John W. Cuozzo
GlaxoSmithKline
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Publication
Featured researches published by John W. Cuozzo.
Nature Chemical Biology | 2009
Matthew A. Clark; Raksha A. Acharya; Christopher C. Arico-Muendel; Svetlana L. Belyanskaya; Dennis R Benjamin; Neil R Carlson; Paolo A. Centrella; Cynthia H. Chiu; Steffen Phillip Creaser; John W. Cuozzo; Christopher P. Davie; Yun Ding; G. Joseph Franklin; Kurt D Franzen; Malcolm L. Gefter; Steven P Hale; Nils Jakob Vest Hansen; David I. Israel; Jinwei Jiang; Malcolm J. Kavarana; Michael Kelley; Christopher S. Kollmann; Fan Li; Kenneth Lind; Sibongile Mataruse; Patricia F Medeiros; Jeffrey A. Messer; Paul Myers; Heather O'Keefe; Matthew C Oliff
Biochemical combinatorial techniques such as phage display, RNA display and oligonucleotide aptamers have proven to be reliable methods for generation of ligands to protein targets. Adapting these techniques to small synthetic molecules has been a long-sought goal. We report the synthesis and interrogation of an 800-million-member DNA-encoded library in which small molecules are covalently attached to an encoding oligonucleotide. The library was assembled by a combination of chemical and enzymatic synthesis, and interrogated by affinity selection. We describe methods for the selection and deconvolution of the chemical display library, and the discovery of inhibitors for two enzymes: Aurora A kinase and p38 MAP kinase.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013
Jeremy S. Disch; Ghotas Evindar; Cynthia H. Chiu; Charles A. Blum; Han Dai; Lei Jin; Kenneth Lind; Svetlana L. Belyanskaya; Jianghe Deng; Frank T. Coppo; Leah Aquilani; Todd L. Graybill; John W. Cuozzo; Siva Lavu; Cheney Mao; George P. Vlasuk; Robert B. Perni
The sirtuins SIRT1, SIRT2, and SIRT3 are NAD(+) dependent deacetylases that are considered potential targets for metabolic, inflammatory, oncologic, and neurodegenerative disorders. Encoded library technology (ELT) was used to affinity screen a 1.2 million heterocycle enriched library of DNA encoded small molecules, which identified pan-inhibitors of SIRT1/2/3 with nanomolar potency (e.g., 11c: IC50 = 3.6, 2.7, and 4.0 nM for SIRT1, SIRT2, and SIRT3, respectively). Subsequent SAR studies to improve physiochemical properties identified the potent drug like analogues 28 and 31. Crystallographic studies of 11c, 28, and 31 bound in the SIRT3 active site revealed that the common carboxamide binds in the nicotinamide C-pocket and the aliphatic portions of the inhibitors extend through the substrate channel, explaining the observable SAR. These pan SIRT1/2/3 inhibitors, representing a novel chemotype, are significantly more potent than currently available inhibitors, which makes them valuable tools for sirtuin research.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012
Hongfeng Deng; Heather O’Keefe; Christopher P. Davie; Kenneth Lind; Raksha A. Acharya; G. Joseph Franklin; J. Larkin; Rosalie Matico; Michael Neeb; Monique M. Thompson; Thomas Lohr; Jeffrey W. Gross; Paolo A. Centrella; Gary O’Donovan; Katie L. (Sargent) Bedard; Kurt van Vloten; Sibongile Mataruse; Steven R. Skinner; Svetlana L. Belyanskaya; Tiffany Y. Carpenter; Todd W. Shearer; Matthew A. Clark; John W. Cuozzo; Christopher C. Arico-Muendel; Barry Morgan
The metalloprotease ADAMTS-5 is considered a potential target for the treatment of osteoarthritis. To identify selective inhibitors of ADAMTS-5, we employed encoded library technology (ELT), which enables affinity selection of small molecule binders from complex mixtures by DNA tagging. Selection of ADAMTS-5 against a four-billion member ELT library led to a novel inhibitor scaffold not containing a classical zinc-binding functionality. One exemplar, (R)-N-((1-(4-(but-3-en-1-ylamino)-6-(((2-(thiophen-2-yl)thiazol-4-yl)methyl)amino)-1,3,5-triazin-2-yl)pyrrolidin-2-yl)methyl)-4-propylbenzenesulfonamide (8), inhibited ADAMTS-5 with IC(50) = 30 nM, showing >50-fold selectivity against ADAMTS-4 and >1000-fold selectivity against ADAMTS-1, ADAMTS-13, MMP-13, and TACE. Extensive SAR studies showed that potency and physicochemical properties of the scaffold could be further improved. Furthermore, in a human osteoarthritis cartilage explant study, compounds 8 and 15f inhibited aggrecanase-mediated (374)ARGS neoepitope release from aggrecan and glycosaminoglycan in response to IL-1β/OSM stimulation. This study provides the first small molecule evidence for the critical role of ADAMTS-5 in human cartilage degradation.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007
J. Perry Hall; Yahya Kurdi; Sang Hsu; John W. Cuozzo; Julie Liu; Jean-Baptiste Telliez; Katherine J. Seidl; Aaron Winkler; Yonghan Hu; Neal Green; G. Roger Askew; Steve Tam; James D. Clark; Lih-Ling Lin
Tumor necrosis factor α (TNFα) is a pro-inflammatory cytokine that controls the initiation and progression of inflammatory diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis. Tpl2 is a MAPKKK in the MAPK (i.e. ERK) pathway, and the Tpl2-MEK-ERK signaling pathway is activated by the pro-inflammatory mediators TNFα, interleukin (IL)-1β, and bacterial endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide (LPS)). Moreover, Tpl2 is required for TNFα expression. Thus, pharmacologic inhibition of Tpl2 should be a valid approach to therapeutic intervention in the pathogenesis of rheumatoid arthritis and other inflammatory diseases in humans. We have developed a series of highly selective and potent Tpl2 inhibitors, and in the present study we have used these inhibitors to demonstrate that the catalytic activity of Tpl2 is required for the LPS-induced activation of MEK and ERK in primary human monocytes. These inhibitors selectively target Tpl2 in these cells, and they block LPS- and IL-1β-induced TNFα production in both primary human monocytes and human blood. In rheumatoid arthritis fibroblast-like synoviocytes these inhibitors block ERK activation, cyclooxygenase-2 expression, and the production of IL-6, IL-8, and prostaglandin E2, and the matrix metalloproteinases MMP-1 and MMP-3. Taken together, our results show that inhibition of Tpl2 in primary human cell types can decrease the production of TNFα and other pro-inflammatory mediators during inflammatory events, and they further support the notion that Tpl2 is an appropriate therapeutic target for rheumatoid arthritis and other human inflammatory diseases.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2014
Christopher S. Kollmann; Xiaopeng Bai; Ching-Hsuan Tsai; Hongfang Yang; Kenneth Lind; Steven R. Skinner; Zhengrong Zhu; David I. Israel; John W. Cuozzo; Barry Morgan; Koichi Yuki; Can Xie; Timothy A. Springer; Motomu Shimaoka; Ghotas Evindar
The inhibition of protein-protein interactions remains a challenge for traditional small molecule drug discovery. Here we describe the use of DNA-encoded library technology for the discovery of small molecules that are potent inhibitors of the interaction between lymphocyte function-associated antigen 1 and its ligand intercellular adhesion molecule 1. A DNA-encoded library with a potential complexity of 4.1 billion compounds was exposed to the I-domain of the target protein and the bound ligands were affinity selected, yielding an enriched small-molecule hit family. Compounds representing this family were synthesized without their DNA encoding moiety and found to inhibit the lymphocyte function-associated antigen 1/intercellular adhesion molecule-1 interaction with submicromolar potency in both ELISA and cell adhesion assays. Re-synthesized compounds conjugated to DNA or a fluorophore were demonstrated to bind to cells expressing the target protein.
Scientific Reports | 2015
Alexander Litovchick; Christoph E. Dumelin; Sevan Habeshian; Diana Gikunju; Marie-Aude Guié; Paolo A. Centrella; Ying Zhang; Eric A. Sigel; John W. Cuozzo; Anthony D. Keefe; Matthew A. Clark
A chemical ligation method for construction of DNA-encoded small-molecule libraries has been developed. Taking advantage of the ability of the Klenow fragment of DNA polymerase to accept templates with triazole linkages in place of phosphodiesters, we have designed a strategy for chemically ligating oligonucleotide tags using cycloaddition chemistry. We have utilized this strategy in the construction and selection of a small molecule library, and successfully identified inhibitors of the enzyme soluble epoxide hydrolase.
Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2009
Zhengrong Zhu; John W. Cuozzo
High-throughput affinity-based technologies are rapidly growing in use as primary screening methods in drug discovery. In this review, their principles and applications are described and their impact on small-molecule drug discovery is evaluated. In general, these technologies can be divided into 2 groups: those that detect binding interactions by measuring changes to the protein target and those that detect bound compounds. Technologies detecting binding interactions by focusing on the protein have limited throughput but can reveal mechanistic information about the binding interaction; technologies detecting bound compounds have very high throughput, some even significantly higher than current high-throughput screening technologies, but offer limited information about the binding interaction. In addition, the appropriate use of affinity-based technologies is discussed. Finally, nanotechnology is predicted to generate a significant impact on the future of affinity-based technologies. (Journal of Biomolecular Screening 2009:1157-1164)
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015
Hongfang Yang; Patricia F Medeiros; Kaushik Raha; Patricia A. Elkins; Kenneth Lind; Ruth Lehr; Nicholas D. Adams; Joelle L. Burgess; Stanley J. Schmidt; Steven David Knight; Kurt R. Auger; Michael D. Schaber; G. Joseph Franklin; Yun Ding; Jennifer L. DeLorey; Paolo A. Centrella; Sibongile Mataruse; Steven R. Skinner; Matthew A. Clark; John W. Cuozzo; Ghotas Evindar
In the search of PI3K p110α wild type and H1047R mutant selective small molecule leads, an encoded library technology (ELT) campaign against the desired target proteins was performed which led to the discovery of a selective chemotype for PI3K isoforms from a three-cycle DNA encoded library. An X-ray crystal structure of a representative inhibitor from this chemotype demonstrated a unique binding mode in the p110α protein.
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015
Yun Ding; Heather O’Keefe; Jennifer L. DeLorey; David I. Israel; Jeffrey A. Messer; Cynthia H. Chiu; Steven R. Skinner; Rosalie Matico; Monique F. Murray-Thompson; Fan Li; Matthew A. Clark; John W. Cuozzo; Christopher C. Arico-Muendel; Barry Morgan
The aggrecan degrading metalloprotease ADAMTS-4 has been identified as a novel therapeutic target for osteoarthritis. Here, we use DNA-encoded Library Technology (ELT) to identify novel ADAMTS-4 inhibitors from a DNA-encoded triazine library by affinity selection. Structure-activity relationship studies based on the selection information led to the identification of potent and highly selective inhibitors. For example, 4-(((4-(6,7-dimethoxy-3,4-dihydroisoquinolin-2(1H)-yl)-6-(((4-methylpiperazin-1-yl)methyl)amino)-1,3,5-triazin-2-yl)amino)methyl)-N-ethyl-N-(m-tolyl)benzamide has IC50 of 10 nM against ADAMTS-4, with >1000-fold selectivity over ADAMT-5, MMP-13, TACE, and ADAMTS-13. These inhibitors have no obvious zinc ligand functionality.
ChemBioChem | 2017
John W. Cuozzo; Paolo A. Centrella; Diana Gikunju; Sevan Habeshian; Christopher D. Hupp; Anthony D. Keefe; Eric A. Sigel; Holly H. Soutter; Heather Thomson; Ying Zhang; Matthew A. Clark
We have identified and characterized novel potent inhibitors of Brutons tyrosine kinase (BTK) from a single DNA‐encoded library of over 110 million compounds by using multiple parallel selection conditions, including variation in target concentration and addition of known binders to provide competition information. Distinct binding profiles were observed by comparing enrichments of library building block combinations under these conditions; one enriched only at high concentrations of BTK and was competitive with ATP, and another enriched at both high and low concentrations of BTK and was not competitive with ATP. A compound representing the latter profile showed low nanomolar potency in biochemical and cellular BTK assays. Results from kinetic mechanism of action studies were consistent with the selection profiles. Analysis of the co‐crystal structure of the most potent compound demonstrated a novel binding mode that revealed a new pocket in BTK. Our results demonstrate that profile‐based selection strategies using DNA‐encoded libraries form the basis of a new methodology to rapidly identify small molecule inhibitors with novel binding modes to clinically relevant targets.