Katrina W. Copeland
Amgen
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Featured researches published by Katrina W. Copeland.
Pain | 2010
BaoXi Gao; Markus Hierl; Kristie Clarkin; Todd Juan; Hung Nguyen; Marissa van der Valk; Hong Deng; Wenhong Guo; Sonya G. Lehto; David J. Matson; Jeff S. McDermott; Johannes Knop; Kevin Gaida; Lei Cao; Dan Waldon; Brian K. Albrecht; Alessandro Boezio; Katrina W. Copeland; Jean-Christophe Harmange; Stephanie K. Springer; Annika B. Malmberg
&NA; Nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) are longstanding targets for a next generation of pain therapeutics, but the nAChR subtypes that govern analgesia remain unknown. We tested a series of nicotinic agonists, including many molecules used or tried clinically, on a panel of cloned neuronal nAChRs for potency and selectivity using patch‐clamp electrophysiology and a live cell‐based fluorescence assay. Nonselective nicotinic agonists as well as compounds selective either for &agr;4&bgr;2 or for &agr;7 nAChRs were then tested in the formalin and complete Freunds adjuvant models of pain. Nonselective nAChR agonists ABT‐594 and varenicline were effective analgesics. By contrast, the selective &agr;4&bgr;2 agonist ispronicline and a novel &agr;4&bgr;2‐selective potentiator did not appear to produce analgesia in either model. &agr;7‐selective agonists reduced the pain‐related endpoint, but the effect could be ascribed to nonspecific reduction of movement rather than to analgesia. Neither selective nor nonselective &agr;7 nicotinic agonists affected the release of pro‐inflammatory cytokines in response to antigen challenge. Electrophysiological recordings from spinal cord slice showed a strong nicotine‐induced increase in inhibitory synaptic transmission that was mediated partially by &agr;4&bgr;2 and only minimally by &agr;7 subtypes. Taken with previous studies, the results suggest that agonism of &agr;4&bgr;2 nAChRs is necessary but not sufficient to produce analgesia, and that the spinal cord is a key site where the molecular action of nAChRs produces analgesia.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011
Emily A. Peterson; Paul S. Andrews; Xuhai Be; Alessandro Boezio; Tammy L. Bush; Alan C. Cheng; James R. Coats; Adria E. Colletti; Katrina W. Copeland; Michelle DuPont; Russell Graceffa; Barbara Grubinska; Jean-Christophe Harmange; Joseph L. Kim; Erin L. Mullady; Philip R. Olivieri; Laurie B. Schenkel; Mary K. Stanton; Yohannes Teffera; Douglas A. Whittington; Ti Cai; Daniel S. La
mTOR is part of the PI3K/AKT pathway and is a central regulator of cell growth and survival. Since many cancers display mutations linked to the mTOR signaling pathway, mTOR has emerged as an important target for oncology therapy. Herein, we report the discovery of triazine benzimidazole inhibitors that inhibit mTOR kinase activity with up to 200-fold selectivity over the structurally homologous kinase PI3Kα. When tested in a panel of cancer cell lines displaying various mutations, a selective inhibitor from this series inhibited cellular proliferation with a mean IC(50) of 0.41 μM. Lead compound 42 demonstrated up to 83% inhibition of mTOR substrate phosphorylation in a murine pharmacodynamic model.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012
Emily A. Peterson; Alessandro Boezio; Paul S. Andrews; Christiane Boezio; Tammy L. Bush; Alan C. Cheng; Deborah Choquette; James R. Coats; Adria E. Colletti; Katrina W. Copeland; Michelle DuPont; Russell Graceffa; Barbara Grubinska; Joseph L. Kim; Richard T. Lewis; Jingzhou Liu; Erin L. Mullady; Michele Potashman; Karina Romero; Paul L. Shaffer; Mary K. Stanton; John Stellwagen; Yohannes Teffera; Shuyan Yi; Ti Cai; Daniel S. La
mTOR is a critical regulator of cellular signaling downstream of multiple growth factors. The mTOR/PI3K/AKT pathway is frequently mutated in human cancers and is thus an important oncology target. Herein we report the evolution of our program to discover ATP-competitive mTOR inhibitors that demonstrate improved pharmacokinetic properties and selectivity compared to our previous leads. Through targeted SAR and structure-guided design, new imidazopyridine and imidazopyridazine scaffolds were identified that demonstrated superior inhibition of mTOR in cellular assays, selectivity over the closely related PIKK family and improved in vivo clearance over our previously reported benzimidazole series.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016
Alessandro Boezio; Katrina W. Copeland; Karen Rex; Brian K. Albrecht; David Bauer; Steven Bellon; Christiane Boezio; Martin A. Broome; Deborah Choquette; Angela Coxon; Isabelle Dussault; Satoko Hirai; Richard J. Lewis; Min-Hwa Jasmine Lin; Julia Lohman; Jingzhou Liu; Emily A. Peterson; Michele Potashman; Roman Shimanovich; Yohannes Teffera; Douglas A. Whittington; Karina R. Vaida; Jean-Christophe Harmange
Deregulation of the receptor tyrosine kinase mesenchymal epithelial transition factor (MET) has been implicated in several human cancers and is an attractive target for small molecule drug discovery. Herein, we report the discovery of compound 23 (AMG 337), which demonstrates nanomolar inhibition of MET kinase activity, desirable preclinical pharmacokinetics, significant inhibition of MET phosphorylation in mice, and robust tumor growth inhibition in a MET-dependent mouse efficacy model.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015
Emily A. Peterson; Yohannes Teffera; Brian K. Albrecht; David Bauer; Steven Bellon; Alessandro Boezio; Christiane Boezio; Martin A. Broome; Deborah Choquette; Katrina W. Copeland; Isabelle Dussault; Richard J. Lewis; Min-Hwa Jasmine Lin; Julia Lohman; Jingzhou Liu; Michele Potashman; Karen Rex; Roman Shimanovich; Douglas A. Whittington; Karina R. Vaida; Jean-Christophe Harmange
The overexpression of c-Met and/or hepatocyte growth factor (HGF), the amplification of the MET gene, and mutations in the c-Met kinase domain can activate signaling pathways that contribute to cancer progression by enabling tumor cell proliferation, survival, invasion, and metastasis. Herein, we report the discovery of 8-fluorotriazolopyridines as inhibitors of c-Met activity. Optimization of the 8-fluorotriazolopyridine scaffold through the combination of structure-based drug design, SAR studies, and metabolite identification provided potent (cellular IC50 < 10 nM), selective inhibitors of c-Met with desirable pharmacokinetic properties that demonstrate potent inhibition of HGF-mediated c-Met phosphorylation in a mouse liver pharmacodynamic model.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2014
Katrina W. Copeland; Alessandro Boezio; Eugene Cheung; Josie Lee; Philip R. Olivieri; Laurie B. Schenkel; Qian Wan; Weiya Wang; Mary Wells; Beth D. Youngblood; Narender R. Gavva; Sonya G. Lehto; Stephanie Geuns-Meyer
The transient receptor potential ankyrin 1 (TRPA1) channel is activated by noxious stimuli including chemical irritants and endogenous inflammatory mediators. Antagonists of this channel are currently being investigated for use as therapeutic agents for treating pain, airway disorders, and itch. A novel azabenzofuran series was developed that demonstrated in vitro inhibition of allyl isothiocyanate (AITC)-induced (45)Ca(2+) uptake with nanomolar potencies against both human and rat TRPA1. From this series, compound 10 demonstrated in vivo target coverage in an AITC-induced flinching model in rats while providing unbound plasma concentrations up to 16-fold higher than the TRPA1 rat IC50.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2018
Alessandro Boezio; Kristin L. Andrews; Christiane Boezio; Margaret Yuhua Chu-Moyer; Katrina W. Copeland; Erin F. DiMauro; Robert S. Foti; Robert T. Fremeau; Hua Gao; Stephanie Geuns-Meyer; Russell Graceffa; Hakan Gunaydin; Hongbing Huang; Daniel S. La; Joseph Ligutti; Bryan D. Moyer; Emily A. Peterson; Violeta Yu; Matthew Weiss
Recently, the identification of several classes of aryl sulfonamides and acyl sulfonamides that potently inhibit NaV1.7 and demonstrate high levels of selectivity over other NaV isoforms have been reported. The fully ionizable nature of these inhibitors has been shown to be an important part of the pharmacophore for the observed potency and isoform selectivity. The requirement of this functionality, however, has presented challenges associated with optimization toward inhibitors with drug-like properties and minimal off-target activity. In an effort to obviate these challenges, we set out to develop an orally bioavailable, selective NaV1.7 inhibitor, lacking these acidic functional groups. Herein, we report the discovery of a novel series of inhibitors wherein a triazolesulfone has been designed to serve as a bioisostere for the acyl sulfonamide. This work culminated in the delivery of a potent series of inhibitors which demonstrated good levels of selectivity over NaV1.5 and favorable pharmacokinetics in rodents.
Chemical Research in Toxicology | 2010
Daniel Waldon; Yohannes Teffera; Adria Colletti; Jingzhou Liu; Danielle Zurcher; Katrina W. Copeland; Zhiyang Zhao
Archive | 2010
Alessandro Boezio; Alan C. Cheng; James R. Coats; Katrina W. Copeland; Russell Graceffa; Jean-Christophe Harmange; Hongbing Huang; Daniel La; Philip R. Olivieri; Emily A. Peterson; Laurie B. Schenkel
Archive | 2013
Christiane Boezio; Alessandro Boezio; Howard Bregman; Nagasree Chakka; James R. Coats; Katrina W. Copeland; Erin F. DiMauro; Thomas Dineen; Hua Gao; Daniel La; Isaac E. Marx; Hanh Nho Nguyen; Emily A. Peterson; Matthew Weiss