Kumiko Takeuchi
Eli Lilly and Company
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Publication
Featured researches published by Kumiko Takeuchi.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2003
Kumiko Takeuchi; Todd J. Kohn; Nicholas Allan Honigschmidt; Vincent Patrick Rocco; Patrick Gianpietro Spinazze; Daniel James Koch; Steven T Atkinson; Larry Wayne Hertel; David L. Nelson; D.Bradley Wainscott; Laura J Ahmad; Janice Shaw; David T. Wong
A series of 1-aryloxy-3-piperidinylpropan-2-ols possessing potent dual 5-HT(1A) receptor antagonism and serotonin reuptake inhibition was discovered. 1-(1H-Indol-4-yloxy)-3-(4-benzo[b]thiophen-2-ylpiperidinyl)propan-2-ols exhibited selective and high affinity at the 5-HT(1A) receptor and serotonin reuptake inhibition at nanomolar concentrations for dual activities.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2000
Kumiko Takeuchi; Jolie Anne Bastian; Donetta S. Gifford-Moore; Richard Waltz Harper; Shawn Christopher Miller; Jeffrey Thomas Mullaney; Daniel Jon Sall; Gerald F. Smith; Minsheng Zhang; Matthew Joseph Fisher
A novel series of 1,2-disubstituted indole, azaindole and benzimidazole derivatives possessing an amine moiety was identified as thrombin inhibitors. An indole with basic diamine moieties (12a) was the most potent thrombin inhibitor in the series with Kass= 197 x 10(6) L/mol.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 1999
Kumiko Takeuchi; Todd J. Kohn; Daniel Jon Sall; Michael L. Denney; Jefferson R. McCowan; Gerry F. Smith; Donetta S. Gifford-Moore
A novel series of benzo[b]thiophene diamine thrombin inhibitors with a conformationally restricted C3-side chain 3 was investigated. The constrained C3-side chain by a cyclohexyl ring contributed to not only an additive but also a synergistic effect on the thrombin inhibitory activity. The SAR studies resulted in the discovery of a potent thrombin inhibitor 27 that was over 750-fold more potent than the initial lead compound 1.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 1999
Minsheng Zhang; Dianna L. Bailey; Jolie Anne Bastian; Stephen L. Briggs; Nickolay Y. Chirgadze; David K. Clawson; Michael L. Denney; Donetta S. Gifford-Moore; Richard Waltz Harper; Lea M. Johnson; Valentine J. Klimkowski; Todd J. Kohn; Ho-Shen Lin; Jefferson R. McCowan; Michael Enrico Richett; Daniel Jon Sall; Amy J. Smith; Gerald F. Smith; David W. Snyder; Kumiko Takeuchi; Barbara G. Utterback; Sau-Chi B. Yan
Potent, subnanomolar thrombin inhibitors 4, 5, and 6 are developed through side chain optimization of novel, benzo[b]thiophene-based small organic entities 2 and 3 and through SAR additivity studies of the new structural elements identified. X-ray crystallographic studies of 4b-thrombin complex revealed a hydrophobic and an electrostatic interaction of these new elements with thrombin at the S2 and S3 binding sites. In vitro and in vivo pharmacological studies showed that 4, 5, and 6 are potent anticoagulants in human plasma with demonstrated antithrombotic efficacy in a rat model of thrombosis.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 1994
Mitchell I. Steinberg; Alan David Palkowitz; Kenneth Jeff Thrasher; Jon K. Reel; Karen M. Zimmerman; Celia A. Whitesitt; Richard Lee Simon; Kenneth Lee Hauser; Sherryl Lynn Lifer; William Pfeifer; Kumiko Takeuchi; Sally A. Wiest; Venkatraghavan Vasudevan; K.G. Bermis; Jack B. Deeter; C.J. Barnett; T.M. Wilson; Winston S. Marshall; Donald B. Boyd
Abstract The synthesis and in vitro biological evaluation of a novel series of diastereomeric phenoxyproline octanoamides ( 3–h ) as angiotensin II (AT 1 ) receptor antagonists are reported.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 1998
Kumiko Takeuchi; Todd J. Kohn; Dale E. Mais; Timothy A True; Virginia L. Wyss; Joseph A. Jakubowski
Synthesis and initial in vitro evaluation of a novel series of phenyl oxazole derivatives are described. An SAR study of the novel dual-acting TRA/TSI agent has revealed that the lipophilicity of the oxazole amide substituents greatly influences the TRA activity but not the TSI. The chain length of the alkenoic acid side chain affects both TRA and TSI. The optimal chain length for the combined activities was found to be n = 4 (heptenoic acid).
Tetrahedron Letters | 1998
Kumiko Takeuchi; Todd J. Kohn
Abstract A Wittig reaction of amide substituted phenyl 3-pyridyl ketones with “nonstabilized” phosphorus ylides which contain a carboxyl terminus preferentially forms (E) -olefin. The preference for this stereoselectivity stems from either hydrogen bonding or salt-bridge formation between the amide group and the carboxyl terminus during the oxaphosphetane intermediate formation.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 1997
Daniel Jon Sall; Jolie Anne Bastian; Stephen L. Briggs; John A. Buben; Nickolay Y. Chirgadze; David K. Clawson; Michael L. Denney; Deborah D. Giera; Donetta S. Gifford-Moore; Richard Waltz Harper; Kenneth Lee Hauser; Valentine J. Klimkowski; Todd J. Kohn; Ho-Shen Lin; Jefferson R. McCowan; Alan David Palkowitz; Gerald F. Smith; Kumiko Takeuchi; Kenneth Jeff Thrasher; Jennifer M. Tinsley; Barbara G. Utterback; Sau-Chi B. Yan; Minsheng Zhang
Archive | 2003
Maria-Jesus Blanco-Pillado; Mark Donald Chappell; La Torre Marta Garcia Lilly S. A. De; Buezo Nuria Diaz; James Erwin Fritz; William Glen Holloway; James Edward Junior Matt; Charles H. Mitch; Concepcion Pedregal-Tercero; Steven J. Quimby; Miles Goodman Siegel; Dana Rae Smith; Russell D. Stucky; Kumiko Takeuchi; Elizabeth Marie Thomas; Chad Nolan Wolfe
Archive | 1998
Michael R. Jirousek; Michael Paal; Gerd Ruhter; Theo Schotten; Wolfgang Stenzel; Kumiko Takeuchi