John L. Gilmore
Bristol-Myers Squibb
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Publication
Featured researches published by John L. Gilmore.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 1999
Janet S. Plummer; Cuiman Cai; Sheryl Jeanne Hays; John L. Gilmore; Mark R. Emmerling; Walter Michael; Lakshmi Narasimhan; M. Desiree Watson; Kevin K. W. Wang; Rathna Nath; Lori M. Evans; Juan C. Jaen
A series of 2-sulfonyl-4H-3,1-benzoxazinones was prepared that inhibit C1r protease in vitro. Several compounds were found to be selective for C1r verses the related serine protease trypsin. Selected compounds demonstrated functional activity in a hemolysis assay.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016
John L. Gilmore; James E. Sheppeck; Scott H. Watterson; Lauren Haque; Parag Mukhopadhyay; Andrew J. Tebben; Michael A. Galella; Ding Ren Shen; Melissa Yarde; Mary Ellen Cvijic; Virna Borowski; Kathleen M. Gillooly; Tracy L. Taylor; Kim W. McIntyre; Bethanne M. Warrack; Paul Levesque; Julia P. Li; Georgia Cornelius; Celia D’Arienzo; Anthony Marino; Praveen Balimane; Luisa Salter-Cid; Joel C. Barrish; William J. Pitts; Percy H. Carter; Jenny Xie; Alaric J. Dyckman
Sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) is a bioactive sphingolipid metabolite that regulates a multitude of physiological processes such as lymphocyte trafficking, cardiac function, vascular development, and inflammation. Because of the ability of S1P1 receptor agonists to suppress lymphocyte egress, they have great potential as therapeutic agents in a variety of autoimmune diseases. In this article, the discovery of selective, direct acting S1P1 agonists utilizing an ethanolamine scaffold containing a terminal carboxylic acid is described. Potent S1P1 agonists such as compounds 18a and 19a which have greater than 1000-fold selectivity over S1P3 are described. These compounds efficiently reduce blood lymphocyte counts in rats through 24 h after single doses of 1 and 0.3 mpk, respectively. Pharmacodynamic properties of both compounds are discussed. Compound 19a was further studied in two preclinical models of disease, exhibiting good efficacy in both the rat adjuvant arthritis model (AA) and the mouse experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis model (EAE).
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013
James E. Sheppeck; John L. Gilmore; Hai-Yun Xiao; T. G. Murali Dhar; David S. Nirschl; Arthur M. Doweyko; Martin J. Corbett; Mary F. Malley; Jack Z. Gougoutas; Lorraine I. McKay; Mark D. Cunningham; Sium Habte; John H. Dodd; Steven G. Nadler; John E. Somerville; Joel C. Barrish
Modification of a phenolic lead structure based on lessons learned from increasing the potency of steroidal glucocorticoid agonists lead to the discovery of exceptionally potent, nonsteroidal, indazole GR agonists. SAR was developed to achieve good selectivity against other nuclear hormone receptors with the ultimate goal of achieving a dissociated GR agonist as measured by human in vitro assays. The specific interactions by which this class of compounds inhibits GR was elucidated by solving an X-ray co-crystal structure.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013
John L. Gilmore; James E. Sheppeck; Jim Wang; T. G. Murali Dhar; Cullen L. Cavallaro; Arthur M. Doweyko; Lorraine I. McKay; Mark D. Cunningham; Sium Habte; Steven G. Nadler; John H. Dodd; John E. Somerville; Joel C. Barrish
SAR was used to further develop an indazole class of non-steroidal glucocorticoid receptor agonists aided by a GR LBD (ligand-binding domain)-agonist co-crystal structure described in the accompanying paper. Progress towards discovering a dissociated GR agonist guided by human in vitro assays biased the optimization of this compound series towards partial agonists that possessed excellent selectivity against other nuclear hormone receptors.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016
Michael G. Yang; Zili Xiao; T. G. Murali Dhar; Hai-Yun Xiao; John L. Gilmore; David Marcoux; Jenny Xie; Kim W. McIntyre; Tracy L. Taylor; Virna Borowski; Elizabeth M. Heimrich; Yu-Wen Li; Jianlin Feng; Alda Fernandes; Zheng Yang; Praveen Balimane; Anthony Marino; Georgia Cornelius; Bethanne M. Warrack; Arvind Mathur; Dauh-Rurng Wu; Peng Li; Anuradha Gupta; Bala Pragalathan; Ding Ren Shen; Mary Ellen Cvijic; Lois D. Lehman-McKeeman; Luisa Salter-Cid; Joel C. Barrish; Percy H. Carter
We describe a highly efficient route for the synthesis of 4a (BMS-986104). A key step in the synthesis is the asymmetric hydroboration of trisubstituted alkene 6. Particularly given the known difficulties involved in this type of transformation (6 → 7), the current methodology provides an efficient approach to prepare this class of compounds. In addition, we disclose the efficacy of 4a in a mouse EAE model, which is comparable to 4c (FTY720). Mechanistically, 4a exhibited excellent remyelinating effects on lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC) induced demyelination in a three-dimensional brain cell culture assay.
Archive | 1997
Bradley William Caprathe; John L. Gilmore; Sheryl Jeanne Hays; Juan C. Jaen; Harry LeVine
Archive | 1997
Hans-Peter Albrecht; Hamish Allen; Kenneth Dale Brady; Bradley William Caprathe; John L. Gilmore; William Glen Harter; Sheryl J. Hays; Catherine Rose Kostlan; Elizabeth A. Lunney; Kimberly Suzanne Para; Anthony Jerome Thomas; Nigel Walker
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2007
James E. Sheppeck; John L. Gilmore; Andrew J. Tebben; Chu-Biao Xue; Rui-Qin Liu; Carl P. Decicco; James J.-W. Duan
Archive | 2003
Bryan W. King; James E. Sheppeck; John L. Gilmore
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2007
James E. Sheppeck; John L. Gilmore; Anle Yang; Xiao-Tao Chen; Chu-Biao Xue; John Roderick; Rui-Qin Liu; Maryanne B. Covington; Carl P. Decicco; James J.-W. Duan