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Dive into the research topics where Lauren G. Monovich is active.

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Featured researches published by Lauren G. Monovich.


FEBS Letters | 2010

A novel kinase inhibitor establishes a predominant role for protein kinase D as a cardiac class IIa histone deacetylase kinase

Lauren G. Monovich; Richard B. Vega; Erik Meredith; Karl Miranda; Chang Rao; Michael Paul Capparelli; Douglas D. Lemon; Dillon Phan; Keith A. Koch; Joseph A. Chapo; David B. Hood; Timothy A. McKinsey

Class IIa histone deacetylases (HDACs) repress genes involved in pathological cardiac hypertrophy. The anti‐hypertrophic action of class IIa HDACs is overcome by signals that promote their phosphorylation‐dependent nuclear export. Several kinases have been shown to phosphorylate class IIa HDACs, including calcium/calmodulin‐dependent protein kinase (CaMK), protein kinase D (PKD) and G protein‐coupled receptor kinase (GRK). However, the identity of the kinase(s) responsible for phosphorylating class IIa HDACs during cardiac hypertrophy has remained controversial. We describe a novel and selective small molecule inhibitor of PKD, bipyridyl PKD inhibitor (BPKDi). BPKDi blocks signal‐dependent phosphorylation and nuclear export of class IIa HDACs in cardiomyocytes and concomitantly suppresses hypertrophy of these cells. These studies define PKD as a principal cardiac class IIa HDAC kinase.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Identification of Orally Available Naphthyridine Protein Kinase D Inhibitors

Erik Meredith; Ophelia Ardayfio; Kimberly Beattie; Markus Dobler; Istvan J. Enyedy; Christoph Gaul; Vinayak Hosagrahara; Charles Jewell; Keith A. Koch; Wendy Lee; Hansjoerg Lehmann; Timothy A. McKinsey; Karl Miranda; Nikos Pagratis; Margaret R. Pancost; Anup Patnaik; Dillon Phan; Craig F. Plato; Ming Qian; Vasumathy Rajaraman; Chang Rao; Olga Rozhitskaya; Thomas Ruppen; Jie Shi; Sarah Siska; Clayton Springer; Maurice J. van Eis; Richard B. Vega; Anette Von Matt; Lihua Yang

A novel 2,6-naphthyridine was identified by high throughput screen (HTS) as a dual protein kinase C/D (PKC/PKD) inhibitor. PKD inhibition in the heart was proposed as a potential antihypertrophic mechanism with application as a heart failure therapy. As PKC was previously identified as the immediate upstream activator of PKD, PKD vs PKC selectivity was essential to understand the effect of PKD inhibition in models of cardiac hypertrophy and heart failure. The present study describes the modification of the HTS hit to a series of prototype pan-PKD inhibitors with routine 1000-fold PKD vs PKC selectivity. Example compounds inhibited PKD activity in vitro, in cells, and in vivo following oral administration. Their effects on heart morphology and function are discussed herein.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Identification of Potent and Selective Amidobipyridyl Inhibitors of Protein Kinase D

Erik Meredith; Kimberly Beattie; Robin Burgis; Michael Paul Capparelli; Joseph A. Chapo; Lucian DiPietro; Gabriel G. Gamber; Istvan J. Enyedy; David B. Hood; Vinayak Hosagrahara; Charles Jewell; Keith A. Koch; Wendy Lee; Douglas D. Lemon; Timothy A. McKinsey; Karl Miranda; Nikos Pagratis; Dillon Phan; Craig F. Plato; Chang Rao; Olga Rozhitskaya; Nicolas Soldermann; Clayton Springer; Maurice J. van Eis; Richard B. Vega; Wanlin Yan; Qingming Zhu; Lauren G. Monovich

The synthesis and biological evaluation of potent and selective PKD inhibitors are described herein. The compounds described in the present study selectively inhibit PKD among other putative HDAC kinases. The PKD inhibitors of the present study blunt phosphorylation and subsequent nuclear export of HDAC4/5 in response to diverse agonists. These compounds further establish the central role of PKD as an HDAC4/5 kinase and enhance the current understanding of cardiac myocyte signal transduction. The in vivo efficacy of a representative example compound on heart morphology is reported herein.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2009

Suppression of HDAC nuclear export and cardiomyocyte hypertrophy by novel irreversible inhibitors of CRM1.

Lauren G. Monovich; Keith A. Koch; Robin Burgis; Ekundayo Osimboni; Thierry Mann; Daniel Wall; Jinhai Gao; Yan Feng; Richard B. Vega; Benjamin A. Turner; David B. Hood; Andy Law; Philip J. Papst; David Koditek; Joseph A. Chapo; Brian G. Reid; Lawrence Melvin; Nikos Pagratis; Timothy A. McKinsey

Histone deacetylase 5 (HDAC5) represses expression of nuclear genes that promote cardiac hypertrophy. Agonism of a variety of G protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) triggers phosphorylation-dependent nuclear export of HDAC5 via the CRM1 nuclear export receptor, resulting in derepression of pro-hypertrophic genes. A cell-based high-throughput screen of a commercial compound collection was employed to identify compounds with the ability to preserve the nuclear fraction of GFP-HDAC5 in primary cardiomyocytes exposed to GPCR agonists. A hit compound potently inhibited agonist-induced GFP-HDAC5 nuclear export in cultured neonatal rat ventricular myocytes (NRVMs). A small set of related compounds was designed and synthesized to evaluate structure-activity relationship (SAR). The results demonstrated that inhibition of HDAC5 nuclear export was a result of compounds irreversibly reacting with a key cysteine residue in CRM1 that is required for its function. CRM1 inhibition by the compounds also resulted in potent suppression of cardiomyocyte hypertrophy. These studies define a novel class of anti-hypertrophic compounds that function through irreversible inhibition of CRM1-dependent nuclear export.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

3,5-Diarylazoles as novel and selective inhibitors of protein kinase D

Gabriel G. Gamber; Erik Meredith; Qingming Zhu; Wanlin Yan; Chang Rao; Michael Paul Capparelli; Robin Burgis; Istvan J. Enyedy; Ji-Hu Zhang; Nicolas Soldermann; Kimberley Beattie; Olga Rozhitskaya; Keith A. Koch; Nikos Pagratis; Vinayak P. Hosagrahara; Richard B. Vega; Timothy A. McKinsey; Lauren G. Monovich

The synthesis and preliminary studies of the SAR of novel 3,5-diarylazole inhibitors of Protein Kinase D (PKD) are reported. Notably, optimized compounds in this class have been found to be active in cellular assays of phosphorylation-dependant HDAC5 nuclear export, orally bioavailable, and highly selective versus a panel of additional putative histone deacetylase (HDAC) kinases. Therefore these compounds could provide attractive tools for the further study of PKD/HDAC5 signaling.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

2,6-Naphthyridines as potent and selective inhibitors of the novel protein kinase C isozymes.

Maurice J. van Eis; Jean-Pierre Evenou; Philipp Floersheim; Christoph Gaul; Sandra W. Cowan-Jacob; Lauren G. Monovich; Gabriele Rummel; Walter Schuler; Wilhelm Stark; André Strauss; Anette Von Matt; Eric Vangrevelinghe; Juergen Wagner; Nicolas Soldermann

The present study describes a novel series of ATP-competitive PKC inhibitors based on the 2,6-naphthyridine template. Example compounds potently inhibit the novel Protein Kinase C (PKC) isotypes δ, ε, η, θ (in particular PKCε/η, and display a 10-100-fold selectivity over the classical PKC isotypes. The prototype compound 11 was found to inhibit PKCθ-dependent pathways in vitro and in vivo. In vitro, a-CD3/a-CD28-induced lymphocyte proliferation could be effectively blocked in 10% rat whole blood. In mice, 11 dose-dependently inhibited Staphylococcus aureus enterotoxin B-triggered IL-2 serum levels after oral dosing.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

Discovery and in Vivo Evaluation of Potent Dual CYP11B2 (Aldosterone Synthase) and CYP11B1 Inhibitors.

Erik Meredith; Gary Michael Ksander; Lauren G. Monovich; Julien Papillon; Qian Liu; Karl Miranda; Patrick Morris; Chang Rao; Robin Burgis; Michael Paul Capparelli; Qi-Ying Hu; Alok Singh; Dean F. Rigel; Arco Y. Jeng; Michael E. Beil; Fumin Fu; Chii-Whei Hu; Daniel LaSala

Aldosterone is a key signaling component of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system and as such has been shown to contribute to cardiovascular pathology such as hypertension and heart failure. Aldosterone synthase (CYP11B2) is responsible for the final three steps of aldosterone synthesis and thus is a viable therapeutic target. A series of imidazole derived inhibitors, including clinical candidate 7n, have been identified through design and structure-activity relationship studies both in vitro and in vivo. Compound 7n was also found to be a potent inhibitor of 11β-hydroxylase (CYP11B1), which is responsible for cortisol production. Inhibition of CYP11B1 is being evaluated in the clinic for potential treatment of hypercortisol diseases such as Cushings syndrome.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2007

Optimization of Halopemide for Phospholipase D2 inhibition

Lauren G. Monovich; Benjamin Biro Mugrage; Elizabeth Quadros; Karen Toscano; Ruben Tommasi; Stacey LaVoie; Eugene Liu; Zhengming Du; Daniel LaSala; William C. Boyar; Paul M. Steed


Archive | 2003

Substituted amino phenylacetic acids, derivatives thereof, their preparation and their use as cyclooxygenase 2 (cox-2) inhibitors

Roger Aki Fujimoto; Leslie Wighton Mcquire; Lauren G. Monovich; Benjamin Biro Mugrage; David Thomas Parker; Duzer John Henry Van; Sompong Wattanasin


Archive | 2006

Condensed imidazolo derivatives for the inhibition of aldosterone synthase and aromatase

Gary Michael Ksander; Erik Meredith; Lauren G. Monovich; Julien Papillon; Fariborz Firooznia; Qi-Ying Hu

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