Koc-Kan Ho
Princeton University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Koc-Kan Ho.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011
Ronald Palin; Lynn Abernethy; Nasrin Ansari; Ken Cameron; Thomas R. Clarkson; Maureen Dempster; David Dunn; Anna-Marie Easson; Darren Edwards; John Maclean; Katy Everett; Helen Feilden; Koc-Kan Ho; Steve Kultgen; Peter Littlewood; Duncan McArthur; Deborah McGregor; Hazel McLuskey; Irina Neagu; Stuart Neale; Lesley-Anne Nisbet; Michael Ohlmeyer; Quynhchi Pham; Paul Ratcliffe; Yajing Rong; Andrew Roughton; Melanie Sammons; Robert Swanson; Heather Tracey; Glenn Walker
Optimisation of a screening hit incorporating both TRPV1 activity and solubility was conducted. Substitution of the isoxazole-3-carboxamide with the bespoke 1S, 3R-3-aminocyclohexanol motif afforded the requisite balance of potency and solubility. Compounds 32 and 40 were found to have antihyperalgesic effects in the rat CFA Hg assay and induce a mechanism based hyperthermia.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009
Koc-Kan Ho; James R. Beasley; Laura Belanger; Darcey Black; Jui-Hsiang Chan; David Dunn; Bing Hu; Anthony E. Klon; Steven G. Kultgen; Michael Ohlmeyer; Susan M. Parlato; Peter C. Ray; Quynhchi Pham; Yajing Rong; Andrew Roughton; Tiffany L. Walker; Jane Wright; Kai Xu; Yan Xu; Limei Zhang; Maria L. Webb
The profile of a series of triazine and pyrimidine based ROCK inhibitors is described. An initial binding mode was established based on a homology model and the proposed interactions are consistent with the observed SAR. Compounds from the series are potent in a cell migration assay and possess a favorable kinase selectivity. In vivo activity was demonstrated for compound 1A in a spontaneous hypertensive rat model.
Drug Discovery Today | 2002
Douglas S. Auld; David J. Diller; Koc-Kan Ho
The large-scale application of combinatorial chemistry to drug discovery is an endeavor that is now more than ten years old. The growth of chemical libraries together with the influx of novel genomic targets has led to a reconstruction of the drug-screening paradigm. The drug discovery industry faces a post-genomic world where the interplay between tens-of-thousands of proteins must be addressed. To compound this complexity, there now exists the ability to screen millions of compounds against a single target. This review focuses on the practice and use of selecting individual compounds from large chemical libraries that act on targets relevant to signal transduction.
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015
Yong Xu; Benjamin Brenning; Steven G. Kultgen; Jason M. Foulks; Adrianne Clifford; Shuping Lai; Ashley Chan; Shannon Merx; Michael V. McCullar; Steven B. Kanner; Koc-Kan Ho
Pim-1 has emerged as an attractive target for developing therapeutic agents for treating disorders involving abnormal cell growth, especially cancers. Herein we present lead optimization, chemical synthesis and biological evaluation of pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidine compounds as potent and selective inhibitors of Pim-1 starting from a hit from virtual screening. These pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidine compounds strongly inhibited Pim-1 and Flt-3 kinases. Selected compounds suppressed both the phosphorylation of BAD protein in a cell-based assay and 2-dimensional colony formation in a clonogenic cell survival assay at submicromolar potency, suggesting that cellular activity was mediated through inhibition of Pim-1. Moreover, these Pim-1 inhibitors did not show significant hERG inhibition at 30 μM concentration. The lead compound proved to be highly selective against a panel of 119 oncogenic kinases, indicating it had an improved safety profile compared with the first generation Pim-1 inhibitor SGI-1776.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009
Andrew G. Cole; Adolph C. Bohnstedt; Vidyadhar M. Paradkar; Celia Kingsbury; Jorge Quintero; Haengsoon Park; Yingchun Lu; Ming You; Irina Neagu; David J. Diller; Jeffrey J. Letourneau; Yuefei Shao; Ray Anthony James; Christopher Mark Riviello; Koc-Kan Ho; Tsung H. Lin; Bojing Wang; Kenneth C. Appell; Matthew A. Sills; Elizabeth Quadros; Earl F. Kimble; Michael Ohlmeyer; Maria L. Webb
A novel class of Janus tyrosine kinase 3 (JAK3) inhibitors based on a 2-benzimidazoylpurinone core structure is described. Through substitution of the benzimidazoyl moiety and optimization of the N-9 substituent of the purinone, compound 24 was identified incorporating a chroman-based functional group. Compound 24 shows excellent kinase activity, good oral bioavailability and demonstrates efficacy in an acute mechanistic mouse model through inhibition of interleukin-2 (IL-2) induced interferon-gamma (INF-gamma) production.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011
Paul Ratcliffe; Lynn Abernethy; Nasrin Ansari; Kenneth S. Cameron; Tom Clarkson; Maureen Dempster; David Dunn; Anna-Marie Easson; Darren Edwards; Katy Everett; Helen Feilden; Koc-Kan Ho; Steve Kultgen; Peter Littlewood; John Maclean; Duncan McArthur; Deborah McGregor; Hazel McLuskey; Irina Neagu; Olaf Nimz; Lesley-Anne Nisbet; Michael Ohlmeyer; Ronnie Palin; Quynhchi Pham; Yajing Rong; Andrew Roughton; Melanie Sammons; Robert Swanson; Heather Tracey; Glenn Walker
Systematic optimisation of a poorly soluble lead series of isoxazole-3-carboxamides was conducted. Substitution of the 4-position with specific polar functionality afforded the requisite balance of potency, solubility and physicochemical properties. Compound 21a was found to be efficacious in the rat Capsaicin Hargreaves assay following oral administration.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010
Brian F. Mcguinness; Koc-Kan Ho; Tara M. Stauffer; Laura L. Rokosz; Neelima Mannava; Steven G. Kultgen; Kurt W. Saionz; Anthony E. Klon; Weiqing Chen; Hema Desai; W. Lynn Rogers; Maria L. Webb; Juxing Yin; Yan Jiang; Tailong Li; Hao Yan; Konghua Jing; Shengting Zhang; Kanak Kanti Majumdar; Vikash Srivastava; Samiran Saha
A novel series of quinolinone-based adenosine A(2B) receptor antagonists was identified via high throughput screening of an encoded combinatorial compound collection. Synthesis and assay of a series of analogs highlighted essential structural features of the initial hit. Optimization resulted in an A(2B) antagonist (2i) which exhibited potent activity in a cAMP accumulation assay (5.1 nM) and an IL-8 release assay (0.4 nM).
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011
Susan Elizabeth Napier; Jeffrey J. Letourneau; Nasrin Ansari; Douglas S. Auld; James R. Baker; Stuart Best; Leigh Campbell-Wan; Ray Jui-Hsiang Chan; Mark Craighead; Hema Desai; Koc-Kan Ho; Cliona P. MacSweeney; Rachel Milne; J. Richard Morphy; Irina Neagu; Michael Ohlmeyer; Jack Pick; Jeremy Presland; Chris Riviello; Heather A. Zanetakos; Jiuqiao Zhao; Maria L. Webb
Synthesis and structure-activity relationships (SAR) of a novel series of vasopressin V(1b) antagonists are described. 2-(6-Aminomethylaryl-2-aryl-4-oxo-quinazolin-3(4H)-yl)acetamide have been identified with low nanomolar affinity for the V(1b) receptor and good selectivity with respect to related receptors V(1a), V(2) and OT. Optimised compound 16 shows a good pharmacokinetic profile and activity in a mechanistic model of HPA dysfunction.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011
Susan Elizabeth Napier; Jeffrey J. Letourneau; Nasrin Ansari; Douglas S. Auld; James R. Baker; Stuart Best; Leigh Campbell-Wan; Jui-Hsiang Chan; Mark Craighead; Hema Desai; Katharine A. Goan; Koc-Kan Ho; Ellen G.J. Hulskotte; Cliona P. MacSweeney; Rachel Milne; J. Richard Morphy; Irina Neagu; Michael Ohlmeyer; Ard W.M.M. Peeters; Jeremy Presland; Chris Riviello; Ge S.F. Ruigt; Fiona J. Thomson; Heather A. Zanetakos; Jiuqiao Zhao; Maria L. Webb
Synthesis and structure-activity relationships (SAR) of a novel series of vasopressin V(1b) (V(3)) antagonists are described. 2-(4-Oxo-2-aryl-quinazolin-3(4H)-yl)acetamides have been identified with low nanomolar affinity for the V(1b) receptor and good selectivity with respect to related receptors V(1a), V(2) and oxytocin (OT). Optimised compound 12j demonstrates a good pharmacokinetic profile and activity in a mechanistic model of HPA dysfunction.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011
Angus R. Brown; Michael Bosies; Helen Cameron; John K. Clark; Angela Cowley; Mark Craighead; Moira A. Elmore; Alistair Firth; Richard Goodwin; Susan Goutcher; Emma Grant; Morag Grassie; Simon James Anthony Grove; Niall M. Hamilton; Hannah Hampson; Alison Hillier; Koc-Kan Ho; Michael Kiczun; Celia Kingsbury; Steven G. Kultgen; Peter Littlewood; Scott J. Lusher; Susan MacDonald; Lorraine McIntosh; Theresa McIntyre; Ashvin Mistry; J. Richard Morphy; Olaf Nimz; Michael Ohlmeyer; Jack Pick
High-throughput screening of 3.87 million compounds delivered a novel series of non-steroidal GR antagonists. Subsequent rounds of optimisation allowed progression from a non-selective ligand with a poor ADMET profile to an orally bioavailable, selective, stable, glucocorticoid receptor antagonist.