Kenneth M. Boy
Bristol-Myers Squibb
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Publication
Featured researches published by Kenneth M. Boy.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011
Kenneth M. Boy; Jason M. Guernon; Jianliang Shi; Jeremy H. Toyn; Jere E. Meredith; Donna M. Barten; Catherine R. Burton; Charles F. Albright; Jovita Marcinkeviciene; Andrew C. Good; Andrew J. Tebben; Jodi K. Muckelbauer; Daniel M. Camac; Kimberley A. Lentz; Joanne J. Bronson; Richard E. Olson; John E. Macor; Lorin A. Thompson
The synthesis, evaluation, and structure-activity relationships of a class of γ-lactam 1,3-diaminopropan-2-ol transition-state isostere inhibitors of BACE are discussed. Two strategies for optimizing lead compound 1a are presented. Reducing the overall size of the inhibitors resulted in the identification of γ-lactam 1i, whereas the introduction of conformational constraint on the prime-side of the inhibitor generated compounds such as the 3-hydroxypyrrolidine inhibitor 28n. The full in vivo profile of 1i in rats and 28n in Tg 2576 mice is presented.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011
Lorin A. Thompson; Jianliang Shi; Carl P. Decicco; Andrew J. Tebben; Richard E. Olson; Kenneth M. Boy; Jason M. Guernon; Andrew Good; Ann Y. Liauw; Changsheng Zheng; Robert A. Copeland; Andrew P. Combs; George L. Trainor; Daniel M. Camac; Jodi K. Muckelbauer; Kimberley A. Lentz; James E. Grace; Catherine R. Burton; Jeremy H. Toyn; Donna M. Barten; Jovita Marcinkeviciene; Jere E. Meredith; Charles F. Albright; John E. Macor
The synthesis, evaluation, and structure-activity relationships of a set of related constrained diaminopropane inhibitors of BACE-1 are described. The full in vivo profile of an optimized inhibitor in both normal and P-gp deficient mice is compared with data generated in normal rats.
Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2016
Jeremy H. Toyn; Kenneth M. Boy; Joseph Raybon; Jere E. Meredith; Alan S. Robertson; Valerie Guss; Nina Hoque; Francis Sweeney; Xiaoliang Zhuo; Wendy Clarke; Kimberly Snow; Rex Denton; Dmitry Zuev; Lorin A. Thompson; John Morrison; James E. Grace; Flora Berisha; Michael T. Furlong; Jun-Sheng Wang; Kimberly A. Lentz; Ramesh Padmanabha; Lynda S. Cook; Cong Wei; Dieter M. Drexler; John E. Macor; Charlie F. Albright; Maciej Gasior; Richard E. Olson; Quan Hong; Holly Soares
The amyloid-β peptide (Aβ)—in particular, the 42–amino acid form, Aβ1-42—is thought to play a key role in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Thus, several therapeutic modalities aiming to inhibit Aβ synthesis or increase the clearance of Aβ have entered clinical trials, including γ-secretase inhibitors, anti-Aβ antibodies, and amyloid-β precursor protein cleaving enzyme inhibitors. A unique class of small molecules, γ-secretase modulators (GSMs), selectively reduce Aβ1-42 production, and may also decrease Aβ1-40 while simultaneously increasing one or more shorter Aβ peptides, such as Aβ1-38 and Aβ1-37. GSMs are particularly attractive because they do not alter the total amount of Aβ peptides produced by γ-secretase activity; they spare the processing of other γ-secretase substrates, such as Notch; and they do not cause accumulation of the potentially toxic processing intermediate, β-C-terminal fragment. This report describes the translation of pharmacological activity across species for two novel GSMs, (S)-7-(4-fluorophenyl)-N2-(3-methoxy-4-(3-methyl-1H-1,2,4-triazol-1-yl)phenyl)-N4-methyl-6,7-dihydro-5H-cyclopenta[d]pyrimidine-2,4-diamine (BMS-932481) and (S,Z)-17-(4-chloro-2-fluorophenyl)-34-(3-methyl-1H-1,2,4-triazol-1-yl)-16,17-dihydro-15H-4-oxa-2,9-diaza-1(2,4)-cyclopenta[d]pyrimidina-3(1,3)-benzenacyclononaphan-6-ene (BMS-986133). These GSMs are highly potent in vitro, exhibit dose- and time-dependent activity in vivo, and have consistent levels of pharmacological effect across rats, dogs, monkeys, and human subjects. In rats, the two GSMs exhibit similar pharmacokinetics/pharmacodynamics between the brain and cerebrospinal fluid. In all species, GSM treatment decreased Aβ1-42 and Aβ1-40 levels while increasing Aβ1-38 and Aβ1-37 by a corresponding amount. Thus, the GSM mechanism and central activity translate across preclinical species and humans, thereby validating this therapeutic modality for potential utility in AD.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015
Kenneth M. Boy; Jason M. Guernon; Yong-Jin Wu; Yunhui Zhang; Joe Shi; Weixu Zhai; Shirong Zhu; Samuel W. Gerritz; Jeremy H. Toyn; Jere E. Meredith; Donna M. Barten; Catherine R. Burton; Charles F. Albright; Andrew C. Good; James E. Grace; Kimberley A. Lentz; Richard E. Olson; John E. Macor; Lorin A. Thompson
The synthesis, evaluation, and structure-activity relationships of a class of acyl guanidines which inhibit the BACE-1 enzyme are presented. The prolinyl acyl guanidine chemotype (7c), unlike compounds of the parent isothiazole chemotype (1), yielded compounds with good agreement between their enzymatic and cellular potency as well as a reduced susceptibility to P-gp efflux. Further improvements in potency and P-gp ratio were realized via a macrocyclization strategy. The in vivo profile in wild-type mice and P-gp effects for the macrocyclic analog 21c is presented.
Archive | 2011
Kenneth M. Boy; Jason M. Guernon; John E. Macor; Lorin A. Thompson; Yong-Jin Wu; Yunhui Zhang
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2004
Kenneth M. Boy; Jason M. Guernon; Sing-Yuen Sit; Kai Xie; Piyasena Hewawasam; Christopher G. Boissard; Steven I. Dworetzky; Joanne Natale; Valentin K. Gribkoff; Nicholas J. Lodge; John E. Starrett
Archive | 2010
Lorin A. Thompson; Kenneth M. Boy; Jason M. Guernon; Mendi A. Higgins; Jianliang Shi; Yong-Jin Wu; Yunhui Zhang; John E. Macor
Archive | 2006
Lorin A. Thompson; Kenneth M. Boy; Jianliang Shi; John E. Macor
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2004
Sing-Yuen Sit; Kai Xie; Swanee Jacutin-Porte; Kenneth M. Boy; James Seanz; Matthew T. Taber; Amit G. Gulwadi; Carolyn D. Korpinen; Kevin D. Burris; Thaddeus F. Molski; Elaine Ryan; Cen Xu; Todd A. Verdoorn; Graham Johnson; David E. Nichols; Richard B. Mailman
Archive | 2014
Michael M. Miller; Claudio Mapelli; Martin Patrick Allen; Michael S. Bowsher; Kenneth M. Boy; Eric P. Gillis; David R. Langley; Eric Mull; Maude A Poirier; Nishith Sanghvi; Li-Qiang Sun; Daniel J. Tenney; Kap-Sun Yeung; Juliang Zhu; Patrick C. Reid; Paul Michael Scola