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Dive into the research topics where Joshua Close is active.

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Featured researches published by Joshua Close.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008

Exploration of the internal cavity of histone deacetylase (HDAC) with selective HDAC1/HDAC2 inhibitors (SHI-1:2)

Joey L. Methot; Prasun K. Chakravarty; Melissa Chenard; Joshua Close; Jonathan C. Cruz; William K. Dahlberg; Judith C. Fleming; Christopher Hamblett; Julie E. Hamill; Paul Harrington; Andreas Harsch; Richard Heidebrecht; Bethany Hughes; Joon Jung; Candia M. Kenific; Astrid M. Kral; Peter T. Meinke; Richard E. Middleton; Nicole Ozerova; David L. Sloman; Matthew G. Stanton; Alexander A. Szewczak; Sriram Tyagarajan; David J. Witter; J. Paul Secrist; Thomas A. Miller

We report herein the initial exploration of novel selective HDAC1/HDAC2 inhibitors (SHI-1:2). Optimized SHI-1:2 structures exhibit enhanced intrinsic activity against HDAC1 and HDAC2, and are greater than 100-fold selective versus other HDACs, including HDAC3. Based on the SAR of these agents and our current understanding of the HDAC active site, we postulate that the SHI-1:2 extend the existing HDAC inhibitor pharmacophore to include an internal binding domain.


Biochemistry | 2014

Divergent Kinetics Differentiate the Mechanism of Action of Two HDAC Inhibitors

Astrid M. Kral; Nicole Ozerova; Joshua Close; Joon Jung; Melissa Chenard; Judith C. Fleming; Brian B. Haines; Paul Harrington; John Maclean; Thomas A. Miller; Paul Secrist; Hongmei Wang; Richard Heidebrecht

Histone deacetylases (HDACs) play diverse roles in many diseases including cancer, sarcopenia, and Alzheimers. Different isoforms of HDACs appear to play disparate roles in the cell and are associated with specific diseases; as such, a substantial effort has been made to develop isoform-selective HDAC inhibitors. Our group focused on developing HDAC1/HDAC2-specific inhibitors as a cancer therapeutic. In the course of characterizing the mechanism of inhibition of a novel HDAC1/2-selective inhibitor, it was determined that it did not exhibit classical Michaelis-Menten kinetic behavior; this result is in contrast to the seminal HDAC inhibitor SAHA. Enzymatic assays, along with a newly developed binding assay, were used to determine the rates of binding and the affinities of both the HDAC1/2-selective inhibitor and SAHA. The mechanism of action studies identified a potential conformational change required for optimal binding by the selective inhibitor. A model of this putative conformational change is proposed.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Exploring the pharmacokinetic properties of phosphorus-containing selective HDAC 1 and 2 inhibitors (SHI-1:2).

Richard Heidebrecht; Melissa Chenard; Joshua Close; William K. Dahlberg; Judith C. Fleming; Jonathan Grimm; Julie E. Hamill; Andreas Harsch; Brian B. Haines; Bethany Hughes; Astrid M. Kral; Richard E. Middleton; Chandrasekhar Mushti; Nicole Ozerova; Alexander A. Szewczak; Hongmei Wang; Kevin J. Wilson; David J. Witter; J. Paul Secrist; Thomas A. Miller

We report the preparation and structure-activity relationships of phosphorus-containing histone deacetylase inhibitors. A strong trend between decreasing phosphorus functional group size and superior mouse pharmacokinetic properties was identified. In addition, optimized candidates showed tumor growth inhibition in xenograft studies.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

Lead optimization of 4,4-biaryl piperidine amides as γ-secretase inhibitors.

Joshua Close; Richard Heidebrecht; John Hendrix; Chaomin Li; Ben Munoz; Laura Surdi; Solomon Kattar; Paul Tempest; Paul Moses; Xiaoliu Geng; Bethany Hughes; Nadya Smotrov; Chris Moxham; Jennifer Chapnick; Ilona Kariv; George Nikov; Julie Elizabeth Burke; Sujal V. Deshmukh; Valentina V. Jeliazkova-Mecheva; John Kevin Leach; Damaris Diaz; Lin Xu; Ziping Yang; Gloria Y. Kwei; Lily Y. Moy; Sanjiv Shah; Flobert Tanga; Candia Kenefic; Dan Savage; Mark S. Shearman

Alzheimers disease is a major unmet medical need with pathology characterized by extracellular proteinaceous plaques comprised primarily of β-amyloid. γ-Secretase is a critical enzyme in the cellular pathway responsible for the formation of a range of β-amyloid peptides; one of which, Aβ42, is believed to be responsible for the neuropathological features of the disease. Herein, we report 4,4 disubstituted piperidine γ-secretase inhibitors that were optimized for in vitro cellular potency and pharmacokinetic properties in vivo. Key agents were further characterized for their ability to lower cerebral Aβ42 production in an APP-YAC mouse model. This structural series generally suffered from sub-optimal pharmacokinetics but hypothesis driven lead optimization enabled the discovery of γ-secretase inhibitors capable of lowering cerebral Aβ42 production in mice.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017

The Discovery of 3-((4-Chloro-3-methoxyphenyl)amino)-1-((3R,4S)-4-cyanotetrahydro-2H-pyran-3-yl)-1H-pyrazole-4-carboxamide, a Highly Ligand Efficient and Efficacious Janus Kinase 1 Selective Inhibitor with Favorable Pharmacokinetic Properties

Tony Siu; Jason Brubaker; Peter Fuller; Luis Torres; Hongbo Zeng; Joshua Close; Dawn M. Mampreian; Feng Shi; Duan Liu; Xavier Fradera; Kevin Johnson; Nathan Bays; Elma Kadic; Fang He; Peter Goldenblatt; Lynsey Shaffer; Sangita B. Patel; Charles A. Lesburg; Carla Alpert; Lauren Dorosh; Sujal V. Deshmukh; Hongshi Yu; Joel A. Klappenbach; Fiona Elwood; Christopher J. Dinsmore; Rafael Fernández; Lily Y. Moy; Jonathan R. Young

The discovery of a potent selective low dose Janus kinase 1 (JAK1) inhibitor suitable for clinical evaluation is described. As part of an overall goal to minimize dose, we pursued a medicinal chemistry strategy focused on optimization of key parameters that influence dose size, including lowering human Clint and increasing intrinsic potency, bioavailability, and solubility. To impact these multiple parameters simultaneously, we used lipophilic ligand efficiency as a key metric to track changes in the physicochemical properties of our analogs, which led to improvements in overall compound quality. In parallel, structural information guided advancements in JAK1 selectivity by informing on new vector space, which enabled the discovery of a unique key amino acid difference between JAK1 (Glu966) and JAK2 (Asp939). This difference was exploited to consistently produce analogs with the best balance of JAK1 selectivity, efficacy, and projected human dose, ultimately culminating in the discovery of compound 28.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2018

Discovery of MK-8318, a Potent and Selective CRTh2 Receptor Antagonist for the Treatment of Asthma

Xianhai Huang; Jason Brubaker; Wei Zhou; Purakkattle J. Biju; Li Xiao; Ning Shao; Ying Huang; Li Dong; Zhidan Liu; Rema Bitar; Alexei V. Buevich; Joon Jung; Scott L. Peterson; John W. Butcher; Joshua Close; Michelle Martinez; Rachel N. Maccoss; Hongjun Zhang; Scott Crawford; Kevin D. Mccormick; Robert G. Aslanian; Ravi P. Nargund; Craig Correll; François G. Gervais; Hongchen Qiu; Xiaoxin Yang; Charles G. Garlisi; Diane Rindgen; Kevin M. Maloney; Phieng Siliphaivanh

A novel series of tricyclic tetrahydroquinolines were identified as potent and selective CRTh2 receptor antagonists. The agonism and antagonism switch was achieved through structure-based drug design (SBDD) using a CRTh2 receptor homologue model. The challenge of very low exposures in pharmacokinetic studies was overcome by exhaustive medicinal chemistry lead optimization through focused SAR studies on the tricyclic core. Further optimization resulted in the identification of the preclinical candidate 4-(cyclopropyl((3aS,9R,9aR)-7-fluoro-4-(4-(trifluoromethoxy)benzoyl)-2,3,3a,4,9,9a-hexahydro-1H-cyclopenta[b]quinolin-9-yl)amino)-4-oxobutanoic acid (15c, MK-8318) with potent and selective CRTh2 antagonist activity and a favorable PK profile suitable for once daily oral dosing for potential treatment of asthma.


Archive | 2006

Histone deacetylase inhibitors with aryl-pyrazolyl motifs

Joshua Close; Richard Heidebrecht; Solomon Kattar; Thomas A. Miller; David L. Sloman; Matthew G. Stanton; Paul Tempest; David J. Witter


Archive | 2006

Spirocyclic compounds as hdac inhibitors

Scott C. Berk; Joshua Close; Christopher Hamblett; Richard Heidebrecht; Solomon Kattar; Laura T. Kliman; Dawn M. Mampreian; Joey L. Methot; Thomas A. Miller; David L. Sloman; Matthew G. Stanton; Paul Tempest; Anna A. Zabierek


Archive | 2007

Phosphorus derivatives as histone deacetylase inhibitors

Joshua Close; Jonathan Grimm; Richard Heidebrecht; Solomon Kattar; Thomas A. Miller; Karin M. Otte; Scott L. Peterson; Phieng Siliphaivanh; Paul J. Tempest; Kevin J. Wilson; David J. Witter


Archive | 2005

N-(pyridin-3-yl)-2-phenylbutanamides as androgen receptor modulators

Yuntae Kim; Joshua Close; Mark E. Duggan; Barbara Hanney; Robert S. Meissner; Jeffrey Musselman; James J. Perkins; Jiabing Wang

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