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Featured researches published by Kevin Hong.


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2009

BIIB021, an orally available, fully synthetic small-molecule inhibitor of the heat shock protein Hsp90

Karen Lundgren; Hong Zhang; John Brekken; Nanni Huser; Rachel Powell; Noel Timple; David J. Busch; Laura Neely; John Sensintaffar; Yong‐Ching Yang; Andres McKenzie; Jessica Friedman; Robert Scannevin; Adeela Kamal; Kevin Hong; Srinivas Rao Kasibhatla; Marcus F. Boehm; Francis Burrows

Inhibition of heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90) results in the degradation of oncoproteins that drive malignant progression, inducing cell death, making Hsp90 a target of substantial interest for cancer therapy. BIIB021 is a novel, fully synthetic inhibitor of Hsp90 that binds competitively with geldanamycin in the ATP-binding pocket of Hsp90. In tumor cells, BIIB021 induced the degradation of Hsp90 client proteins including HER-2, AKT, and Raf-1 and up-regulated expression of the heat shock proteins Hsp70 and Hsp27. BIIB021 treatment resulted in growth inhibition and cell death in cell lines from a variety of tumor types at nanomolar concentrations. Oral administration of BIIB021 led to the degradation of Hsp90 client proteins measured in tumor tissue and resulted in the inhibition of tumor growth in several human tumor xenograft models. Studies to investigate the antitumor effects of BIIB021 showed activity on both daily and intermittent dosing schedules, providing dose schedule flexibility for clinical studies. Assays measuring the HER-2 protein in tumor tissue and the HER-2 extracellular domain in plasma were used to show interdiction of the Hsp90 pathway and utility as potential biomarkers in clinical trials for BIIB021. Together, these data show that BIIB021 is a promising new oral inhibitor of Hsp90 with antitumor activity in preclinical models.[Mol Cancer Ther 2009;8(4):921–9]


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2007

Rationally designed high-affinity 2-amino-6-halopurine heat shock protein 90 inhibitors that exhibit potent antitumor activity

Srinivas Rao Kasibhatla; Kevin Hong; Marco Biamonte; David J. Busch; Patricia Karjian; John Sensintaffar; Adeela Kamal; Rachel Lough; John Brekken; Karen Lundgren; Roy Grecko; Gregg Timony; Yingqing Ran; Robert K. Mansfield; Lawrence C. Fritz; Edgar H. Ulm; Francis Burrows; Marcus F. Boehm

Heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90) is a molecular chaperone protein implicated in stabilizing the conformation and maintaining the function of many cell-signaling proteins. Many oncogenic proteins are more dependent on Hsp90 in maintaining their conformation, stability, and maturation than their normal counterparts. Furthermore, recent data show that Hsp90 exists in an activated form in malignant cells but in a latent inactive form in normal tissues, suggesting that inhibitors selective for the activated form could provide a high therapeutic index. Hence, Hsp90 is emerging as an exciting new target for the treatment of cancer. We now report on a novel series of 2-amino-6-halopurine Hsp90 inhibitors exemplified by 2-amino-6-chloro-9-(4-iodo-3,5-dimethylpyridin-2-ylmethyl)purine (30). These highly potent inhibitors (IC50 of 30 = 0.009 microM in a HER-2 degradation assay) also display excellent antiproliferative activity against various tumor cell lines (IC50 of 30 = 0.03 microM in MCF7 cells). Moreover, this class of inhibitors shows higher affinity for the activated form of Hsp90 compared to our earlier 8-sulfanylpurine Hsp90 inhibitor series. When administered orally to mice, these compounds exhibited potent tumor growth inhibition (>80%) in an N87 xenograft model, similar to that observed with 17-allylamino-17-desmethoxygeldanamycin (17-AAG), which is a compound currently in phase I/II clinical trials.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2006

Orally Active Purine-Based Inhibitors of Heat Shock Protein 90

Srinivas Rao Kasibhatla; Lin Zhang; Marco Biamonte; Marcus F. Boehm; Junhua Fan; Jiandong Shi; Kevin Hong

Orally active Hsp90 inhibitors are of interest as potential chemotherapeutic agents. Recently, fully synthetic 8-benzyladenines and 8-sulfanyladenines such as 4 were disclosed as Hsp90 inhibitors, but these compounds are not water soluble and consequently have unacceptably low oral bioavailabilities. We now report that water-solubility can be achieved by inserting an amino functionality in the N(9) side chain. This results in compounds that are potent, soluble in aqueous media, and orally bioavailable. In an HER-2 degradation assay, the highest potency was achieved with the neopentylamine 42 (HER-2 IC(50) = 90 nM). In a murine tumor xenograft model (using the gastric cancer cell line N87), the H(3)PO(4) salts of the amines 38, 39, and 42 induced tumor growth inhibition when administered orally at 200 mg/kg/day. The amines 38, 39, and 42 are the first Hsp90 inhibitors shown to inhibit tumor growth upon oral dosage.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

EC144 Is a Potent Inhibitor of the Heat Shock Protein 90.

Jiandong Shi; Ryan Van de Water; Kevin Hong; Ryan Lamer; Kenneth W. Weichert; Cristina M. Sandoval; Srinivas Rao Kasibhatla; Marcus F. Boehm; Jianhua Chao; Karen Lundgren; Noelito Timple; Rachel Lough; Gerardo Ibanez; Christina Boykin; Francis Burrows; Marilyn R. Kehry; Theodore J. Yun; Erin K. Harning; Christine Ambrose; Jeffrey Thompson; Sarah A. Bixler; Anthone W. Dunah; Pamela A. Snodgrass-Belt; Joseph W. Arndt; Istvan J. Enyedy; Ping Li; Victor Hong; Andres McKenzie; Marco Biamonte

Alkyne 40, 5-(2-amino-4-chloro-7-((4-methoxy-3,5-dimethylpyridin-2-yl)methyl)-7H-pyrrolo[2,3-d]pyrimidin-5-yl)-2-methylpent-4-yn-2-ol (EC144), is a second generation inhibitor of heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90) and is substantially more potent in vitro and in vivo than the first generation inhibitor 14 (BIIB021) that completed phase II clinical trials. Alkyne 40 is more potent than 14 in an Hsp90α binding assay (IC(50) = 1.1 vs 5.1 nM) as well as in its ability to degrade Her-2 in MCF-7 cells (EC(50) = 14 vs 38 nM). In a mouse model of gastric tumors (N87), 40 stops tumor growth at 5 mg/kg and causes partial tumor regressions at 10 mg/kg (po, qd × 5). Under the same conditions, 14 stops tumor growth only at 120 mg/kg, and does not induce partial regressions. Thus, alkyne 40 is approximately 20-fold more efficacious than 14 in mice.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Design, synthesis, and biological evaluation of pyrazolopyrimidine-sulfonamides as potent multiple-mitotic kinase (MMK) inhibitors (part I).

Lin Zhang; Junhua Fan; Jer-Hong Chong; Angela Cesena; Betty Tam; Charles Gilson; Christina Boykin; Deping Wang; Dikran Aivazian; Doug Marcotte; Guangqing Xiao; Jean-Yves Le Brazidec; Jinhua Piao; Karen Lundgren; Kevin Hong; Khang Vu; Khanh Nguyen; Liang-Shang Gan; Laura Silvian; Leona E. Ling; Min Teng; Mitchell Reff; Nicole Takeda; Noel Timple; Qin Wang; Ron Morena; Samina Khan; Shuo Zhao; Tony Li; Wen-Cherng Lee

A novel class of pyrazolopyrimidine-sulfonamides was discovered as selective dual inhibitors of aurora kinase A (AKA) and cyclin-dependent kinase 1 (CDK1). These inhibitors were originally designed based on an early lead (compound I). SAR development has led to the discovery of potent inhibitors with single digit nM IC(50)s towards both AKA and CDK1. An exemplary compound 1a has demonstrated good efficacy in an HCT116 colon cancer xenograft model.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2006

7'-substituted benzothiazolothio- and pyridinothiazolothio-purines as potent heat shock protein 90 inhibitors.

Lin Zhang; Junhua Fan; Khang Vu; Kevin Hong; Jean-Yves Le Brazidec; Jiandong Shi; Marco Biamonte; David J. Busch; Rachel Lough; Roy Grecko; Yingqing Ran; John Sensintaffar; Adeela Kamal; Karen Lundgren; Francis Burrows; Robert K. Mansfield; Gregg Timony; Edgar H. Ulm; and Srinivas R. Kasibhatla; Marcus F. Boehm


Archive | 2004

Pyrrolopyrimidines and related analogs as HSP90-inhibitors

Srinivas Rao Kasibhatla; Jiandong Shi; Jean-Yves Le Brazidec; Marco Biamonte; Kevin Hong; Marcus F. Boehm


Archive | 2002

Purine analogs having hsp90-inhibiting activity

Srinivas Rao Kasibhatla; Kevin Hong; Lin Zhang; Marco Biamonte; Marcus F. Boehm; Jiandong Shi; Junhua Fan


Archive | 2004

Novel heterocyclic compounds as hsp90-inhibitors

Srinivas Rao Kasibhatla; Marcus F. Boehm; Kevin Hong; Marco Biamonte; Jiandong Shi; Brazidec Jean-Yves Le; Lin Zhang; David Hurst


Archive | 2004

2-Aminopurine analogs having HSP90-inhibiting activity

Srinivas Rao Kasibhatla; Kevin Hong; Marcus F. Boehm; Marco Biamonte; Lin Zhang

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Lin Zhang

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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