Maris A. Cinelli
Northwestern University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Maris A. Cinelli.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012
Maris A. Cinelli; P. V. Narasimha Reddy; Peng Cheng Lv; Jian Hua Liang; Lian Chen; Keli Agama; Yves Pommier; Richard B. van Breemen; Mark Cushman
Hydroxylated analogues of the anticancer topoisomerase I (Top1) inhibitors indotecan (LMP400) and indimitecan (LMP776) have been prepared because (1) a variety of potent Top1 poisons are known that contain strategically placed hydroxyl groups, which provides a clear rationale for incorporating them in the present case, and (2) the hydroxylated compounds could conceivably serve as synthetic standards for the identification of metabolites. Indeed, incubating LMP400 and LMP776 with human liver microsomes resulted in two major metabolites of each drug, which had HPLC retention times and mass fragmentation patterns identical to those of the synthetic standards. The hydroxylated indotecan and indimitecan metabolites and analogues were tested as Top1 poisons and for antiproliferative activity in a variety of human cancer cell cultures and in general were found to be very potent. Differences in activity resulting from the placement of the hydroxyl group are explained by molecular modeling analyses.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014
Maris A. Cinelli; Huiying Li; Georges Chreifi; Pavel Martásek; Linda J. Roman; Thomas L. Poulos; Richard B. Silverman
Since high levels of nitric oxide (NO) are implicated in neurodegenerative disorders, inhibition of the neuronal isoform of nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) and reduction of NO levels are therapeutically desirable. Nonetheless, many nNOS inhibitors mimic l-arginine and are poorly bioavailable. 2-Aminoquinoline-based scaffolds were designed with the hope that they could (a) mimic aminopyridines as potent, isoform-selective arginine isosteres and (b) possess chemical properties more conducive to oral bioavailability and CNS penetration. A series of these compounds was synthesized and assayed against purified nNOS enzymes, endothelial NOS (eNOS), and inducible NOS (iNOS). Several compounds built on a 7-substituted 2-aminoquinoline core are potent and isoform-selective; X-ray crystallography indicates that aminoquinolines exert inhibitory effects by mimicking substrate interactions with the conserved active site glutamate residue. The most potent and selective compounds, 7 and 15, were tested in a Caco-2 assay and showed good permeability and low efflux, suggesting high potential for oral bioavailability.
Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2014
Huiying Li; Joumana Jamal; Carla Plaza; Stephanie Hai Pineda; Georges Chreifi; Qing Jing; Maris A. Cinelli; Richard B. Silverman; Thomas L. Poulos
Mammals produce three isoforms of nitric oxide synthase (NOS): neuronal NOS (nNOS), inducible NOS (iNOS) and endothelial NOS (eNOS). The overproduction of NO by nNOS is associated with a number of neurodegenerative disorders; therefore, a desirable therapeutic goal is the design of drugs that target nNOS but not the other isoforms. Crystallography, coupled with computational approaches and medicinal chemistry, has played a critical role in developing highly selective nNOS inhibitors that exhibit exceptional neuroprotective properties. For historic reasons, crystallography has focused on rat nNOS and bovine eNOS because these were available in high quality; thus, their structures have been used in structure-activity-relationship studies. Although these constitutive NOSs share more than 90% sequence identity across mammalian species for each NOS isoform, inhibitor-binding studies revealed that subtle differences near the heme active site in the same NOS isoform across species still impact enzyme-inhibitor interactions. Therefore, structures of the human constitutive NOSs are indispensible. Here, the first structure of human neuronal NOS at 2.03 Å resolution is reported and a different crystal form of human endothelial NOS is reported at 1.73 Å resolution.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015
Maris A. Cinelli; Huiying Li; Anthony V. Pensa; Soosung Kang; Linda J. Roman; Pavel Martásek; Thomas L. Poulos; Richard B. Silverman
Excess nitric oxide (NO) produced by neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) is implicated in neurodegenerative disorders. As a result, inhibition of nNOS and reduction of NO levels is desirable therapeutically, but many nNOS inhibitors are poorly bioavailable. Promising members of our previously reported 2-aminoquinoline class of nNOS inhibitors, although orally bioavailable and brain-penetrant, suffer from unfavorable off-target binding to other CNS receptors, and they resemble known promiscuous binders. Rearranged phenyl ether- and aniline-linked 2-aminoquinoline derivatives were therefore designed to (a) disrupt the promiscuous binding pharmacophore and diminish off-target interactions and (b) preserve potency, isoform selectivity, and cell permeability. A series of these compounds was synthesized and tested against purified nNOS, endothelial NOS (eNOS), and inducible NOS (iNOS) enzymes. One compound, 20, displayed high potency, selectivity, and good human nNOS inhibition, and retained some permeability in a Caco-2 assay. Most promisingly, CNS receptor counterscreening revealed that this rearranged scaffold significantly reduces off-target binding.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017
Maris A. Cinelli; Huiying Li; Georges Chreifi; Thomas L. Poulos; Richard B. Silverman
Neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) inhibition is a promising strategy to treat neurodegenerative disorders, but the development of nNOS inhibitors is often hindered by poor pharmacokinetics. We previously developed a class of membrane-permeable 2-aminoquinoline inhibitors and later rearranged the scaffold to decrease off-target binding. However, the resulting compounds had decreased permeability, low human nNOS activity, and low selectivity versus human eNOS. In this study, 5-substituted phenyl ether-linked aminoquinolines and derivatives were synthesized and assayed against purified NOS isoforms. 5-Cyano compounds are especially potent and selective rat and human nNOS inhibitors. Activity and selectivity are mediated by the binding of the cyano group to a new auxiliary pocket in nNOS. Potency was enhanced by methylation of the quinoline and by introduction of simple chiral moieties, resulting in a combination of hydrophobic and auxiliary pocket effects that yielded high (∼500-fold) n/e selectivity. Importantly, the Caco-2 assay also revealed improved membrane permeability over previous compounds.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017
Anthony V. Pensa; Maris A. Cinelli; Huiying Li; Georges Chreifi; Paramita Mukherjee; Linda J. Roman; Pavel Martásek; Thomas L. Poulos; Richard B. Silverman
Neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) is a target for development of antineurodegenerative agents. Most nNOS inhibitors mimic l-arginine and have poor bioavailability. 2-Aminoquinolines showed promise as bioavailable nNOS inhibitors but suffered from low human nNOS inhibition, low selectivity versus human eNOS, and significant binding to other CNS targets. We aimed to improve human nNOS potency and selectivity and reduce off-target binding by (a) truncating the original scaffold or (b) introducing a hydrophilic group to interrupt the lipophilic, promiscuous pharmacophore and promote interaction with human nNOS-specific His342. We synthesized both truncated and polar 2-aminoquinoline derivatives and assayed them against recombinant NOS enzymes. Although aniline and pyridine derivatives interact with His342, benzonitriles conferred the best rat and human nNOS inhibition. Both introduction of a hydrophobic substituent next to the cyano group and aminoquinoline methylation considerably improved isoform selectivity. Most importantly, these modifications preserved Caco-2 permeability and reduced off-target CNS binding.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016
Maris A. Cinelli; Huiying Li; Anthony V. Pensa; Soosung Kang; Linda J. Roman; Pavel Martásek; Thomas L. Poulos; Richard B. Silverman
P 8698. In the right-hand column, line 9, the text should read “the desired cis-isomer 77” instead of “the desired trans-isomer 77” to match the structure of cis-isomer 77 shown in Scheme 8. Page 8708. In the right-hand column, in line 19, the text should read “(Z)-Methyl 4-(2-Cyanovinyl)-3-nitrobenzoate (77)” instead of “(E)-Methyl 4-(2-Cyanovinyl)-3-nitrobenzoate (77)” to match the structure of the cis-isomer 77 shown in Scheme 8. Addition/Correction
Chemical Society Reviews | 2014
Paramita Mukherjee; Maris A. Cinelli; Soosung Kang; Richard B. Silverman
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008
Maris A. Cinelli; Andrew Morrell; Thomas S. Dexheimer; Evan S. Scher; Yves Pommier; Mark Cushman
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2009
Maris A. Cinelli; Brenda Cordero; Thomas S. Dexheimer; Yves Pommier; Mark Cushman
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University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
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