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Dive into the research topics where Laura E. Zawadzke is active.

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Featured researches published by Laura E. Zawadzke.


Biochemical Journal | 2012

Modulation of cellular S1P levels with a novel, potent and specific inhibitor of sphingosine kinase-1

Mark E. Schnute; Matthew David Mcreynolds; Tom Kasten; Matthew Yates; Gina M. Jerome; John W. Rains; Troii Hall; Jill E. Chrencik; Michelle Kraus; Ciarán N. Cronin; Matthew Saabye; Maureen K. Highkin; Richard Broadus; Shinji Ogawa; Kristin Cukyne; Laura E. Zawadzke; Vincent Peterkin; Kaliapan Iyanar; Jeffrey A. Scholten; Jay M. Wendling; Hideji Fujiwara; Olga V. Nemirovskiy; Arthur J. Wittwer; Marek M. Nagiec

SphK (sphingosine kinase) is the major source of the bioactive lipid and GPCR (G-protein-coupled receptor) agonist S1P (sphingosine 1-phosphate). S1P promotes cell growth, survival and migration, and is a key regulator of lymphocyte trafficking. Inhibition of S1P signalling has been proposed as a strategy for treatment of inflammatory diseases and cancer. In the present paper we describe the discovery and characterization of PF-543, a novel cell-permeant inhibitor of SphK1. PF-543 inhibits SphK1 with a K(i) of 3.6 nM, is sphingosine-competitive and is more than 100-fold selective for SphK1 over the SphK2 isoform. In 1483 head and neck carcinoma cells, which are characterized by high levels of SphK1 expression and an unusually high rate of S1P production, PF-543 decreased the level of endogenous S1P 10-fold with a proportional increase in the level of sphingosine. In contrast with past reports that show that the growth of many cancer cell lines is SphK1-dependent, specific inhibition of SphK1 had no effect on the proliferation and survival of 1483 cells, despite a dramatic change in the cellular S1P/sphingosine ratio. PF-543 was effective as a potent inhibitor of S1P formation in whole blood, indicating that the SphK1 isoform of sphingosine kinase is the major source of S1P in human blood. PF-543 is the most potent inhibitor of SphK1 described to date and it will be useful for dissecting specific roles of SphK1-driven S1P signalling.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

Discovery of Brain-Penetrant, Irreversible Kynurenine Aminotransferase II Inhibitors for Schizophrenia.

Amy B. Dounay; Marie Anderson; Bruce M. Bechle; Brian M. Campbell; Michelle Marie Claffey; Artem G. Evdokimov; Edelweiss Evrard; Kari R. Fonseca; Xinmin Gan; Somraj Ghosh; Matthew Merrill Hayward; Weldon Horner; Ji-Young Kim; Laura A. McAllister; Jayvardhan Pandit; Vanessa Paradis; Vinod D. Parikh; Matthew R. Reese; Suobao Rong; Michelle A. Salafia; Katherine Schuyten; Christine A. Strick; Jamison B. Tuttle; James Valentine; Hong Wang; Laura E. Zawadzke; Patrick Robert Verhoest

Kynurenine aminotransferase (KAT) II has been identified as a potential new target for the treatment of cognitive impairment associated with schizophrenia and other psychiatric disorders. Following a high-throughput screen, cyclic hydroxamic acid PF-04859989 was identified as a potent and selective inhibitor of human and rat KAT II. An X-ray crystal structure and (13)C NMR studies of PF-04859989 bound to KAT II have demonstrated that this compound forms a covalent adduct with the enzyme cofactor, pyridoxal phosphate (PLP), in the active site. In vivo pharmacokinetic and efficacy studies in rat show that PF-04859989 is a brain-penetrant, irreversible inhibitor and is capable of reducing brain kynurenic acid by 50% at a dose of 10 mg/kg (sc). Preliminary structure-activity relationship investigations have been completed and have identified the positions on this scaffold best suited to modification for further optimization of this novel series of KAT II inhibitors.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2016

Fragment-Based Discovery of a Selective and Cell-Active Benzodiazepinone CBP/EP300 Bromodomain Inhibitor (CPI-637).

Alexander M. Taylor; Alexandre Côté; Michael C. Hewitt; Richard Pastor; Yves Leblanc; Christopher G. Nasveschuk; F. Anthony Romero; Terry D. Crawford; Nico Cantone; Hariharan Jayaram; Jeremy W. Setser; Jeremy D. Murray; Maureen Beresini; Gladys de Leon Boenig; Zhongguo Chen; Andrew R. Conery; Richard T. Cummings; Leslie A. Dakin; E. Megan Flynn; Oscar W. Huang; Susan Kaufman; Patricia J. Keller; James R. Kiefer; Tommy Lai; Yingjie Li; Jiangpeng Liao; Wenfeng Liu; Henry Lu; Eneida Pardo; Vickie Tsui

CBP and EP300 are highly homologous, bromodomain-containing transcription coactivators involved in numerous cellular pathways relevant to oncology. As part of our effort to explore the potential therapeutic implications of selectively targeting bromodomains, we set out to identify a CBP/EP300 bromodomain inhibitor that was potent both in vitro and in cellular target engagement assays and was selective over the other members of the bromodomain family. Reported here is a series of cell-potent and selective probes of the CBP/EP300 bromodomains, derived from the fragment screening hit 4-methyl-1,3,4,5-tetrahydro-2H-benzo[b][1,4]diazepin-2-one.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

Structure-Based Design of Irreversible Human KAT II Inhibitors: Discovery of New Potency-Enhancing Interactions

Jamison B. Tuttle; Marie Anderson; Bruce M. Bechle; Brian M. Campbell; Cheng Chang; Amy B. Dounay; Edelweiss Evrard; Kari R. Fonseca; Xinmin Gan; Somraj Ghosh; Weldon Horner; Larry C. James; Ji-Young Kim; Laura A. McAllister; Jayvardhan Pandit; Vinod D. Parikh; Brian Rago; Michelle A. Salafia; Christine A. Strick; Laura E. Zawadzke; Patrick Robert Verhoest

A series of aryl hydroxamates recently have been disclosed as irreversible inhibitors of kynurenine amino transferase II (KAT II), an enzyme that may play a role in schizophrenia and other psychiatric and neurological disorders. The utilization of structure-activity relationships (SAR) in conjunction with X-ray crystallography led to the discovery of hydroxamate 4, a disubstituted analogue that has a significant potency enhancement due to a novel interaction with KAT II. The use of k inact/K i to assess potency was critical for understanding the SAR in this series and for identifying compounds with improved pharmacodynamic profiles.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

PF-04859989 as a template for structure-based drug design: Identification of new pyrazole series of irreversible KAT II inhibitors with improved lipophilic efficiency

Amy B. Dounay; Marie Anderson; Bruce M. Bechle; Edelweiss Evrard; Xinmin Gan; Ji-Young Kim; Laura A. McAllister; Jayvardhan Pandit; Suobao Rong; Michelle A. Salafia; Jamison B. Tuttle; Laura E. Zawadzke; Patrick Robert Verhoest

The structure-based design, synthesis, and biological evaluation of a new pyrazole series of irreversible KAT II inhibitors are described herein. The modification of the inhibitor scaffold of 1 and 2 from a dihydroquinolinone core to a tetrahydropyrazolopyridinone core led to discovery of a new series of potent KAT II inhibitors with excellent physicochemical properties. Compound 20 is the most potent and lipophilically efficient of these new pyrazole analogs, with a k(inact)/K(i) value of 112,000 M(-1)s(-1) and lipophilic efficiency (LipE) of 8.53. The X-ray crystal structure of 20 with KAT II demonstrates key features that contribute to this remarkable potency and binding efficiency.


MedChemComm | 2013

Discovery of hydroxamate bioisosteres as KAT II inhibitors with improved oral bioavailability and pharmacokinetics

Jaclyn Louise Henderson; Aarti Sawant-Basak; Jamison B. Tuttle; Amy B. Dounay; Laura A. McAllister; Jayvardhan Pandit; Suobao Rong; Xinjun Hou; Bruce M. Bechle; Ji-Young Kim; Vinod D. Parikh; Somraj Ghosh; Edelweiss Evrard; Laura E. Zawadzke; Michelle A. Salafia; Brian Rago; Obach Rs; Alan J Clark; Kari R. Fonseca; Cheng Chang; Patrick Robert Verhoest

A series of kynurenine aminotransferase II (KAT II) inhibitors has been developed replacing the hydroxamate motif with a bioisostere. Triazolinones or triazoles have proven to be effective replacements with significantly improved pharmacokinetics including reduced clearance and increased bioavailability. An X-ray crystal structure of an inhibitor bound in KAT II confirms that the irreversible binding to the co-factor is maintained and that the heterocycles make productive hydrogen bonds to the arginine-399.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2017

GNE-886: A Potent and Selective Inhibitor of the Cat Eye Syndrome Chromosome Region Candidate 2 Bromodomain (CECR2)

Terry D. Crawford; James E. Audia; Steve Bellon; Daniel J. Burdick; Archana Bommi-Reddy; Alexandre Côté; Richard T. Cummings; Martin Duplessis; E. Megan Flynn; Michael C. Hewitt; Hon-Ren Huang; Hariharan Jayaram; Ying Jiang; Shivangi Joshi; James R. Kiefer; Jeremy D. Murray; Christopher G. Nasveschuk; Arianne Neiss; Eneida Pardo; F. Anthony Romero; Peter Sandy; Robert J. Sims; Yong Tang; Alexander M. Taylor; Vickie Tsui; Jian Wang; Shumei Wang; Yongyun Wang; Zhaowu Xu; Laura E. Zawadzke

The biological function of bromodomains, epigenetic readers of acetylated lysine residues, remains largely unknown. Herein we report our efforts to discover a potent and selective inhibitor of the bromodomain of cat eye syndrome chromosome region candidate 2 (CECR2). Screening of our internal medicinal chemistry collection led to the identification of a pyrrolopyridone chemical lead, and subsequent structure-based drug design led to a potent and selective CECR2 bromodomain inhibitor (GNE-886) suitable for use as an in vitro tool compound.


Molecular Pharmacology | 2018

Quantitative Translational Analysis of Brain Kynurenic Acid Modulation via Irreversible Kynurenine Aminotransferase II Inhibition

Cheng Chang; Kari R. Fonseca; Cheryl Li; Weldon Horner; Laura E. Zawadzke; Michelle A. Salafia; Kathryn Welch; Christine A. Strick; Brian M. Campbell; Steve S. Gernhardt; Haojing Rong; Aarti Sawant-Basak; Jennifer Liras; Amy B. Dounay; Jamison B. Tuttle; Patrick Robert Verhoest; Tristan S. Maurer

Kynurenic acid (KYNA) plays a significant role in maintaining normal brain function, and abnormalities in KYNA levels have been associated with various central nervous system disorders. Confirmation of its causality in human diseases requires safe and effective modulation of central KYNA levels in the clinic. The kynurenine aminotransferases (KAT) II enzyme represents an attractive target for pharmacologic modulation of central KYNA levels; however, KAT II and KYNA turnover kinetics, which could contribute to the duration of pharmacologic effect, have not been reported. In this study, the kinetics of central KYNA-lowering effect in rats and nonhuman primates (NHPs, Cynomolgus macaques) was investigated using multiple KAT II irreversible inhibitors as pharmacologic probes. Mechanistic pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic analysis of in vivo responses to irreversible inhibition quantitatively revealed that 1) KAT II turnover is relatively slow [16–76 hours’ half-life (t1/2)], whereas KYNA is cleared more rapidly from the brain (<1 hour t1/2) in both rats and NHPs, 2) KAT II turnover is slower in NHPs than in rats (76 hours vs. 16 hours t1/2, respectively), and 3) the percent contribution of KAT II to KYNA formation is constant (∼80%) across rats and NHPs. Additionally, modeling results enabled establishment of in vitro-in vivo correlation for both enzyme turnover rates and drug potencies. In summary, quantitative translational analysis confirmed the feasibility of central KYNA modulation in humans. Model-based analysis, where system-specific properties and drug-specific properties are mechanistically separated from in vivo responses, enabled quantitative understanding of the KAT II-KYNA pathway, as well as assisted development of promising candidates to test KYNA hypothesis in humans.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2018

GNE-371, a Potent and Selective Chemical Probe for the Second Bromodomains of Human Transcription-Initiation-Factor TFIID Subunit 1 and Transcription-Initiation-Factor TFIID Subunit 1-like

Shumei Wang; Vickie Tsui; Terry D. Crawford; James E. Audia; Daniel J. Burdick; Maureen Beresini; Alexandre Côté; Richard D. Cummings; Martin Duplessis; E. Megan Flynn; Michael C. Hewitt; Hon-Ren Huang; Hariharan Jayaram; Ying Jiang; Shivangi Joshi; Jeremy Murray; Christopher G. Nasveschuk; Eneida Pardo; Florence Poy; F. Anthony Romero; Yong Tang; Alexander M. Taylor; Jian Wang; Zhaowu Xu; Laura E. Zawadzke; Xiaoyu Zhu; Brian K. Albrecht; Steven Magnuson; Steve Bellon; Andrea G. Cochran

The biological functions of the dual bromodomains of human transcription-initiation-factor TFIID subunit 1 (TAF1(1,2)) remain unknown, although TAF1 has been identified as a potential target for oncology research. Here, we describe the discovery of a potent and selective in vitro tool compound for TAF1(2), starting from a previously reported lead. A cocrystal structure of lead compound 2 bound to TAF1(2) enabled structure-based design and structure-activity-relationship studies that ultimately led to our in vitro tool compound, 27 (GNE-371). Compound 27 binds TAF1(2) with an IC50 of 10 nM while maintaining excellent selectivity over other bromodomain-family members. Compound 27 is also active in a cellular-TAF1(2) target-engagement assay (IC50 = 38 nM) and exhibits antiproliferative synergy with the BET inhibitor JQ1, suggesting engagement of endogenous TAF1 by 27 and further supporting the use of 27 in mechanistic and target-validation studies.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2017

Inhibition of bromodomain-containing protein 9 for the prevention of epigenetically-defined drug resistance

Terry D. Crawford; Steffan Vartanian; Alexandre Côté; Steve Bellon; Martin Duplessis; E. Megan Flynn; Michael C. Hewitt; Hon-Ren Huang; James R. Kiefer; Jeremy Murray; Christopher G. Nasveschuk; Eneida Pardo; F. Anthony Romero; Peter Sandy; Yong Tang; Alexander M. Taylor; Vickie Tsui; Jian Wang; Shumei Wang; Laura E. Zawadzke; Brian K. Albrecht; Steven Magnuson; Andrea G. Cochran; David Stokoe

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