John M. Keith
Janssen Pharmaceutica
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Publication
Featured researches published by John M. Keith.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2014
John M. Keith; William M. Jones; Joan Pierce; Mark Seierstad; James A. Palmer; Michael Webb; Mark J. Karbarz; Brian Scott; Sandy J. Wilson; Lin Luo; Michelle Wennerholm; Leon Chang; Sean Brown; Michele Rizzolio; Raymond Rynberg; Sandra R. Chaplan; J. Guy Breitenbucher
A series of mechanism based heteroaryl urea fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) inhibitors with spirocyclic diamine cores is described. A potent member of this class, (37), was found to inhibit FAAH centrally, elevate the brain levels of three fatty acid ethanolamides [FAAs: anandamide (AEA), oleoyl ethanolamide (OEA) and palmitoyl ethanolamide (PEA)], and was moderately efficacious in a rat model of neuropathic pain.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012
Mark S. Tichenor; John M. Keith; William M. Jones; Joan Pierce; Jeff Merit; Natalie A. Hawryluk; Mark Seierstad; James A. Palmer; Michael Webb; Mark J. Karbarz; Sandy J. Wilson; Michelle Wennerholm; Filip Woestenborghs; D. Beerens; Lin Luo; Sean Brown; Marlies De Boeck; Sandra R. Chaplan; J. Guy Breitenbucher
The structure-activity relationships for a series of heteroaryl urea inhibitors of fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) are described. Members of this class of inhibitors have been shown to inactivate FAAH by covalent modification of an active site serine with subsequent release of an aromatic amine from the urea electrophile. Systematic Ames II testing guided the optimization of urea substituents by defining the structure-mutagenicity relationships for the released aromatic amine metabolites. Potent FAAH inhibitors were identified having heteroaryl amine leaving groups that were non-mutagenic in the Ames II assay.
Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2016
Jiao Song; Xuejun Liu; Jian Zhu; Mandana Tootoonchi; John M. Keith; Steven P. Meduna; Curt A. Dvorak; Wendy Eccles; Paul J. Krawczuk; Jonathan M. Blevitt; Jiejun Wu; Navin Rao; Alec D. Lebsack; Marcos E. Milla
Leukotrienes (LTs) and related species are proinflammatory lipid mediators derived from arachidonic acid (AA) that have pathological roles in autoimmune and inflammatory conditions, cardiovascular diseases, and cancer. 5-Lipoxygenase activating protein (FLAP) plays a critical accessory role in the conversion of AA to LTA4, and its subsequent conversion to LTC4 by LTC4 synthase. Pharmacological inhibition of FLAP results in a loss of LT production by preventing the biosynthesis of both LTB4 and LTC4, making it an attractive target for the treatment of inflammatory diseases in which LTs likely play a role. Small-molecule (SM) drugs often exhibit polypharmacology through various pathways, which may explain the differential therapeutic efficacies of compounds sharing structural similarity. We have profiled a series of SM FLAP modulators for their selectivity across enzymes of AA cascade in human whole blood (HWB), using a recently developed LC/MS (liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry)-based high-throughput lipidomics platform that monitors 122 eicosanoids in multiplex. Highly efficient data acquisition coupled with fast and accurate data analysis allowed facile compound profiling from ex vivo study samples. This platform allowed us to quantitatively map the effects of those SMs on the entire AA cascade, demonstrating its potential to discriminate structurally related compounds.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2016
Jonathan M. Blevitt; Michael D. Hack; Krystal Herman; Leon Chang; John M. Keith; Tara Mirzadegan; Navin Rao; Alec D. Lebsack; Marcos E. Milla
5-Lipoxygenase activating protein (FLAP) plays a critical role in the metabolism of arachidonic acid to leukotriene A4, the precursor to the potent pro-inflammatory mediators leukotriene B4 and leukotriene C4. Studies with small molecule inhibitors of FLAP have led to the discovery of a drug binding pocket on the protein surface, and several pharmaceutical companies have developed compounds and performed clinical trials. Crystallographic studies and mutational analyses have contributed to a general understanding of compound binding modes. During our own efforts, we identified two unique chemical series. One series demonstrated strong inhibition of human FLAP but differential pharmacology across species and was completely inactive in assays with mouse or rat FLAP. The other series was active across rodent FLAP, as well as human and dog FLAP. Comparison of rodent and human FLAP amino acid sequences together with an analysis of a published crystal structure led to the identification of amino acid residue 24 in the floor of the putative binding pocket as a likely candidate for the observed speciation. On that basis, we tested compounds for binding to human G24A and mouse A24G FLAP mutant variants and compared the data to that generated for wild type human and mouse FLAP. These studies confirmed that a single amino acid mutation was sufficient to reverse the speciation observed in wild type FLAP. In addition, a PK/PD method was established in canines to enable preclinical profiling of mouse-inactive compounds.
Archive | 2007
John M. Keith; Michael A. Letavic; Kiev S. Ly; Neelakandha S. Mani; John E. Mills; Chennagiri R. Pandit; Frank J. Villani; Hua Zhong
Archive | 2010
Guy J. Breitenbucher; John M. Keith; William M. Jones
Archive | 2009
Richard Apodaca; J. Guy Breitenbucher; Alison L. Chambers; Xiaohu Deng; Natalie A. Hawryluk; John M. Keith; Neelakandha S. Mani; Jeffrey E. Merit; Joan Pierce; Mark Seierstad; Wei Xiao
Archive | 2008
John M. Keith
Archive | 2006
Richard Apodaca; Ann J. Barbier; Nicholas I. Carruthers; Leslie A. Gomez; John M. Keith; Timothy W. Lovenberg; Ronald L. Wolin
Archive | 2010
Guy J. Breitenbucher; Mark S. Tichenor; Jeffrey E. Merit; Natalie A. Hawryluk; Alison L. Chambers; John M. Keith