Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Kenneth E. Rittle is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Kenneth E. Rittle.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

Design, Synthesis, and Evaluation of a Novel 4-Aminomethyl-4-fluoropiperidine as a T-Type Ca2+ Channel Antagonist

William D. Shipe; James C. Barrow; Zhi Qiang Yang; Craig W. Lindsley; F. Vivien Yang; Kelly Ann S. Schlegel; Youheng Shu; Kenneth E. Rittle; Mark G. Bock; George D. Hartman; Cuyue Tang; Jeanine Ballard; Yuhsin Kuo; Emily D. Adarayan; Thomayant Prueksaritanont; Matthew M. Zrada; Victor N. Uebele; Cindy E. Nuss; Thomas M. Connolly; Scott M. Doran; Steven V. Fox; Richard L. Kraus; Michael J. Marino; Valerie Kuzmick Graufelds; Hugo M. Vargas; Patricia B. Bunting; Martha Hasbun-Manning; Rose M. Evans; Kenneth S. Koblan; John J. Renger

The novel T-type antagonist ( S)- 5 has been prepared and evaluated in in vitro and in vivo assays for T-type calcium ion channel activity. Structural modification of the piperidine leads 1 and 2 afforded the fluorinated piperidine ( S)- 5, a potent and selective antagonist that displayed in vivo CNS efficacy without adverse cardiovascular effects.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

Discovery of 1,4-Substituted Piperidines as Potent and Selective Inhibitors of T-Type Calcium Channels

Zhi-Qiang Yang; James C. Barrow; William D. Shipe; Kelly-Ann S. Schlegel; Youheng Shu; F. Vivien Yang; Craig W. Lindsley; Kenneth E. Rittle; Mark G. Bock; George D. Hartman; Victor N. Uebele; Cindy E. Nuss; Steve V. Fox; Richard L. Kraus; Scott M. Doran; Thomas M. Connolly; Cuyue Tang; Jeanine Ballard; Yuhsin Kuo; Emily D. Adarayan; Thomayant Prueksaritanont; Matthew M. Zrada; Michael J. Marino; Valerie Kuzmick Graufelds; Anthony G. DiLella; Ian J. Reynolds; Hugo M. Vargas; Patricia B. Bunting; Richard Woltmann; Michael Magee

The discovery of a novel series of potent and selective T-type calcium channel antagonists is reported. Initial optimization of high-throughput screening leads afforded a 1,4-substituted piperidine amide 6 with good potency and limited selectivity over hERG and L-type channels and other off-target activities. Further SAR on reducing the basicity of the piperidine and introducing polarity led to the discovery of 3-axial fluoropiperidine 30 with a significantly improved selectivity profile. Compound 30 showed good oral bioavailability and brain penetration across species. In a rat genetic model of absence epilepsy, compound 30 demonstrated a robust reduction in the number and duration of seizures at 33 nM plasma concentration, with no cardiovascular effects at up to 5.6 microM. Compound 30 also showed good efficacy in rodent models of essential tremor and Parkinsons disease. Compound 30 thus demonstrates a wide margin between CNS and peripheral effects and is a useful tool for probing the effects of T-type calcium channel inhibition.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

Discovery and X-ray Crystallographic Analysis of a Spiropiperidine Iminohydantoin Inhibitor of β-Secretase‡

James C. Barrow; Shaun R. Stauffer; Kenneth E. Rittle; Phung L. Ngo; Zhi-Qiang Yang; Harold G. Selnick; Samuel L. Graham; Sanjeev Munshi; Georgia B. McGaughey; M. Katharine Holloway; Adam J. Simon; Eric A. Price; Sethu Sankaranarayanan; Dennis Colussi; Katherine Tugusheva; Ming Tain Lai; Amy S. Espeseth; Min Xu; Qian Huang; Abigail Wolfe; Beth Pietrak; Paul Zuck; Dorothy Levorse; Daria J. Hazuda; Joseph P. Vacca

A high-throughput screen at 100 microM inhibitor concentration for the BACE-1 enzyme revealed a novel spiropiperidine iminohydantoin aspartyl protease inhibitor template. An X-ray cocrystal structure with BACE-1 revealed a novel mode of binding whereby the inhibitor interacts with the catalytic aspartates via bridging water molecules. Using the crystal structure as a guide, potent compounds with good brain penetration were designed.


Cell Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2009

Positive allosteric interaction of structurally diverse T-type calcium channel antagonists.

Victor N. Uebele; Cindy E. Nuss; Steven V. Fox; Susan L. Garson; Razvan Cristescu; Scott M. Doran; Richard L. Kraus; Vincent P. Santarelli; Yuxing Li; Æ James C. Barrow; Zhi-Qiang Yang; Kelly-Ann S. Schlegel; Kenneth E. Rittle; Thomas S. Reger; Rodney A. Bednar; Wei Lemaire; Faith A. Mullen; Jeanine Ballard; Cuyue Tang; Ge Dai; Owen B. McManus; Kenneth S. Koblan; John J. Renger

Low-voltage-activated (T-type) calcium channels play a role in diverse physiological responses including neuronal burst firing, hormone secretion, and cell growth. To better understand the biological role and therapeutic potential of the target, a number of structurally diverse antagonists have been identified. Multiple drug interaction sites have been identified for L-type calcium channels, suggesting a similar possibility exists for the structurally related T-type channels. Here, we radiolabel a novel amide T-type calcium channel antagonist (TTA-A1) and show that several known antagonists, including mibefradil, flunarizine, and pimozide, displace binding in a concentration-dependent manner. Further, we identify a novel quinazolinone T-type antagonist (TTA-Q4) that enhanced amide radioligand binding, increased affinity in a saturable manner and slowed dissociation. Functional evaluation showed these compounds to be state-dependent antagonists which show a positive allosteric interaction. Consistent with slowing dissociation, the duration of efficacy was prolonged when compounds were co-administered to WAG/Rij rats, a genetic model of absence epilepsy. The development of a T-type calcium channel radioligand has been used to demonstrate structurally distinct TTAs interact at allosteric sites and to confirm the potential for synergistic inhibition of T-type calcium channels with structurally diverse antagonists.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2003

Unexpected enhancement of thrombin inhibitor potency with o-aminoalkylbenzylamides in the P1 position.

Kenneth E. Rittle; James C. Barrow; Kellie J. Cutrona; Kristen L Glass; Julie A. Krueger; Lawrence C. Kuo; S.Dale Lewis; Bobby J. Lucas; Daniel R. McMasters; Matthew M. Morrissette; Philippe G. Nantermet; Christina L. Newton; William M. Sanders; Youwei Yan; Joseph P. Vacca; Harold G. Selnick

Thrombin inhibitors incorporating o-aminoalkylbenzylamides in the P1 position were designed, synthesized and found to have enhanced potency and selectivity in several different structural classes. X-ray crystallographic analysis of compound 24 bound in the alpha-thrombin-hirugen complex provides an explanation for these unanticipated results.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2002

Discovery of a nonpeptidic small molecule antagonist of the human platelet thrombin receptor (PAR-1)

Philippe G. Nantermet; James C. Barrow; George F Lundell; Janetta M. Pellicore; Kenneth E. Rittle; MaryBeth Young; Roger M. Freidinger; Thomas M. Connolly; Cindra Condra; Jerzy Karczewski; Rodney A. Bednar; Stanley L. Gaul; Robert J. Gould; Kris Prendergast; Harold G. Selnick

The synthesis and biological evaluation of a series of nonpeptidic small molecule antagonists of the human platelet thrombin receptor (PAR-1) are described. Optimization of the 5-amino-3-arylisoxazole lead resulted in an approximate 100-fold increase in potency. The most potent of these compounds (54) inhibits platelet activation with IC(50)s of 90 nM against the thrombin receptor agonist peptide (TRAP) and 510 nM against thrombin as the agonist. Further, antagonist 54 fully blocks platelet aggregation stimulated by 1 nM thrombin for 10 min.


ChemMedChem | 2007

Design and Synthesis of 2,3,5-Substituted Imidazolidin-4-one Inhibitors of BACE-1

James C. Barrow; Kenneth E. Rittle; Phung L. Ngo; Harold G. Selnick; Samuel L. Graham; Steven M. Pitzenberger; Georgia B. McGaughey; Dennis Colussi; Ming Tain Lai; Qian Huang; Katherine Tugusheva; Amy S. Espeseth; Adam J. Simon; Sanjeev Munshi; Joseph P. Vacca

Alzheimer’s disease is a slowly progressing neurodegenerative condition that is increasing in prevalence because of the ageing population and is a significant healthcare burden. Although the pathophysiology of the disease has not been completely elucidated, abnormal production and/or clearance of a small peptide called Ab has been implicated from genetic and other studies. The Ab peptide arises from proteolytic processing of the APP protein, first by b-secretase followed by g-secretase. Based on these observations, b-secretase (BACE-1) has been identified as a promising drug target for disease-modifying therapy and has attracted significant attention from the medicinal chemistry community. BACE-1 is an aspartyl protease with a site of action inside the CNS and thus represents a challenging target. Hydroxyethylamine (HEA) transition state isosteres are well-known inhibitory motifs for aspartyl proteases, and prior work from these laboratories identified 1 (Figure 1) as a potent inhibitor of BACE-1. Whereas this compound has good enzyme potency (IC50=11 nm) and cell activity (sAPPb_NF= 29 nm), molecular weight is still high (578 Daltons) and the compound is a P-glycoprotein transporter (PGP) substrate with poor brain penetration. To improve brain-penetration properties, truncation of the structure and removal of hydrogen bond donors and acceptors was deemed necessary. One approach is to further optimize the P3-P1 portion and eliminate the hydroxyethyl amine. The work described in this report instead focuses on prime side modifications with the goal of improving potency sufficiently to allow removal of the P2P3 portion of the inhibitor. Closer examination of the X-ray crystal structure of 1 in the BACE-1 active site shows that the basic amine makes hydrogen-bond contacts to both Asp228 and the Gly34 carbonyl (Figure 2), and SAR studies have shown that primary and secondary amines are preferred over tertiary amines in this posi-


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Pyridyl amides as potent inhibitors of T-type calcium channels

Thomas S. Reger; Zhi Qiang Yang; Kelly Ann S Schlegel; Youheng Shu; Christa Mattern; Rowena V. Cube; Kenneth E. Rittle; Georgia B. McGaughey; George D. Hartman; Cuyue Tang; Jeanine Ballard; Yuhsin Kuo; Thomayant Prueksaritanont; Cindy E. Nuss; Scott M. Doran; Steven V. Fox; Susan L. Garson; Yuxing Li; Richard L. Kraus; Victor N. Uebele; John J. Renger; James C. Barrow

A novel series of amide T-type calcium channel antagonists were prepared and evaluated using in vitro and in vivo assays. Optimization of the screening hit 3 led to identification of the potent and selective T-type antagonist 37 that displayed in vivo efficacy in rodent models of epilepsy and sleep.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Discovery and expanded SAR of 4,4-disubstituted quinazolin-2-ones as potent T-type calcium channel antagonists.

Kelly Ann S. Schlegel; Zhi Qiang Yang; Thomas S. Reger; Youheng Shu; Rowena V. Cube; Kenneth E. Rittle; Phung Le Bondiskey; Mark G. Bock; George D. Hartman; Cuyue Tang; Jeanine Ballard; Yuhsin Kuo; Thomayant Prueksaritanont; Cindy E. Nuss; Scott M. Doran; Steven V. Fox; Susan L. Garson; Richard L. Kraus; Yuxing Li; Victor N. Uebele; John J. Renger; James C. Barrow

The discovery and synthesis of 4,4-disubstituted quinazolinones as T-type calcium channel antagonists is reported. Based on lead compounds 2 and 3, a focused SAR campaign driven by the optimization of potency, metabolic stability, and pharmacokinetic profile identified 45 as a potent T-type Ca(2+) channel antagonist with minimized PXR activation. In vivo, 45 suppressed seizure frequency in a rat model of absence epilepsy and showed significant alterations of sleep architecture after oral dosing to rats as measured by EEG.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Discovery of 4,4-Disubstituted Quinazolin-2-ones as T-Type Calcium Channel Antagonists

James C. Barrow; Kenneth E. Rittle; Thomas S. Reger; Zhi Qiang Yang; Phung Le Bondiskey; Georgia B. McGaughey; Mark G. Bock; George D. Hartman; Cuyue Tang; Jeanine Ballard; Yuhsin Kuo; Thomayant Prueksaritanont; Cindy E. Nuss; Scott M. Doran; Steven V. Fox; Susan L. Garson; Richard L. Kraus; Yuxing Li; Michael J. Marino; Valerie Kuzmick Graufelds; Victor N. Uebele; John J. Renger

A novel series of quinazolinone T-type calcium channel antagonists have been prepared and evaluated using in vitro and in vivo assays. Optimization of the screening hit 3 by modifications of the 3- and 4-positions of the quinazolinone ring afforded potent and selective antagonists that displayed in vivo central nervous system efficacy in epilepsy and tremor models, as well as significant effects on rat active wake as measured by electrocorticogram.

Collaboration


Dive into the Kenneth E. Rittle's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

James C. Barrow

University of Pennsylvania

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Victor J. Lotti

United States Military Academy

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kevin F. Gilbert

United States Military Academy

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge