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Dive into the research topics where Karnail S. Atwal is active.

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Featured researches published by Karnail S. Atwal.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 1991

Dihydropyrimidine calcium channel blockers 51: bicyclic dihydropyrimidines as potent mimics of dihydropyridines

Karnail S. Atwal; Suzanne Moreland

Abstract Bicyclic dihydropyrimidines 3 imitating the in vitro potency of dihydropyridine calcium channel blockers (e.g., nifedipine 2 ) are described. Structure-activity studies show a pyrazole ring can effectively mimic the combined effect of N3-substituent (R 3 ) and C2-hetero atom (X) of monocyclic dihydropyrimidines 1 . These results support our previous hypothesis about the requirement of a vinylogous urethane for calcium channel blocking activity and a nonspecific role for the N3-subtituent and C2-hetero atom (X) of 1 .


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Pyrrolidine amides of pyrazolodihydropyrimidines as potent and selective KV1.5 blockers.

John Lloyd; Heather Finlay; Wayne Vacarro; Tram Hyunh; Alexander Kover; Rao S. Bhandaru; Lin Yan; Karnail S. Atwal; Mary Lee Conder; Tonya Jenkins-West; Hong Shi; Christine Huang; Danshi Li; Huabin Sun; Paul Levesque

Design and synthesis of pyrazolodihydropyrimidines as KV1.5 blockers led to the discovery of 7d as a potent and selective antagonist. This compound showed atrial selective prolongation of effective refractory period in rabbits and was selected for clinical development.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Dihydropyrazolopyrimidines containing benzimidazoles as KV1.5 potassium channel antagonists

John Lloyd; Heather Finlay; Karnail S. Atwal; Alexander Kover; Joseph Prol; Lin Yan; Rao S. Bhandaru; Wayne Vaccaro; Tram Huynh; Christine Huang; MaryLee Conder; Tonya Jenkins-West; Huabin Sun; Danshi Li; Paul Levesque

Dihydropyrazolopyrimidines with a C6 heterocycle substituent were found to have high potency for block of K(V)1.5. Investigation of the substitution in the benzimidazole ring and the substituent in the 5-position of the dihydropyrazolopyrimidine ring produced 31a with an IC50 for K(V)1.5 block of 0.030muM without significant block of other cardiac ion channels. This compound also showed good bioavailability in rats and robust pharmacodynamic effects in a rabbit model.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

Design, structure-activity relationships, X-ray crystal structure, and energetic contributions of a critical P1 pharmacophore: 3-chloroindole-7-yl-based factor Xa inhibitors.

Yan Shi; Doree Sitkoff; Jing Zhang; Herbert E. Klei; Kevin Kish; Eddie C.-K. Liu; Karen S. Hartl; Steve M. Seiler; Ming Chang; Christine Huang; Sonia Youssef; Thomas E. Steinbacher; William A. Schumacher; Nyeemah Grazier; Andrew T. Pudzianowski; Atsu Apedo; Lorell Discenza; Joseph Yanchunas; Philip D. Stein; Karnail S. Atwal

An indole-based P1 moiety was incorporated into a previously established factor Xa inhibitor series. The indole group was designed to hydrogen-bond with the carbonyl of Gly218, while its 3-methyl or 3-chloro substituent was intended to interact with Tyr228. These interactions were subsequently observed in the X-ray crystal structure of compound 18. SAR studies led to the identification of compound 20 as the most potent FXa inhibitor in this series (IC(50) = 2.4 nM, EC(2xPT) = 1.2 microM). An in-depth energetic analysis suggests that the increased binding energy of 3-chloroindole-versus 3-methylindole-containing compounds in this series is due primarily to (a) the more hydrophobic nature of chloro- versus methyl-containing compounds and (b) an increased interaction of 3-chloroindole versus 3-methylindole with Gly218 backbone. The stronger hydrophobicity of chloro- versus methyl-substituted aromatics may partly explain the general preference for chloro- versus methyl-substituted P1 groups in FXa, which extends beyond the current series.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008

Dihydropyrazolopyrimidine Inhibitors of KV1.5 (IKur)

Wayne Vaccaro; Tram Huynh; John Lloyd; Karnail S. Atwal; Heather Finlay; Paul Levesque; Mary Lee Conder; Tonya Jenkins-West; Hong Shi; Lucy Sun

A series of dihydropyrazolopyrimidine inhibitors of K(V)1.5 (I(Kur)) have been identified. The synthesis, structure-activity relationships and selectivity against several other ion channels are described.


Tetrahedron Letters | 2002

One-pot synthesis of N,N′-disubstituted acylguanidines

Jing Zhang; Yan Shi; Philip D. Stein; Karnail S. Atwal; Chi Li

Abstract Acylguanidines are isosteres of thioureas (or ureas) and are possible prodrugs of guanidines. A convenient one-pot synthesis of N,N′ -disubstituted acylguanidines from primary amides is described.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 1992

Aryl cyanoguanidine potassium channel openers

Karnail S. Atwal; Suzanne Moreland; John R. McCullough; Brian C. O'Reilly; Syed Z. Ahmed; Diane E. Normandin

Abstract To investigate whether potassium channel openers cromakalim ( 1 ) and pinacidil ( 2 ) share common pharmacophoric features, the combination compound 6a was prepared and evaluated for biological activity. The potent vasorelaxant/antihypertensive activity displayed by 6a and some of its analogs suggest cromakalim ( 1 ) and pinacidil ( 2 ) may shrare common pharmacophoric features.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008

Pyrano-[2,3b]-pyridines as potassium channel antagonists

Heather Finlay; John Lloyd; Michael Nyman; Mary Lee Conder; Tonya West; Paul Levesque; Karnail S. Atwal

The design and synthesis of a series of highly functionalized pyrano-[2,3b]-pyridines is described. These compounds were assayed for their ability to block the I(Kur) channel encoded by the gene hKV1.5 in patch-clamped L-929 cells. Six of the compounds in this series showed sub-micromolar activity, the most potent being 4-(4-ethyl-benzenesulfonylamino)-3-hydroxy-2,2-dimethyl-3,4-dihydro-2H-pyrano[2,3b]-pyridine-6-carboxylic acid ethyl-phenyl-amide with an IC(50) of 378 nM.


Cardiovascular Research | 1996

Glyburide-reversible cardioprotective effects of calcium-independent phospholipase A2 inhibition in ischemic rat hearts

Carol A. Sargent; Mary W. Wilde; Steven Dzwonczyk; Jeffrey G. Tuttle; Holt N. Murray; Karnail S. Atwal; Gary J. Grover

OBJECTIVES A myocardial calcium-independent PLA2 has been described that is activated during myocardial ischemia and this enzyme may modulate ATP-sensitive potassium channels (KATP). The aim of this study was to determine the effect of an inhibitor of this enzyme, a bromoenol lactone, in isolated globally ischemic rat hearts. METHODS Isolated rat hearts were treated for 10 min with 0.3-6 microM bromoenol lactone and then subjected to 25 min ischemia and 30 min reperfusion. RESULTS The bromoenol lactone significantly increased coronary flow in nonischemic myocardium, and slightly reduced cardiac function at 6 microM. During global ischemia, time to contracture was significantly increased from vehicle group values in the presence of the bromoenol lactone (EC50 = 1.2 microM). During reperfusion, a concentration-dependent increase in function and a reduction in LDH release were observed for the PLA2 inhibitor. The concentrations of the PLA2 inhibitor which were significantly cardioprotective, inhibited this enzyme in membrane fractions of rat myocardium (IC50 = 0.87 microM). The KATP blocker sodium 5-hydroxydecanoate (5-HD) inhibited the increase in time to contracture observed for the bromoenol lactone. During reperfusion, 5-HD abolished the protective effects of the bromoenol lactone on cardiac function and LDH release. Glyburide had similar effects on the cardioprotective activity of the bromoenol lactone, although it only partially abolished the LDH reducing effect of this agent. CONCLUSIONS The bromoenol lactone protects ischemic myocardium at concentrations which also inhibit calcium-independent PLA2. This cardioprotection can be attenuated by blockers of KATP, suggesting a potential mechanism for modulation of myocardial KATP.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Discovery of ((S)-5-(Methoxymethyl)-7-(1-methyl-1H-indol-2-yl)-2-(trifluoromethyl)-4,7-dihydropyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidin-6-yl)((S)-2-(3-methylisoxazol-5-yl)pyrrolidin-1-yl)methanone As a Potent and Selective IKur Inhibitor

Heather Finlay; John Lloyd; Wayne Vaccaro; Alexander Kover; Lin Yan; Gauri Bhave; Joseph Prol; Tram N. Huynh; Rao S. Bhandaru; Yolanda Caringal; John D. Dimarco; Jinping Gan; Tim Harper; Christine Huang; Mary Lee Conder; Huabin Sun; Paul Levesque; Michael A. Blanar; Karnail S. Atwal; Ruth R. Wexler

Previously disclosed dihydropyrazolopyrimidines are potent and selective blockers of I(Kur) current. A potential liability with this chemotype is the formation of a reactive metabolite which demonstrated covalent binding to protein in vitro. When substituted at the 2 or 3 position, this template yielded potent I(Kur) inhibitors, with selectivity over hERG which did not form reactive metabolites. Subsequent optimization for potency and PK properties lead to the discovery of ((S)-5-(methoxymethyl)-7-(1-methyl-1H-indol-2-yl)-2-(trifluoromethyl)-4,7-dihydropyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidin-6-yl)((S)-2-(3-methylisoxazol-5-yl)pyrrolidin-1-yl)methanone (13j), with an acceptable PK profile in preclinical species and potent efficacy in the preclinical rabbit atrial effective refractory period (AERP) model.

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John Lloyd

Alfred I. duPont Hospital for Children

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