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Dive into the research topics where Joseph Tsay is active.

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Featured researches published by Joseph Tsay.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Discovery of covalent inhibitors for MIF tautomerase via cocrystal structures with phantom hits from virtual screening.

Larry R. McLean; Ying Zhang; Hua Li; Ziyu Li; Ulrike Lukasczyk; Yong-Mi Choi; Zuoning Han; Joy Prisco; Jeremy Fordham; Joseph Tsay; Stephan Reiling; Roy J. Vaz; Yi Li

Biochemical and X-ray crystallographic studies confirmed that hydroxyquinoline derivatives identified by virtual screening were actually covalent inhibitors of the MIF tautomerase. Adducts were formed by N-alkylation of the Pro-1 at the catalytic site with a loss of an amino group of the inhibitor.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

A conformationally constrained inhibitor with an enhanced potency for β-tryptase and stability against semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidase (SSAO).

Guyan Liang; Yong Mi Choi-Sledeski; Gregory Bernard Poli; Xin Chen; Patrick Wai-Kwok Shum; Anne Minnich; Qingping Wang; Joseph Tsay; Keith Sides; Jennifer Cairns; Gregory T. Stoklosa; Thaddeus R. Nieduzak; Zhicheng Zhao; Jie Wang; Roy J. Vaz

A novel β-tryptase inhibitor with a basic benzylamine P1 group, a piperidine-amide linker, and a substituted indole P4 group was discovered. A substitution at 4-indole position was introduced to constrain the conformational flexibility of the inhibitor to the bioactive conformation exhibited by X-ray structures so that entropic penalty was decreased. More importantly, this constrained conformation limited the accessibility of this molecule to anti-targets, especially SSAO, so that an enhanced metabolic profile was achieved.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Discovery of novel inhibitors for DHODH via virtual screening and X-ray crystallographic structures

Larry R. McLean; Ying Zhang; William Degnen; Jane Peppard; Dasha Cabel; Chao Zou; Joseph Tsay; Arun Subramaniam; Roy J. Vaz; Yi Li

Amino-benzoic acid derivatives 1-4 were found to be inhibitors for DHODH by virtual screening, biochemical, and X-ray crystallographic studies. X-ray structures showed that 1 and 2 bind to DHODH as predicted by virtual screening, but 3 and 4 were found to be structurally different from the corresponding compounds initially identified by virtual screening.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

Structure-based library design and the discovery of a potent and selective mast cell β-tryptase inhibitor as an oral therapeutic agent

Guyan Liang; Suzanne Aldous; Gregory H. Merriman; Julian Levell; James Pribish; Jennifer Cairns; Xin Chen; Sébastien Maignan; Magali Mathieu; Joseph Tsay; Keith Sides; Sam Rebello; Brian Whitely; Isabelle Morize; Henry W. Pauls

A solid phase combinatorial library was designed based on X-ray structures and in-silico models to explore an inducible S4+ pocket, which is formed by a simple side-chain rotation of Tyr95. This inducible S4+ pocket is unique to β-tryptase and does not exist for other trypsin-like serine proteases of interest. Therefore, inhibitors utilizing this pocket have inherent advantages for being selective against other proteases in the same family. A member of this library was found to be a potent and selective β-tryptase inhibitor with a suitable pharmacokinetic profile for further clinical evaluation.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

A β-tryptase inhibitor with a tropanylamide scaffold to improve in vitro stability and to lower hERG channel binding affinity.

Guyan Liang; Yong Mi Choi-Sledeski; Patrick Wai-Kwok Shum; Xin Chen; Gregory Bernard Poli; Vasant Kumar; Anne Minnich; Qingping Wang; Joseph Tsay; Keith Sides; Jiesheng Kang; Ying Zhang

Tropanylamide was investigated as a possible scaffold for β-tryptase inhibitors with a basic benzylamine P1 group and a substituted thiophene P4 group. Comparing to piperidinylamide, the tropanylamide scaffold is much more rigid, which presents less opportunity for the inhibitor to bind with off-target proteins, such as cytochrome P450, SSAO, and hERG potassium channel. The proposed binding mode was further confirmed by an in-house X-ray structure through co-crystallization.


MedChemComm | 2011

Structure-based design, synthesis, and profiling of a β-tryptase inhibitor with a spiro-piperidineamide scaffold, benzylamine P1 group, and a substituted indole P4 group

Guyan Liang; Yong Mi Choi-Sledeski; Gregory Bernard Poli; Xin Chen; Anne Minnich; Qingping Wang; Joseph Tsay; Keith Sides; Roy J. Vaz

A β-tryptase inhibitor with a basic benzylamine P1 group, a substituted indole P4 group, and a spiro-piperidineamide scaffold linker was designed, synthesized, and tested for its β-tryptase potency and ADMET properties. Comparing to its non-spiro analogs, the inhibitor with a spiro-piperidineamide scaffold demonstrated superior metabolic stability in human liver microsome and against semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidase (SSAO).


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

Dimerization of β-tryptase inhibitors, does it work for both basic and neutral P1 groups?

Guyan Liang; Yong Mi Choi-Sledeski; Xin Chen; Yong Gong; Eric W. MacMillan; Joseph Tsay; Keith Sides; Jennifer Cairns; Berndt Kulitzscher; David J. Aldous; Isabelle Morize; Henry W. Pauls

The tetrameric folding of β-tryptase and the pair-wise distribution of its substrate binding sites offer a unique opportunity for development of inhibitors that span two adjacent binding sites. A series of dimeric inhibitors with two basic P1 moieties was discovered using this design strategy and exhibited tight-binder characteristics. Using the same strategy, an attempt was made to design and synthesize dimeric inhibitors with two neutral-P1 groups in hope to exploit the dimeric binding mode to achieve a starting point for further optimization. The unsuccessful attempt, however, demonstrated the important role played by Ala190 in neutral-P1 binding and casted further doubt on the possibility of developing neutral-P1 inhibitors for β-tryptase.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2005

Structure based design of 4-(3-aminomethylphenyl)piperidinyl-1-amides: novel, potent, selective, and orally bioavailable inhibitors of βII tryptase

Julian Levell; Peter Charles Astles; Paul Robert Eastwood; Jennifer Cairns; Olivier Houille; Suzanne Aldous; Gregory H. Merriman; Brian Whiteley; James Pribish; Mark Czekaj; Guyan Liang; Sébastien Maignan; Jean-Pierre Guilloteau; Alain Dupuy; Jane Davidson; Trevor K.P. Harrison; Andrew David Morley; Simon Watson; Garry Fenton; Clive McCarthy; Joseph Romano; Rose Mappilakunnel Mathew; Darren Engers; Michael Gardyan; Keith Sides; Jennifer Kwong; Joseph Tsay; Sam Rebello; Liduo Shen; Jie Wang


Archive | 2004

Substituted 1H-pyrrolo[3,2-b, 3,2-c, and 2,3-c]pyridine-2-carboxamides and related analogs as inhibitors of casein kinase lepsilon

William A. Metz; Frank Halley; Gilles Dutruc-Rosset; Yong Mi Choi-Sledeski; Gregory Bernard Poli; David Marc Fink; Gilles Doerflinger; Bao-Guo Huang; Ann Marie Gelormini; Juan Antonio Gamboa; Andrew Giovanni; Joachim E. Roehr; Joseph Tsay; Fernando Camacho; William Joseph Hurst; Stephen Wayne Harnish; Yulin Chiang


Archive | 1997

3-mercaptoacetylamino-1,5-substituted-2-oxo-azepan derivatives useful as inhibitors of matrix metalloproteinase

Alan M. Warshawsky; Joseph Tsay; Michael J. Janusz; Jian Shen; Gary A. Flynn; Ramalinga M. Dharanipragada; Joseph P. Burkhart; Douglas W. Beight; Meena V. Patel

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