoA synthase inhibitor L-659,699 ((E,E)-11-[3′R-(hydroxymethyl)-4′-oxo-2′R-oxetanyl]-3,5,7R- trimethyl-2,4-undecadienoic acid 1,2 ), which maintained the trans relationship of the ring side chains. The N-tosyl azetidinone analog represents the first reported member of a new series of non β-lactone HMG CoA synthase inhibitors.

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