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Dive into the research topics where Kyle E. Parcella is active.

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Featured researches published by Kyle E. Parcella.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2017

Discovery and initial optimization of alkoxyanthranilic acid derivatives as inhibitors of HCV NS5B polymerase.

Kyle E. Parcella; Andrew Nickel; Brett R. Beno; Steven Sheriff; Changhong Wan; Ying-Kai Wang; Susan B. Roberts; Nicholas A. Meanwell; John F. Kadow

Alkoxyanthranilic acid derivatives have been identified to inhibit HCV NS5B polymerase, binding in an allosteric site located at the convergence of the palm and thumb regions. Information from co-crystal structures guided the structural design strategy. Ultimately, two independent structural modifications led to a similar shift in binding mode that when combined led to a synergistic improvement in potency and the identification of inhibitors with sub-micromolar HCV NS5B binding potency.


Drug Metabolism and Disposition | 2016

Phosphocholine conjugation: an unexpected in vivo conjugation pathway associated with hepatitis c ns5b inhibitors featuring a bicyclo[1.1.1]pentane.

Xiaoliang Zhuo; Joseph L. Cantone; Yingzi Wang; John E. Leet; Dieter M. Drexler; Kap-Sun Yeung; Xiaohua Stella Huang; Kyle J. Eastman; Kyle E. Parcella; Kathleen W. Mosure; Matthew G. Soars; John F. Kadow; Benjamin M. Johnson

During a medicinal chemistry campaign to identify inhibitors of the hepatitis C virus nonstructural protein 5B (RNA-dependent RNA polymerase), a bicyclo[1.1.1]pentane was introduced into the chemical scaffold to improve metabolic stability. The inhibitors bearing this feature, compound 1 [5-(3-(bicyclo[1.1.1]pentan-1-ylcarbamoyl)-4-fluorophenyl)-2-(4-fluorophenyl)-N-methyl-6-(3,3,3-trifluoropropyl)furo[2,3-b]pyridine-3-carboxamide] and compound 2 [5-(3-(bicyclo[1.1.1]pentan-1-ylcarbamoyl)phenyl)-2-(4-fluorophenyl)-N-methyl-6-(3,3,3-trifluoropropyl)furo[2,3-b]pyridine-3-carboxamide], exhibited low turnover in incubations with liver S9 or hepatocytes (rat, human), with hydroxylation of the bicyclic moiety being the only metabolic pathway observed. In subsequent disposition studies using bile duct–cannulated rats, the metabolite profiles of bile samples revealed, in addition to multiple products of bicyclopentane oxidation, unexpected metabolites characterized by molecular masses that were 181 Da greater than those of compound 1 or 2. Further liquid chromatography/multiple-stage mass spectrometry and nuclear magnetic resonance analysis of the isolated metabolite of compound 1 demonstrated the presence of a phosphocholine (POPC) moiety bound to the methine carbon of the bicyclic moiety through an ester bond. The POPC conjugate of the nonstructural protein 5B inhibitors was assumed to result from two sequential reactions: hydroxylation of the bicyclic methine to a tertiary alcohol and addition of POPC by cytidine-diphosphocholine:1,2-diacylglycerol cholinephosphotransferase, an enzyme responsible for the final step in the biosynthesis of phosphatidylcholine. However, this pathway could not be recapitulated using cytidine-diphosphocholine–supplemented liver S9 or hepatocytes because of inadequate formation of the hydroxylation product in vitro. The observation of this unexpected pathway prompted concerns about the possibility that compounds 1 and 2 might interfere with routine phospholipid synthesis. These results demonstrate the participation in xenobiotic metabolism of a process whose function is ordinarily limited to the synthesis of endogenous compounds.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017

Discovery of a Hepatitis C Virus NS5B Replicase Palm Site Allosteric Inhibitor (BMS-929075) Advanced to Phase 1 Clinical Studies

Kap-Sun Yeung; Brett R. Beno; Kyle E. Parcella; John A. Bender; Katherine A. Grant-Young; Andrew Nickel; Prashantha Gunaga; Prakash Anjanappa; Rajesh Onkardas Bora; Kumaravel Selvakumar; Karen Rigat; Ying-Kai Wang; Mengping Liu; Julie A. Lemm; Kathy Mosure; Steven Sheriff; Changhong Wan; Mark R. Witmer; Kevin Kish; Umesh Hanumegowda; Xiaoliang Zhuo; Yue-Zhong Shu; Dawn D. Parker; Roy Haskell; Alicia Ng; Qi Gao; Elizabeth Colston; Joseph J. Raybon; Dennis M. Grasela; Kenneth S. Santone

The hepatitis C virus (HCV) NS5B replicase is a prime target for the development of direct-acting antiviral drugs for the treatment of chronic HCV infection. Inspired by the overlay of bound structures of three structurally distinct NS5B palm site allosteric inhibitors, the high-throughput screening hit anthranilic acid 4, the known benzofuran analogue 5, and the benzothiadiazine derivative 6, an optimization process utilizing the simple benzofuran template 7 as a starting point for a fragment growing approach was pursued. A delicate balance of molecular properties achieved via disciplined lipophilicity changes was essential to achieve both high affinity binding and a stringent targeted absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion profile. These efforts led to the discovery of BMS-929075 (37), which maintained ligand efficiency relative to early leads, demonstrated efficacy in a triple combination regimen in HCV replicon cells, and exhibited consistently high oral bioavailability and pharmacokinetic parameters across preclinical animal species. The human PK properties from the Phase I clinical studies of 37 were better than anticipated and suggest promising potential for QD administration.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2017

Improving Metabolic Stability with Deuterium: The Discovery of BMT-052, a Pan-genotypic HCV NS5B Polymerase Inhibitor

Kyle E. Parcella; Kyle J. Eastman; Kap-Sun Yeung; Katharine A. Grant-Young; Juliang Zhu; Tao Wang; Zhongxing Zhang; Zhiwei Yin; Dawn D. Parker; Kathy Mosure; Hua Fang; Ying-Kai Wang; Julie A. Lemm; Xiaoliang Zhuo; Umesh Hanumegowda; Mengping Liu; Karen Rigat; Maria Donoso; Maria Tuttle; Tatyana Zvyaga; Zuzana Haarhoff; Nicholas A. Meanwell; Matthew G. Soars; Susan B. Roberts; John F. Kadow

Iterative structure-activity analyses in a class of highly functionalized furo[2,3-b]pyridines led to the identification of the second generation pan-genotypic hepatitis C virus NS5B polymerase primer grip inhibitor BMT-052 (14), a potential clinical candidate. The key challenge of poor metabolic stability was overcome by strategic incorporation of deuterium at potential metabolic soft spots. The preclinical profile and status of BMT-052 (14) is described.


Xenobiotica | 2017

Bioactivation of cyclopropyl rings by P450: an observation encountered during the optimisation of a series of hepatitis C virus NS5B inhibitors

Xiaoliang Zhuo; Yingzi Wang; Kap-Sun Yeung; Juliang Zhu; Xiaohua Stella Huang; Kyle E. Parcella; Kyle J. Eastman; John F. Kadow; Nicholas A. Meanwell; Yue-Zhong Shu; Benjamin M. Johnson

Abstract 1. Due to its unique C–C and C–H bonding properties, conformational preferences and relative hydrophilicity, the cyclopropyl ring has been used as a synthetic building block in drug discovery to modulate potency and drug-like properties. During an effort to discover inhibitors of the hepatitis C virus non-structural protein 5B with improved potency and genotype-coverage profiles, the use of a pyrimidinylcyclopropylbenzamide moiety linked to a C6-substituted benzofuran or azabenzofuran core scaffold was explored in an effort to balance antiviral potency and metabolic stability. 2. In vitro metabolism studies of two compounds from this C6-substituted series revealed an NADPH-dependent bioactivation pathway leading to the formation of multiple glutathione (GSH) conjugates. Analysis of these conjugates by LC-MS and NMR demonstrated that the cyclopropyl group was the site of bioactivation. Based on the putative structures and molecular weights of the cyclopropyl-GSH conjugates, a multi-step mechanism was proposed to explain the formation of these metabolites by P450. This mechanism involves hydrogen atom abstraction to form a cyclopropyl radical, followed by a ring opening rearrangement and reaction with GSH. 3. These findings provided important information to the medicinal chemistry team which responded by replacing the cyclopropyl ring with a gem-dimethyl group. Subsequent compounds bearing this feature were shown to avert the bioactivation pathways in question.


MedChemComm | 2017

The discovery of a pan-genotypic, primer grip inhibitor of HCV NS5B polymerase

Kyle J. Eastman; Kyle E. Parcella; Kap-Sun Yeung; Katharine A. Grant-Young; Juliang Zhu; Tao Wang; Zhongxing Zhang; Zhiwei Yin; Brett R. Beno; Steven Sheriff; Kevin Kish; Jeffrey Tredup; Adam G. Jardel; Vivek Halan; Kaushik Ghosh; Dawn D. Parker; Kathy Mosure; Hua Fang; Ying-Kai Wang; Julie A. Lemm; Xiaoliang Zhuo; Umesh Hanumegowda; Karen Rigat; Maria Donoso; Maria Tuttle; Tatyana Zvyaga; Zuzana Haarhoff; Nicholas A. Meanwell; Matthew G. Soars; Susan B. Roberts


Archive | 2014

FUSED FURANS FOR THE TREATMENT OF HEPATITIS C

Kap-Sun Yeung; Kyle J. Eastman; Kyle E. Parcella


Archive | 2015

SUBSTITUTED 2-PHENYL (AZA)BENZOFURAN COMPOUNDS FOR THE TREATMENT OF HEPATITIS C

Tao Wang; Zhongxing Zhang; Kyle E. Parcella; Kyle J. Eastman; John F. Kadow


Archive | 2015

CYANO CONTAINING AZABENZOFURAN COMPOUNDS FOR THE TREATMENT OF HEPATITIS C

Tao Wang; Kyle J. Eastman; Zhongxing Zhang; Kyle E. Parcella; Zhiwei Yin; John F. Kadow


Archive | 2017

FUROPYRIDINE COMPOUNDS FOR THE TREATMENT OF HEPATITIS C

Tao Wang; Kyle J. Eastman; Zhongxing Zhang; Kyle E. Parcella; John F. Kadow

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Tao Wang

Bristol-Myers Squibb

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