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Dive into the research topics where Kathy Mosure is active.

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Featured researches published by Kathy Mosure.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2012

Preclinical Profile and Characterization of the Hepatitis C Virus NS3 Protease Inhibitor Asunaprevir (BMS-650032)

Fiona McPhee; Amy K. Sheaffer; Jacques Friborg; Dennis Hernandez; Paul Falk; Guangzhi Zhai; Steven Levine; Susan Chaniewski; Fei Yu; Diana Barry; Chaoqun Chen; Min S. Lee; Kathy Mosure; Li-Qiang Sun; Michael Sinz; Nicholas A. Meanwell; Richard J. Colonno; Jay O. Knipe; Paul Michael Scola

ABSTRACT Asunaprevir (ASV; BMS-650032) is a hepatitis C virus (HCV) NS3 protease inhibitor that has demonstrated efficacy in patients chronically infected with HCV genotype 1 when combined with alfa interferon and/or the NS5A replication complex inhibitor daclatasvir. ASV competitively binds to the NS3/4A protease complex, with Ki values of 0.4 and 0.24 nM against recombinant enzymes representing genotypes 1a (H77) and 1b (J4L6S), respectively. Selectivity was demonstrated by the absence of any significant activity against the closely related GB virus-B NS3 protease and a panel of human serine or cysteine proteases. In cell culture, ASV inhibited replication of HCV replicons representing genotypes 1 and 4, with 50% effective concentrations (EC50s) ranging from 1 to 4 nM, and had weaker activity against genotypes 2 and 3 (EC50, 67 to 1,162 nM). Selectivity was again demonstrated by the absence of activity (EC50, >12 μM) against a panel of other RNA viruses. ASV exhibited additive or synergistic activity in combination studies with alfa interferon, ribavirin, and/or inhibitors specifically targeting NS5A or NS5B. Plasma and tissue exposures in vivo in several animal species indicated that ASV displayed a hepatotropic disposition (liver-to-plasma ratios ranging from 40- to 359-fold across species). Twenty-four hours postdose, liver exposures across all species tested were ≥110-fold above the inhibitor EC50s observed with HCV genotype-1 replicons. Based on these virologic and exposure properties, ASV holds promise for future utility in a combination with other anti-HCV agents in the treatment of HCV-infected patients.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

The Discovery of Asunaprevir (BMS-650032), An Orally Efficacious NS3 Protease Inhibitor for the Treatment of Hepatitis C Virus Infection

Paul Michael Scola; Li-Qiang Sun; Alan Xiangdong Wang; Jie Chen; Ny Sin; Brian Lee Venables; Sing-Yuen Sit; Yan Chen; Anthony J. Cocuzza; Donna M. Bilder; Stanley V. D’Andrea; Barbara Zheng; Piyasena Hewawasam; Yong Tu; Jacques Friborg; Paul Falk; Dennis Hernandez; Steven Levine; Chaoqun Chen; Fei Yu; Amy K. Sheaffer; Guangzhi Zhai; Diana Barry; Jay O. Knipe; Yong-Hae Han; Richard Schartman; Maria Donoso; Kathy Mosure; Michael Sinz; Tatyana Zvyaga

The discovery of asunaprevir (BMS-650032, 24) is described. This tripeptidic acylsulfonamide inhibitor of the NS3/4A enzyme is currently in phase III clinical trials for the treatment of hepatitis C virus infection. The discovery of 24 was enabled by employing an isolated rabbit heart model to screen for the cardiovascular (CV) liabilities (changes to HR and SNRT) that were responsible for the discontinuation of an earlier lead from this chemical series, BMS-605339 (1), from clinical trials. The structure-activity relationships (SARs) developed with respect to CV effects established that small structural changes to the P2* subsite of the molecule had a significant impact on the CV profile of a given compound. The antiviral activity, preclincial PK profile, and toxicology studies in rat and dog supported clinical development of BMS-650032 (24).


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Discovery and Preclinical Characterization of the Cyclopropylindolobenzazepine BMS-791325, A Potent Allosteric Inhibitor of the Hepatitis C Virus NS5B Polymerase.

Robert G. Gentles; Min Ding; John A. Bender; Carl P. Bergstrom; Katharine A. Grant-Young; Piyasena Hewawasam; Thomas William Hudyma; Scott Martin; Andrew Nickel; Alicia Regueiro-Ren; Yong Tu; Zhong Yang; Kap-Sun Yeung; Xiaofan Zheng; Sam T. Chao; Jung-Hui Sun; Brett R. Beno; Daniel M. Camac; Mian Gao; Paul E. Morin; Steven Sheriff; Jeff Tredup; John Wan; Mark R. Witmer; Dianlin Xie; Umesh Hanumegowda; Jay O. Knipe; Kathy Mosure; Kenneth S. Santone; Dawn D. Parker

Described herein are structure-activity relationship studies that resulted in the optimization of the activity of members of a class of cyclopropyl-fused indolobenzazepine HCV NS5B polymerase inhibitors. Subsequent iterations of analogue design and syntheses successfully addressed off-target activities, most notably human pregnane X receptor (hPXR) transactivation, and led to significant improvements in the physicochemical properties of lead compounds. Those analogues exhibiting improved solubility and membrane permeability were shown to have notably enhanced pharmacokinetic profiles. Additionally, a series of alkyl bridged piperazine carboxamides was identified as being of particular interest, and from which the compound BMS-791325 (2) was found to have distinguishing antiviral, safety, and pharmacokinetic properties that resulted in its selection for clinical evaluation.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016

Discovery of a Potent Acyclic, Tripeptidic, Acyl Sulfonamide Inhibitor of Hepatitis C Virus NS3 Protease as a Back-up to Asunaprevir with the Potential for Once-Daily Dosing

Li-Qiang Sun; Eric Mull; Barbara Zheng; Stanley V. D’Andrea; Qian Zhao; Alan Xiangdong Wang; Ny Sin; Brian Lee Venables; Sing-Yuen Sit; Yan Chen; Jie Chen; Anthony J. Cocuzza; Donna M. Bilder; Arvind Mathur; Richard Rampulla; Bang-Chi Chen; Theerthagiri Palani; Sivakumar Ganesan; Pirama Nayagam Arunachalam; Paul Falk; Steven Levine; Chaoqun Chen; Jacques Friborg; Fei Yu; Dennis Hernandez; Amy K. Sheaffer; Jay O. Knipe; Yong-Hae Han; Richard Schartman; Maria Donoso

The discovery of a back-up to the hepatitis C virus NS3 protease inhibitor asunaprevir (2) is described. The objective of this work was the identification of a drug with antiviral properties and toxicology parameters similar to 2, but with a preclinical pharmacokinetic (PK) profile that was predictive of once-daily dosing. Critical to this discovery process was the employment of an ex vivo cardiovascular (CV) model which served to identify compounds that, like 2, were free of the CV liabilities that resulted in the discontinuation of BMS-605339 (1) from clinical trials. Structure-activity relationships (SARs) at each of the structural subsites in 2 were explored with substantial improvement in PK through modifications at the P1 site, while potency gains were found with small, but rationally designed structural changes to P4. Additional modifications at P3 were required to optimize the CV profile, and these combined SARs led to the discovery of BMS-890068 (29).


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017

Discovery of a Hepatitis C Virus NS5B Replicase Palm Site Allosteric Inhibitor (BMS-929075) Advanced to Phase 1 Clinical Studies

Kap-Sun Yeung; Brett R. Beno; Kyle E. Parcella; John A. Bender; Katherine A. Grant-Young; Andrew Nickel; Prashantha Gunaga; Prakash Anjanappa; Rajesh Onkardas Bora; Kumaravel Selvakumar; Karen Rigat; Ying-Kai Wang; Mengping Liu; Julie A. Lemm; Kathy Mosure; Steven Sheriff; Changhong Wan; Mark R. Witmer; Kevin Kish; Umesh Hanumegowda; Xiaoliang Zhuo; Yue-Zhong Shu; Dawn D. Parker; Roy Haskell; Alicia Ng; Qi Gao; Elizabeth Colston; Joseph J. Raybon; Dennis M. Grasela; Kenneth S. Santone

The hepatitis C virus (HCV) NS5B replicase is a prime target for the development of direct-acting antiviral drugs for the treatment of chronic HCV infection. Inspired by the overlay of bound structures of three structurally distinct NS5B palm site allosteric inhibitors, the high-throughput screening hit anthranilic acid 4, the known benzofuran analogue 5, and the benzothiadiazine derivative 6, an optimization process utilizing the simple benzofuran template 7 as a starting point for a fragment growing approach was pursued. A delicate balance of molecular properties achieved via disciplined lipophilicity changes was essential to achieve both high affinity binding and a stringent targeted absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion profile. These efforts led to the discovery of BMS-929075 (37), which maintained ligand efficiency relative to early leads, demonstrated efficacy in a triple combination regimen in HCV replicon cells, and exhibited consistently high oral bioavailability and pharmacokinetic parameters across preclinical animal species. The human PK properties from the Phase I clinical studies of 37 were better than anticipated and suggest promising potential for QD administration.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2017

Structure-activity relationships of 4-hydroxy-4-biaryl-proline acylsulfonamide tripeptides: A series of potent NS3 protease inhibitors for the treatment of hepatitis C virus

Alan Xiangdong Wang; Jie Chen; Qian Zhao; Li-Qiang Sun; Jacques Friborg; Fei Yu; Dennis Hernandez; Andrew C. Good; Herbert E. Klei; Ramkumar Rajamani; Kathy Mosure; Jay O. Knipe; Danshi Li; Jialong Zhu; Paul Levesque; Fiona McPhee; Nicholas A. Meanwell; Paul Michael Scola

The design and synthesis of a series of tripeptide acylsulfonamides as potent inhibitors of the HCV NS3/4A serine protease is described. These analogues house a C4 aryl, C4 hydroxy-proline at the S2 position of the tripeptide scaffold. Information relating to structure-activity relationships as well as the pharmacokinetic and cardiovascular profiles of these analogues is provided.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2014

Identification of a novel series of potent HCV NS5B Site I inhibitors

Kyle J. Eastman; Zhong Yang; John A. Bender; Kathy Mosure; Julie A. Lemm; Nicholas A. Meanwell; Susan B. Roberts; Jay O. Knipe; John F. Kadow

Efforts investigating spatially comparative alternates of the ethylene-bridged piperazine in BMS-791325 that would offer a maintained or improved virologic and pharmacokinetic profile have been multifaceted. One foray involved the utilization of various octahydropyrrolo[3,4-c]pyrrole propellanes. Many of the propellane analogs described in this work exhibited better than targeted potency (less than 20 nM). Additionally, improved exposure in rats was achieved through the employment of two newly invented and now readily accessible carbon bridged propellanes as compared to their heteroatom bridged analogs.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2018

Potent Inhibitors of Hepatitis C Virus NS3 Protease: Employment of a Difluoromethyl Group as a Hydrogen-Bond Donor

Barbara Zheng; Stanley D'andrea; Li-Qiang Sun; Alan Xiangdong Wang; Yan Chen; Peter Hrnciar; Jacques Friborg; Paul Falk; Dennis Hernandez; Fei Yu; Amy K. Sheaffer; Jay O. Knipe; Kathy Mosure; Ramkumar Rajamani; Andrew C. Good; Kevin Kish; Jeffrey Tredup; Herbert E. Klei; Manjula Paruchuri; Alicia Ng; Qi Gao; Richard Rampulla; Arvind Mathur; Nicholas A. Meanwell; Fiona McPhee; Paul Michael Scola

The design and synthesis of potent, tripeptidic acylsulfonamide inhibitors of HCV NS3 protease that contain a difluoromethyl cyclopropyl amino acid at P1 are described. A cocrystal structure of 18 with a NS3/4A protease complex suggests the presence of a H-bond between the polarized C-H of the CHF2 moiety and the backbone carbonyl of Leu135 of the enzyme. Structure-activity relationship studies indicate that this H-bond enhances enzyme inhibitory potency by 13- and 17-fold compared to the CH3 and CF3 analogues, respectively, providing insight into the deployment of this unique amino acid.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2017

Discovery of BMS-961955, an allosteric inhibitor of the hepatitis C virus NS5B polymerase

Barbara Zhizhen Zheng; Stanley D'andrea; Umesh Hanumegowda; Jay O. Knipe; Kathy Mosure; Xiaoliang Zhuo; Julie A. Lemm; Mengping Liu; Karen Rigat; Ying-Kai Wang; Hua Fang; Chris Poronsky; Jingfang Qian Cutrone; Dauh-Rurng Wu; Pirama Nayagam Arunachalam; T.J. Balapragalathan; Arunachalam Arumugam; Arvind Mathur; Nicholas A. Meanwell; Min Gao; Susan B. Roberts; John F. Kadow

The synthesis, structure-activity relationship (SAR) data, and further optimization of the metabolic stability and pharmacokinetic (PK) properties for a previously disclosed class of cyclopropyl-fused indolobenzazepine HCV NS5B polymerase inhibitors are described. These efforts led to the discovery of BMS-961955 as a viable contingency backup to beclabuvir which was recently approved in Japan for the treatment of HCV as part of a three drug, single pill combination marketed as XimencyTM.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2017

Improving Metabolic Stability with Deuterium: The Discovery of BMT-052, a Pan-genotypic HCV NS5B Polymerase Inhibitor

Kyle E. Parcella; Kyle J. Eastman; Kap-Sun Yeung; Katharine A. Grant-Young; Juliang Zhu; Tao Wang; Zhongxing Zhang; Zhiwei Yin; Dawn D. Parker; Kathy Mosure; Hua Fang; Ying-Kai Wang; Julie A. Lemm; Xiaoliang Zhuo; Umesh Hanumegowda; Mengping Liu; Karen Rigat; Maria Donoso; Maria Tuttle; Tatyana Zvyaga; Zuzana Haarhoff; Nicholas A. Meanwell; Matthew G. Soars; Susan B. Roberts; John F. Kadow

Iterative structure-activity analyses in a class of highly functionalized furo[2,3-b]pyridines led to the identification of the second generation pan-genotypic hepatitis C virus NS5B polymerase primer grip inhibitor BMT-052 (14), a potential clinical candidate. The key challenge of poor metabolic stability was overcome by strategic incorporation of deuterium at potential metabolic soft spots. The preclinical profile and status of BMT-052 (14) is described.

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Fei Yu

Bristol-Myers Squibb

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