Mark Seierstad
Janssen Pharmaceutica
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Publication
Featured researches published by Mark Seierstad.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2014
John M. Keith; William M. Jones; Joan Pierce; Mark Seierstad; James A. Palmer; Michael Webb; Mark J. Karbarz; Brian Scott; Sandy J. Wilson; Lin Luo; Michelle Wennerholm; Leon Chang; Sean Brown; Michele Rizzolio; Raymond Rynberg; Sandra R. Chaplan; J. Guy Breitenbucher
A series of mechanism based heteroaryl urea fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) inhibitors with spirocyclic diamine cores is described. A potent member of this class, (37), was found to inhibit FAAH centrally, elevate the brain levels of three fatty acid ethanolamides [FAAs: anandamide (AEA), oleoyl ethanolamide (OEA) and palmitoyl ethanolamide (PEA)], and was moderately efficacious in a rat model of neuropathic pain.
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015
John M. Keith; Jones Wm; Mark S. Tichenor; Liu J; Mark Seierstad; James Palmer; Michael Webb; Mark J. Karbarz; Brian Scott; Sandy J. Wilson; Lin Luo; Michelle Wennerholm; Leon Chang; Michele Rizzolio; Raymond Rynberg; Chaplan; Breitenbucher Jg
The pre-clinical characterization of the aryl piperazinyl urea inhibitor of fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) JNJ-42165279 is described. JNJ-42165279 covalently inactivates the FAAH enzyme, but is highly selective with regard to other enzymes, ion channels, transporters, and receptors. JNJ-42165279 exhibited excellent ADME and pharmacodynamic properties as evidenced by its ability to block FAAH in the brain and periphery of rats and thereby cause an elevation of the concentrations of anandamide (AEA), oleoyl ethanolamide (OEA), and palmitoyl ethanolamide (PEA). The compound was also efficacious in the spinal nerve ligation (SNL) model of neuropathic pain. The combination of good physical, ADME, and PD properties of JNJ-42165279 supported it entering the clinical portfolio.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012
Mark S. Tichenor; John M. Keith; William M. Jones; Joan Pierce; Jeff Merit; Natalie A. Hawryluk; Mark Seierstad; James A. Palmer; Michael Webb; Mark J. Karbarz; Sandy J. Wilson; Michelle Wennerholm; Filip Woestenborghs; D. Beerens; Lin Luo; Sean Brown; Marlies De Boeck; Sandra R. Chaplan; J. Guy Breitenbucher
The structure-activity relationships for a series of heteroaryl urea inhibitors of fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) are described. Members of this class of inhibitors have been shown to inactivate FAAH by covalent modification of an active site serine with subsequent release of an aromatic amine from the urea electrophile. Systematic Ames II testing guided the optimization of urea substituents by defining the structure-mutagenicity relationships for the released aromatic amine metabolites. Potent FAAH inhibitors were identified having heteroaryl amine leaving groups that were non-mutagenic in the Ames II assay.
Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation | 2018
Arjun Saha; Amy Y. Shih; Taraneh Mirzadegan; Mark Seierstad
Since a goal of most drug discovery projects in either academia or industry is to design molecules that selectively bind to the desired protein, determination of protein-ligand binding free energies is of utmost importance in computer aided drug design. With the help of significant improvements in computer power, enhanced sampling techniques and accuracy of force fields, FEP (free energy perturbation) is becoming an important tool to estimate binding free energies in many drug discovery projects both retrospectively and prospectively. We have evaluated the ability of Schrödingers FEP+ to predict relative binding free energies of a congeneric series of noncovalent fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) inhibitors using an in-house crystal structure. This study shows that although an impressively accurate correlation can be obtained with experimental IC50s considering small perturbations on the deeper side of the pocket, the same was not observed with small perturbations on the relatively more open-ended and solvent-accessible side of the pocket. To understand these observations, we thoroughly investigated several key factors including the sampling of asymmetrically substituted rings, different perturbation maps, impact of simultaneous perturbations at two different ends of the ligand, and selecting the perturbations in a chemically sensible way.
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2018
Suchitra Ravula; Nyantsz Wu; Brian Lord; Kevin J. Coe; Kai Wang; Mark Seierstad; Devin M. Swanson; Jeannie Ziff; Minh Nguyen; Perry Leung; Ray Rynberg; David La; Daniel J. Pippel; Tatiana Koudriakova; Timothy W. Lovenberg; Nicholas I. Carruthers; Michael P. Maher; Michael K. Ameriks
Glutamate mediates fast excitatory neurotransmission via ionotropic α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA) receptors. The trafficking and gating properties of AMPA receptors (AMPARs) can be amplified by transmembrane AMPAR regulatory proteins (TARPs), which are often expressed in localized brain regions. Herein, we describe the discovery, lead optimization, and preclinical characterization of 5-arylbenzimidazolone and oxindole-based negative modulators of AMPARs associated with TARP γ-8, the primary TARP found in hippocampus. High-throughput screen lead 4 was optimized for potency and brain penetration to provide benzimidazolone 3, JNJ-55511118.1 Replacement of the benzimidazolone core in 3 with an oxindole mitigated reactive metabolite formation and led to the identification of 18 (GluA1/γ-8 pIC50 = 9.7). Following oral dosing in rats, 18 demonstrated robust target engagement in hippocampus as assessed by ex vivo autoradiography (ED50 = 0.6 mg/kg, plasma EC50 = 9 ng/mL).
Archive | 2005
Richard Apodaca; J. Guy Breitenbucher; Kanaka Pattabiraman; Mark Seierstad; Wei Xiao
Archive | 2006
Richard Apodaca; James Guy Breitenbucher; Kanaka Pattabiraman; Mark Seierstad; Wei Xiao
Archive | 2006
Richard Apodaca; J. Guy Breitenbucher; Matthew T. Epperson; Amy K. Fried; Daniel J. Pippel; Mark Seierstad
Archive | 2007
Richard Apodaca; James Guy Breitenbucher; Alison L. Chambers; Mark Seierstad; Wei Xiao
Archive | 2009
Richard Apodaca; J. Guy Breitenbucher; Alison L. Chambers; Xiaohu Deng; Natalie A. Hawryluk; John M. Keith; Neelakandha S. Mani; Jeffrey E. Merit; Joan Pierce; Mark Seierstad; Wei Xiao