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Featured researches published by Mark Zak.


Nature | 2013

Mechanism of MEK inhibition determines efficacy in mutant KRAS- versus BRAF-driven cancers

Georgia Hatzivassiliou; Jacob R. Haling; Huifen Chen; Kyung Song; Steve Price; Robert Heald; Joanne Frances Mary Hewitt; Mark Zak; Ariana Peck; Christine Orr; Mark Merchant; Klaus P. Hoeflich; Jocelyn Chan; Shiuh-Ming Luoh; Daniel J. Anderson; Mary J. C. Ludlam; Christian Wiesmann; Mark Ultsch; Lori Friedman; Shiva Malek; Marcia Belvin

KRAS and BRAF activating mutations drive tumorigenesis through constitutive activation of the MAPK pathway. As these tumours represent an area of high unmet medical need, multiple allosteric MEK inhibitors, which inhibit MAPK signalling in both genotypes, are being tested in clinical trials. Impressive single-agent activity in BRAF-mutant melanoma has been observed; however, efficacy has been far less robust in KRAS-mutant disease. Here we show that, owing to distinct mechanisms regulating MEK activation in KRAS- versus BRAF-driven tumours, different mechanisms of inhibition are required for optimal antitumour activity in each genotype. Structural and functional analysis illustrates that MEK inhibitors with superior efficacy in KRAS-driven tumours (GDC-0623 and G-573, the former currently in phase I clinical trials) form a strong hydrogen-bond interaction with S212 in MEK that is critical for blocking MEK feedback phosphorylation by wild-type RAF. Conversely, potent inhibition of active, phosphorylated MEK is required for strong inhibition of the MAPK pathway in BRAF-mutant tumours, resulting in superior efficacy in this genotype with GDC-0973 (also known as cobimetinib), a MEK inhibitor currently in phase III clinical trials. Our study highlights that differences in the activation state of MEK in KRAS-mutant tumours versus BRAF-mutant tumours can be exploited through the design of inhibitors that uniquely target these distinct activation states of MEK. These inhibitors are currently being evaluated in clinical trials to determine whether improvements in therapeutic index within KRAS versus BRAF preclinical models translate to improved clinical responses in patients.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Identification of Imidazo-Pyrrolopyridines as Novel and Potent JAK1 Inhibitors.

Janusz Jozef Kulagowski; Wade S. Blair; Richard J. Bull; Christine Chang; Gauri Deshmukh; Hazel Joan Dyke; Charles Eigenbrot; Nico Ghilardi; Paul Gibbons; Trevor Keith Harrison; Peter R. Hewitt; Marya Liimatta; Christopher Hurley; Adam R. Johnson; Tony Johnson; Jane R. Kenny; Pawan Bir Kohli; Robert James Maxey; Rohan Mendonca; Kyle Mortara; Jeremy Murray; Raman Narukulla; Steven Shia; Micah Steffek; Savita Ubhayakar; Mark Ultsch; Anne van Abbema; Stuart Ward; Bohdan Waszkowycz; Mark Zak

A therapeutic rationale is proposed for the treatment of inflammatory diseases, such as rheumatoid arthritis (RA), by specific targeting of the JAK1 pathway. Examination of the preferred binding conformation of clinically effective, pan-JAK inhibitor 1 led to identification of a novel, tricyclic hinge binding scaffold 3. Exploration of SAR through a series of cycloamino and cycloalkylamino analogues demonstrated this template to be highly tolerant of substitution, with a predisposition to moderate selectivity for the JAK1 isoform over JAK2. This study culminated in the identification of subnanomolar JAK1 inhibitors such as 22 and 49, having excellent cell potency, good rat pharmacokinetic characteristics, and excellent kinase selectivity. Determination of the binding modes of the series in JAK1 and JAK2 by X-ray crystallography supported the design of analogues to enhance affinity and selectivity.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Structure-Based Discovery of Novel Amide-Containing Nicotinamide Phosphoribosyltransferase (Nampt) Inhibitors

Xiaozhang Zheng; Paul H. Bauer; Timm Baumeister; Alexandre J. Buckmelter; Maureen Caligiuri; Karl H. Clodfelter; Bingsong Han; Yen-Ching Ho; Nikolai Kley; Jian Lin; Dominic J. Reynolds; Geeta Sharma; Chase Smith; Zhongguo Wang; Peter S. Dragovich; Janet Gunzner-Toste; Bianca M. Liederer; Justin Ly; Thomas O’Brien; Angela Oh; Leslie Wang; Weiru Wang; Yang Xiao; Mark Zak; Guiling Zhao; Po-wai Yuen; Kenneth W. Bair

Crystal structures of several urea- and thiourea-derived compounds in complex with the nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase (Nampt) protein were utilized to design a potent amide-containing inhibitor bearing an aza-indole moiety (7, Nampt BC IC50 = 9.0 nM, A2780 cell proliferation IC50 = 10 nM). The Nampt-7 cocrystal structure was subsequently obtained and enabled the design of additional amide-containing inhibitors which incorporated various other fused 6,5-heterocyclic moieties and biaryl sulfone or sulfonamide motifs. Additional modifications of these molecules afforded many potent biaryl sulfone-containing Nampt inhibitors which also exhibited favorable in vitro ADME properties (microsomal and hepatocyte stability, MDCK permeability, plasma protein binding). An optimized compound (58) was a potent inhibitor of multiple cancer cell lines (IC50 <10 nM vs U251, HT1080, PC3, MiaPaCa2, and HCT116 lines), displayed acceptable mouse PK properties (F = 41%, CL = 52.4 mL/min/kg), and exhibited robust efficacy in a U251 mouse xenograft model.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Discovery and Optimization of C-2 Methyl Imidazopyrrolopyridines as Potent and Orally Bioavailable JAK1 Inhibitors with Selectivity over JAK2.

Mark Zak; Rohan Mendonca; Mercedesz Balazs; Kathy Barrett; Philippe Bergeron; Wade S. Blair; Christine Chang; Gauri Deshmukh; Jason DeVoss; Peter S. Dragovich; Charles Eigenbrot; Nico Ghilardi; Paul Gibbons; Stefan Gradl; Chris Hamman; Emily Hanan; Eric Harstad; Peter R. Hewitt; Christopher Hurley; T Jin; Amber E. Johnson; Tony Johnson; Jane R. Kenny; Michael F. T. Koehler; P Bir Kohli; Janusz Jozef Kulagowski; Sharada Labadie; J Liao; Marya Liimatta; Zeming Lin

Herein we report the discovery of the C-2 methyl substituted imidazopyrrolopyridine series and its optimization to provide potent and orally bioavailable JAK1 inhibitors with selectivity over JAK2. The C-2 methyl substituted inhibitor 4 exhibited not only improved JAK1 potency relative to unsubstituted compound 3 but also notable JAK1 vs JAK2 selectivity (20-fold and >33-fold in biochemical and cell-based assays, respectively). Features of the X-ray structures of 4 in complex with both JAK1 and JAK2 are delineated. Efforts to improve the in vitro and in vivo ADME properties of 4 while maintaining JAK1 selectivity are described, culminating in the discovery of a highly optimized and balanced inhibitor (20). Details of the biological characterization of 20 are disclosed including JAK1 vs JAK2 selectivity levels, preclinical in vivo PK profiles, performance in an in vivo JAK1-mediated PK/PD model, and attributes of an X-ray structure in complex with JAK1.


Journal of Immunology | 2013

A Restricted Role for TYK2 Catalytic Activity in Human Cytokine Responses Revealed by Novel TYK2-Selective Inhibitors

Sue J. Sohn; Kathy Barrett; Anne van Abbema; Christine Chang; Pawan Bir Kohli; Hidenobu Kanda; Janice Smith; Yingjie Lai; Aihe Zhou; Birong Zhang; Wenqian Yang; Karen Williams; Calum Macleod; Christopher Hurley; Janusz Jozef Kulagowski; Nicholas Lewin-Koh; Hart S. Dengler; Adam R. Johnson; Nico Ghilardi; Mark Zak; Jun Liang; Wade S. Blair; Steven Magnuson; Lawren C. Wu

TYK2 is a JAK family protein tyrosine kinase activated in response to multiple cytokines, including type I IFNs, IL-6, IL-10, IL-12, and IL-23. Extensive studies of mice that lack TYK2 expression indicate that the IFN-α, IL-12, and IL-23 pathways, but not the IL-6 or IL-10 pathways, are compromised. In contrast, there have been few studies of the role of TYK2 in primary human cells. A genetic mutation at the tyk2 locus that results in a lack of TYK2 protein in a single human patient has been linked to defects in the IFN-α, IL-6, IL-10, IL-12, and IL-23 pathways, suggesting a broad role for TYK2 protein in human cytokine responses. In this article, we have used a panel of novel potent TYK2 small-molecule inhibitors with varying degrees of selectivity against other JAK kinases to address the requirement for TYK2 catalytic activity in cytokine pathways in primary human cells. Our results indicate that the biological processes that require TYK2 catalytic function in humans are restricted to the IL-12 and IL-23 pathways, and suggest that inhibition of TYK2 catalytic activity may be an efficacious approach for the treatment of select autoimmune diseases without broad immunosuppression.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Structure-Based Identification of Ureas as Novel Nicotinamide Phosphoribosyltransferase (Nampt) Inhibitors

Xiaozhang Zheng; Paul H. Bauer; Timm Baumeister; Alexandre J. Buckmelter; Maureen Caligiuri; Karl H. Clodfelter; Bingsong Han; Yen-Ching Ho; Nikolai Kley; Jian Lin; Dominic J. Reynolds; Geeta Sharma; Chase Smith; Zhongguo Wang; Peter S. Dragovich; Angela Oh; Weiru Wang; Mark Zak; Janet Gunzner-Toste; Guiling Zhao; Po-wai Yuen; Kenneth W. Bair

Nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase (Nampt) is a promising anticancer target. Virtual screening identified a thiourea analogue, compound 5, as a novel highly potent Nampt inhibitor. Guided by the cocrystal structure of 5, SAR exploration revealed that the corresponding urea compound 7 exhibited similar potency with an improved solubility profile. These studies also indicated that a 3-pyridyl group was the preferred substituent at one inhibitor terminus and also identified a urea moiety as the optimal linker to the remainder of the inhibitor structure. Further SAR optimization of the other inhibitor terminus ultimately yielded compound 50 as a urea-containing Nampt inhibitor which exhibited excellent biochemical and cellular potency (enzyme IC50 = 0.007 μM; A2780 IC50 = 0.032 μM). Compound 50 also showed excellent in vivo antitumor efficacy when dosed orally in an A2780 ovarian tumor xenograft model (TGI of 97% was observed on day 17).


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Identification of C-2 Hydroxyethyl Imidazopyrrolopyridines as Potent JAK1 Inhibitors with Favorable Physicochemical Properties and High Selectivity over JAK2.

Mark Zak; Christopher Hurley; Stuart Ward; Philippe Bergeron; Kathy Barrett; Mercedesz Balazs; Wade S. Blair; Richard James Bull; Paroma Chakravarty; Christine Chang; Peter Crackett; Gauri Deshmukh; Jason DeVoss; Peter S. Dragovich; Charles Eigenbrot; Charles Ellwood; Simon Gaines; Nico Ghilardi; Paul Gibbons; Stefan Gradl; Peter Gribling; Chris Hamman; Eric Harstad; Peter R. Hewitt; Adam R. Johnson; Tony Johnson; Jane R. Kenny; Michael F. T. Koehler; Pawan Bir Kohli; Sharada Shenvi Labadie

Herein we report on the structure-based discovery of a C-2 hydroxyethyl moiety which provided consistently high levels of selectivity for JAK1 over JAK2 to the imidazopyrrolopyridine series of JAK1 inhibitors. X-ray structures of a C-2 hydroxyethyl analogue in complex with both JAK1 and JAK2 revealed differential ligand/protein interactions between the two isoforms and offered an explanation for the observed selectivity. Analysis of historical data from related molecules was used to develop a set of physicochemical compound design parameters to impart desirable properties such as acceptable membrane permeability, potent whole blood activity, and a high degree of metabolic stability. This work culminated in the identification of a highly JAK1 selective compound (31) exhibiting favorable oral bioavailability across a range of preclinical species and robust efficacy in a rat CIA model.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

Identification of amides derived from 1H-pyrazolo[3,4-b]pyridine-5-carboxylic acid as potent inhibitors of human nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase (NAMPT).

Xiaozhang Zheng; Kenneth W. Bair; Paul H. Bauer; Timm Baumeister; Krista K. Bowman; Alexandre J. Buckmelter; Maureen Caligiuri; Karl H. Clodfelter; Yezhen Feng; Bingsong Han; Yen-Ching Ho; Nikolai Kley; Hong Li; Xiaorong Liang; Bianca M. Liederer; Jian Lin; Justin Ly; Thomas O’Brien; Jason Oeh; Angela Oh; Dominic J. Reynolds; Deepak Sampath; Geeta Sharma; Nicholas J. Skelton; Chase Smith; Jarrod Tremayne; Leslie Wang; Weiru Wang; Zhongguo Wang; Hongxing Wu

Potent, 1H-pyrazolo[3,4-b]pyridine-containing inhibitors of the human nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase (NAMPT) enzyme were identified using structure-based design techniques. Many of these compounds exhibited nanomolar antiproliferation activities against human tumor lines in in vitro cell culture experiments, and a representative example (compound 26) demonstrated encouraging in vivo efficacy in a mouse xenograft tumor model derived from the A2780 cell line. This molecule also exhibited reduced rat retinal exposures relative to a previously studied imidazo-pyridine-containing NAMPT inhibitor. Somewhat surprisingly, compound 26 was only weakly active in vitro against mouse and monkey tumor cell lines even though it was a potent inhibitor of NAMPT enzymes derived from these species. The compound also exhibited only minimal effects on in vivo NAD levels in mice, and these changes were considerably less profound than those produced by an imidazo-pyridine-containing NAMPT inhibitor. The crystal structures of compound 26 and the corresponding PRPP-derived ribose adduct in complex with NAMPT were also obtained.


ChemBioChem | 2014

Structural and biochemical analyses of the catalysis and potency impact of inhibitor phosphoribosylation by human nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase.

Angela Oh; Yen-Ching Ho; Mark Zak; Yichin Liu; X Chen; Po-wai Yuen; Xiaozhang Zheng; Peter S. Dragovich; Weiru Wang

Prolonged inhibition of nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase (NAMPT) is a strategy for targeting cancer metabolism. Many NAMPT inhibitors undergo NAMPT‐catalyzed phosphoribosylation (pRib), a property often correlated with their cellular potency. To understand this phenomenon and facilitate drug design, we analyzed a potent cellularly active NAMPT inhibitor (GNE‐617). A crystal structure of pRib‐GNE‐617 in complex with NAMPT protein revealed a relaxed binding mode. Consistently, the adduct formation resulted in tight binding and strong product inhibition. In contrast, a biochemically equipotent isomer of GNE‐617 (GNE‐643) also formed pRib adducts but displayed significantly weaker cytotoxicity. Structural analysis revealed an altered ligand conformation of GNE‐643, thus suggesting weak association of the adducts with NAMPT. Our data support a model for cellularly active NAMPT inhibitors that undergo NAMPT‐catalyzed phosphoribosylation to produce pRib adducts that retain efficient binding to the enzyme.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Fragment-Based Identification of Amides Derived from trans-2-(Pyridin-3-yl)cyclopropanecarboxylic Acid as Potent Inhibitors of Human Nicotinamide Phosphoribosyltransferase (NAMPT)

Anthony M. Giannetti; Xiaozhang Zheng; Nicholas J. Skelton; Weiru Wang; Brandon J. Bravo; Kenneth W. Bair; Timm Baumeister; Eric Cheng; Lisa Crocker; Yezhen Feng; Janet Gunzner-Toste; Yen-Ching Ho; Rongbao Hua; Bianca M. Liederer; Yongbo Liu; Xiaolei Ma; Thomas O’Brien; Jason Oeh; Deepak Sampath; Youming Shen; Chengcheng Wang; Leslie Wang; Hongxing Wu; Yang Xiao; Po-wai Yuen; Mark Zak; Guiling Zhao; Qiang Zhao; Peter S. Dragovich

Potent, trans-2-(pyridin-3-yl)cyclopropanecarboxamide-containing inhibitors of the human nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase (NAMPT) enzyme were identified using fragment-based screening and structure-based design techniques. Multiple crystal structures were obtained of initial fragment leads, and this structural information was utilized to improve the biochemical and cell-based potency of the associated molecules. Many of the optimized compounds exhibited nanomolar antiproliferative activities against human tumor lines in in vitro cell culture experiments. In a key example, a fragment lead (13, KD = 51 μM) was elaborated into a potent NAMPT inhibitor (39, NAMPT IC50 = 0.0051 μM, A2780 cell culture IC50 = 0.000 49 μM) which demonstrated encouraging in vivo efficacy in an HT-1080 mouse xenograft tumor model.

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