John C. Pettersen
Pfizer
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Featured researches published by John C. Pettersen.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012
Jeffrey A. Pfefferkorn; Angel Guzman-Perez; John Litchfield; Robert J. Aiello; Judith L. Treadway; John C. Pettersen; Martha L. Minich; Kevin J. Filipski; Christopher S. Jones; Meihua Tu; Gary E. Aspnes; Hud Risley; Jianwei Bian; Benjamin D. Stevens; Patricia Bourassa; Theresa D’Aquila; Levenia Baker; Nicole Barucci; Alan Robertson; Francis Bourbonais; David R. Derksen; Margit MacDougall; Over Cabrera; Jing Chen; Amanda Lee Lapworth; James A. Landro; William J. Zavadoski; Karen Atkinson; Nahor Haddish-Berhane; Beijing Tan
Glucokinase is a key regulator of glucose homeostasis, and small molecule allosteric activators of this enzyme represent a promising opportunity for the treatment of type 2 diabetes. Systemically acting glucokinase activators (liver and pancreas) have been reported to be efficacious but in many cases present hypoglycaemia risk due to activation of the enzyme at low glucose levels in the pancreas, leading to inappropriately excessive insulin secretion. It was therefore postulated that a liver selective activator may offer effective glycemic control with reduced hypoglycemia risk. Herein, we report structure-activity studies on a carboxylic acid containing series of glucokinase activators with preferential activity in hepatocytes versus pancreatic β-cells. These activators were designed to have low passive permeability thereby minimizing distribution into extrahepatic tissues; concurrently, they were also optimized as substrates for active liver uptake via members of the organic anion transporting polypeptide (OATP) family. These studies lead to the identification of 19 as a potent glucokinase activator with a greater than 50-fold liver-to-pancreas ratio of tissue distribution in rodent and non-rodent species. In preclinical diabetic animals, 19 was found to robustly lower fasting and postprandial glucose with no hypoglycemia, leading to its selection as a clinical development candidate for treating type 2 diabetes.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2011
Vincent Mascitti; Tristan S. Maurer; Ralph P. Robinson; Jianwei Bian; Carine M. Boustany-Kari; Thomas A. Brandt; Benjamin Micah Collman; Amit S. Kalgutkar; Michelle K. Klenotic; Michael T. Leininger; André Lowe; Robert John Maguire; Victoria M. Masterson; Zhuang Miao; Emi Mukaiyama; Jigna D. Patel; John C. Pettersen; Cathy Préville; Brian Samas; Li She; Zhanna Sobol; Claire M. Steppan; Benjamin D. Stevens; Benjamin A. Thuma; Meera Tugnait; Dongxiang Zeng; Tong Zhu
Compound 4 (PF-04971729) belongs to a new class of potent and selective sodium-dependent glucose cotransporter 2 inhibitors incorporating a unique dioxa-bicyclo[3.2.1]octane (bridged ketal) ring system. In this paper we present the design, synthesis, preclinical evaluation, and human dose predictions related to 4. This compound demonstrated robust urinary glucose excretion in rats and an excellent preclinical safety profile. It is currently in phase 2 clinical trials and is being evaluated for the treatment of type 2 diabetes.
MedChemComm | 2011
Jeffrey A. Pfefferkorn; Angel Guzman-Perez; Peter J. Oates; John Litchfield; Gary E. Aspnes; Arindrajit Basak; John William Benbow; Martin A. Berliner; Jianwei Bian; Chulho Choi; Kevin Daniel Freeman-Cook; Jeffrey W. Corbett; Mary Theresa Didiuk; Joshua R. Dunetz; Kevin J. Filipski; William M. Hungerford; Christopher S. Jones; Kapil Karki; Anthony Lai Ling; Jian-Cheng Li; Leena Patel; Christian Perreault; Hud Risley; James Saenz; Wei Song; Meihua Tu; Robert J. Aiello; Karen Atkinson; Nicole Barucci; David A. Beebe
Glucokinase is a key regulator of glucose homeostasis and small molecule activators of this enzyme represent a promising opportunity for the treatment of Type 2 diabetes. Several glucokinase activators have advanced to clinical studies and demonstrated promising efficacy; however, many of these early candidates also revealed hypoglycemia as a key risk. In an effort to mitigate this hypoglycemia risk while maintaining the promising efficacy of this mechanism, we have investigated a series of substituted 2-methylbenzofurans as “partial activators” of the glucokinase enzyme leading to the identification of N,N-dimethyl-5-(2-methyl-6-((5-methylpyrazin-2-yl)-carbamoyl)benzofuran-4-yloxy)pyrimidine-2-carboxamide as an early development candidate.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2002
Philip A. Carpino; Bruce Allen Lefker; Steven M. Toler; Lydia Codetta Pan; John R. Hadcock; Marianne C. Murray; Ewell R. Cook; Joseph DiBrino; Shari L. DeNinno; Kristin L. Chidsey-Frink; William A. Hada; John Inthavongsay; Sharon K. Lewis; F.Michael Mangano; Michelle A. Mullins; David F. Nickerson; Oicheng Ng; C.M. Pirie; John A. Ragan; Colin R. Rose; David A. Tess; Ann S. Wright; Li Yu; Michael P. Zawistoski; John C. Pettersen; Paul DaSilva-Jardine; Theresa C. Wilson; David Duane Thompson
New tert-butyl, picolyl and fluorinated analogues of capromorelin (3), a short-acting growth hormone secretagogue (GHS), were prepared as part of a program to identify long-acting GHSs that increase 24-h plasma IGF-1 levels. Compounds 4c and 4d (ACD LogD values >or=2.9) displayed extended plasma elimination half-lives in dogs, primarily due to high volumes of distribution, but showed weak GH secretagogue activities in rats (ED(50)s>10 mg/kg). A less lipophilic derivative 4 (ACD LogD=1.6) exhibited a shorter canine half-life, but stimulated GH secretion in two animal species. Repeat oral dosing of 4 in dogs for 29 days (6 mg/kg) resulted in a significant down-regulation of the post dose GH response and a 60 and 40% increase in IGF-1 levels relative to pre-dose levels at the 8- and 24-h post dose time points. Compound 4 (CP-464709-18) has been selected as a development candidate for the treatment of frailty.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015
Kentaro Futatsugi; Daniel W. Kung; Suvi T. M. Orr; Shawn Cabral; David Hepworth; Gary E. Aspnes; Scott Bader; Jianwei Bian; Markus Boehm; Philip A. Carpino; Steven B. Coffey; Matthew S. Dowling; Michael Herr; Wenhua Jiao; Sophie Y. Lavergne; Qifang Li; Ronald W. Clark; Derek M. Erion; Kou Kou; Kyuha Lee; Brandon Pabst; Sylvie Perez; Julie Purkal; Csilla C. Jorgensen; Theunis C. Goosen; James R. Gosset; Mark Niosi; John C. Pettersen; Jeffrey A. Pfefferkorn; Kay Ahn
The medicinal chemistry and preclinical biology of imidazopyridine-based inhibitors of diacylglycerol acyltransferase 2 (DGAT2) is described. A screening hit 1 with low lipophilic efficiency (LipE) was optimized through two key structural modifications: (1) identification of the pyrrolidine amide group for a significant LipE improvement, and (2) insertion of a sp(3)-hybridized carbon center in the core of the molecule for simultaneous improvement of N-glucuronidation metabolic liability and off-target pharmacology. The preclinical candidate 9 (PF-06424439) demonstrated excellent ADMET properties and decreased circulating and hepatic lipids when orally administered to dyslipidemic rodent models.
Toxicologic Pathology | 2012
John C. Pettersen; Ingrid Pruimboom-Brees; Omar L. Francone; David E. Amacher; Sherri E. Boldt; Roy L. Kerlin; William E. Ballinger
Weak peroxisome proliferator–activated receptor (PPAR) α agonists (fibrates) are used to treat dyslipidemia. This study compared the effects of the potent and selective PPARα agonist CP-778875 on peroxisomal β-oxidation and cardiac and/or skeletal muscle injury with those of the weak PPARα agonist fenofibrate. We hypothesized that these muscle effects are mediated through the PPARα receptor, leading to increased β-oxidation and consequent oxidative stress. CP-778875 (5 or 500 mg/kg) and fenofibrate (600 or 2,000→1,200 mg/kg, dose lowered because of intolerance) were administered to rats for six weeks. Standard end points, serum troponin I, heart and skeletal muscle β-oxidation of palmitoyl-CoA, and acyl co-oxidase (AOX) mRNA were assessed. Both compounds dose-dependently increased the incidence and/or severity of cardiomyocyte degeneration and necrosis, heart weight, troponin I, and skeletal muscle degeneration. Mean heart β-oxidation (3.4- to 5.1-fold control) and AOX mRNA (2.4- to 3.2-fold control) were increased with CP-778875 500 mg/kg and both doses of fenofibrate. β-Oxidation of skeletal muscle was not affected by either compound; however, a significant increase in AOX mRNA (1.6- to 2.1-fold control) was observed with CP-778875 500 mg/kg and both doses of fenofibrate. Taken together, these findings were consistent with PPARα agonism and support the link between increased cardiac and skeletal muscle β-oxidation and resultant muscle injury in the rat.
Toxicologic Pathology | 2008
John C. Pettersen; Luc Chouinard; Roy L. Kerlin; Simon N. Groom; Suzanne Botts; Joseph C. Arezzo; Mary A. Boucher; Donald E. Frazier; Allan R. Buchholz
Zoniporide, an inhibitor of the Na+-H+ exchanger-1, was administered by continuous intravenous infusion to rats and dogs for up to 1 month. In 1-month studies, histological and functional changes were observed in select portions of the peripheral nervous system; however, these findings were not detected in 2-week studies at similar or higher doses. In the 1-month rat study, there was dose-dependent, minimal, focal, or multifocal nerve fiber (axonal) degeneration in the spinal cord and/or sciatic nerve. In a follow-up rat study, findings included slowing of caudal nerve conduction velocity and axonal degeneration in the spinal cord (dorsal funiculus), dorsal roots, dorsal root ganglia (DRG), radial, sciatic, and tibial nerves. In the 1-month dog study, there was impairment of the patellar reflex and associated postural reaction changes, minimal to marked proximal nerve fiber degeneration in the DRG, and minimal nerve fiber degeneration in the dorsal roots and funiculi of the spinal cord. Minimal nerve fiber degeneration of equivocal significance was noted in various peripheral nerves. Taken together, these findings were consistent with a specific effect on peripheral sensory nerve fibers. These studies demonstrated that zoniporide produces clinical, electrophysiologic, and microscopic evidence of peripheral sensory axonopathy and establishes the importance of careful preclinical evaluation of neurological function.
Toxicologic Pathology | 2014
John C. Pettersen; John Litchfield; Natasha Neef; Stephen P. Schmidt; Norimitsu Shirai; Karen Walters; Bradley E. Enerson; Linda A. Chatman; Jeffrey A. Pfefferkorn
Glucokinase activators (GKAs) are being developed for the treatment of type 2 diabetes. The toxicity of 4 GKAs (PF-04279405, PF-04651887, piragliatin, and PF-04937319) was assessed in mice, rats, dogs, and/or monkeys. GKAs were administered for 2 to 8 weeks. Standard endpoints, glucose, and insulin were assessed. All compounds produced varying degrees of hypoglycemia in all species. Brain neuronal necrosis and/or peripheral neuropathy were observed with most compounds. These findings are consistent with literature reports linking hypoglycemia with nervous system effects. Arteriopathy, mainly of cardiac vessels, was observed at a low frequency in monkey and/or dog. Arteriopathy occurred only at doses that produced severe and prolonged periods of repeated hypoglycemia. Since this lesion occurred in multiple studies with structurally distinct GKAs, these results suggested arteriopathy was related to GKA pharmacology. The morphological characteristics of the arteriopathy were consistent with that produced by experimental catecholamine administration. We hypothesize that the prolonged periods of hypoglycemia resulted in increased local and/or systemic concentrations of catecholamines via a counterregulatory and/or stress-related mechanism. Alternatively, prolonged hypoglycemia may have resulted in endothelial dysfunction leading to arteriopathy. This risk can be managed in human patients in clinical studies by careful glucose monitoring and intervention to avoid prolonged episodes of hypoglycemia.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013
Benjamin D. Stevens; John Litchfield; Jeffrey A. Pfefferkorn; Karen Atkinson; Christian Perreault; Paul Amor; Kevin B. Bahnck; Martin A. Berliner; Jessica Calloway; Anthony A. Carlo; David R. Derksen; Kevin J. Filipski; Mike Gumkowski; Charanjeet Jassal; Margit MacDougall; Brendan John Murphy; Paul Nkansah; John C. Pettersen; Charles J. Rotter; Yan Zhang
Glucokinase (hexokinase IV) continues to be a compelling target for the treatment of type 2 diabetes given the wealth of supporting human genetics data and numerous reports of robust clinical glucose lowering in patients treated with small molecule allosteric activators. Recent work has demonstrated the ability of hepatoselective activators to deliver glucose lowering efficacy with minimal risk of hypoglycemia. While orally administered agents require a considerable degree of passive permeability to promote suitable exposures, there is no such restriction on intravenously delivered drugs. Therefore, minimization of membrane diffusion in the context of an intravenously agent should ensure optimal hepatic targeting and therapeutic index. This work details the identification a hepatoselective GKA exhibiting the aforementioned properties.
Drug Metabolism and Disposition | 2014
Raman Sharma; John Litchfield; Karen Atkinson; Heather Eng; Neeta B. Amin; William S. Denney; John C. Pettersen; Theunis C. Goosen; Li Di; Esther Cheng Yin Lee; Jeffrey A. Pfefferkorn; Deepak Dalvie; Amit S. Kalgutkar
The present article summarizes Metabolites in Safety Testing (MIST) studies on a glucokinase activator, N,N-dimethyl-5-((2-methyl-6-((5-methylpyrazin-2-yl)carbamoyl)benzofuran-4-yl)oxy)pyrimidine-2-carboxamide (PF-04937319), which is under development for the treatment of type 2 diametes mellitus. Metabolic profiling in rat, dog, and human hepatocytes revealed that PF-04937319 is metabolized via oxidative (major) and hydrolytic pathways (minor). N-Demethylation to metabolite M1 [N-methyl-5-((2-methyl-6-((5-methylpyrazin-2-yl)carbamoyl)benzofuran-4-yl)oxy)pyrimidine-2-carboxamide] was the major metabolic fate of PF-04937319 in human (but not rat or dog) hepatocytes, and was catalyzed by CYP3A and CYP2C isoforms. Qualitative examination of circulating metabolites in humans at the 100- and 300-mg doses from a 14-day multiple dose study revealed unchanged parent drug and M1 as principal components. Because M1 accounted for 65% of the drug-related material at steady state, an authentic standard was synthesized and used for comparison of steady-state exposures in humans and the 3-month safety studies in rats and dogs at the no-observed-adverse-effect level. Although circulating levels of M1 were very low in beagle dogs and female rats, adequate coverage was obtained in terms of total maximal plasma concentration (∼7.7× and 1.8×) and area under the plasma concentration-time curve (AUC; 3.6× and 0.8× AUC) relative to the 100- and 300-mg doses, respectively, in male rats. Examination of primary pharmacology revealed M1 was less potent as a glucokinase activator than the parent drug (compound PF-04937319: EC50 = 0.17 μM; M1: EC50 = 4.69 μM). Furthermore, M1 did not inhibit major human P450 enzymes (IC50 > 30 μM), and was negative in the Salmonella Ames assay, with minimal off-target pharmacology, based on CEREP broad ligand profiling. Insights gained from this analysis should lead to a more efficient and focused development plan for fulfilling MIST requirements with PF-04937319.