Mark E. Fraley
Merck & Co.
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Publication
Featured researches published by Mark E. Fraley.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009
Antonella Converso; Timothy J. Hartingh; Robert M. Garbaccio; Edward Tasber; Keith Rickert; Mark E. Fraley; Youwei Yan; Constantine Kreatsoulas; Steve Stirdivant; Bob Drakas; Eileen S. Walsh; Kelly Hamilton; Carolyn A. Buser; Xianzhi Mao; Marc T. Abrams; Stephen C. Beck; Weikang Tao; Rob Lobell; Laura Sepp-Lorenzino; Joan Zugay-Murphy; Vinod V. Sardana; Sanjeev Munshi; Sylvie Jezequel-Sur; Paul Zuck; George D. Hartman
A high throughput screening campaign was designed to identify allosteric inhibitors of Chk1 kinase by testing compounds at high concentration. Activity was then observed at K(m) for ATP and at near-physiological concentrations of ATP. This strategy led to the discovery of a non-ATP competitive thioquinazolinone series which was optimized for potency and stability. An X-ray crystal structure for the complex of our best inhibitor bound to Chk1 was solved, indicating that it binds to an allosteric site approximately 13A from the ATP binding site. Preliminary data is presented for several of these compounds.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015
Brendan M. Crowley; Craig A. Stump; Diem N. Nguyen; Craig M. Potteiger; Melody Mcwherter; Daniel V. Paone; Amy G. Quigley; Joseph G. Bruno; Dan Cui; J. Christopher Culberson; Andrew Danziger; Christine Fandozzi; Danny Gauvreau; Amanda L. Kemmerer; Karsten Menzel; Eric L. Moore; Scott D. Mosser; Vijay Bhasker G. Reddy; Rebecca B. White; Christopher A. Salvatore; Stefanie A. Kane; Ian M. Bell; Harold G. Selnick; Mark E. Fraley; Christopher S. Burgey
In our efforts to develop CGRP receptor antagonists as backups to MK-3207, 2, we employed a scaffold hopping approach to identify a series of novel oxazolidinone-based compounds. The development of a structurally diverse, potent (20, cAMP+HS IC50=0.67 nM), and selective compound (hERG IC50=19 μM) with favorable rodent pharmacokinetics (F=100%, t1/2=7h) is described. Key to this development was identification of a 3-substituted spirotetrahydropyran ring that afforded a substantial gain in potency (10 to 35-fold).
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2014
Antonella Converso; Timothy J. Hartingh; Mark E. Fraley; Robert M. Garbaccio; George D. Hartman; Shaei Y. Huang; John Majercak; Alexander McCampbell; Sang Jin Na; William J. Ray; Mary J. Savage; Carrie Wolffe; Suzie Yeh; Yuanjiang Yu; Rebecca B. White; Rena Zhang
Elevated plasma homocysteine (Hcy) levels are an independent risk factor for the onset and progression of Alzheimers disease. Reduction of Hcy to normal levels therefore presents a new approach for disease modification. Hcy is produced by the cytosolic enzyme S-adenosylhomocysteine hydrolase (AHCY), which converts S-adenosylhomocysteine (SAH) to Hcy and adenosine. Herein we describe the design and characterization of novel, substrate-based S-adenosylhomocysteine hydrolase inhibitors with low nanomolar potency in vitro and robust activity in vivo.
Archive | 1998
Mark T. Bilodeau; Randall W. Hungate; Richard L. Kendall; Ruth Z. Rutledge; Kenneth A. Thomas; Robert Rubino; Mark E. Fraley
Archive | 1997
Philip E. Sanderson; Adel M. Naylor-Olsen; Dona L. Dyer; Joseph P. Vacca; Richard Isaacs; Bruce D. Dorsey; Mark E. Fraley
Archive | 2006
Mark E. Fraley; Robert M. Garbaccio; Shaei Y. Huang; Justin T. Steen
Archive | 2003
Carolyn Buser-Doepner; Paul J. Coleman; Christopher D. Cox; Mark E. Fraley; Robert M. Garbaccio; George D. Hartman; David C. Heimbrook; Lawrence C. Kuo; Hans E. Huber; Vinod V. Sardana; Maricel Torrent; Youwei Yan
Archive | 2009
Edward Brnardic; Mark E. Fraley; Mark E. Layton; Robert M. Garbaccio
Archive | 2003
Mark E. Fraley
Archive | 2009
Antonella Converso; Timothy J. Hartingh; Mark E. Fraley