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Dive into the research topics where Matthew Burger is active.

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Featured researches published by Matthew Burger.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Identification of NVP-BKM120 as a Potent, Selective, Orally Bioavailable Class I PI3 Kinase Inhibitor for Treating Cancer

Matthew Burger; Sabina Pecchi; Allan S. Wagman; Zhi-Jie Ni; Mark Knapp; Thomas Hendrickson; Gordana Atallah; Keith B. Pfister; Yanchen Zhang; Sarah Bartulis; Kelly Frazier; Simon Ng; Aaron Smith; Joelle Verhagen; Joshua Haznedar; Kay Huh; Ed Iwanowicz; Xiaohua Xin; Daniel Menezes; Hanne Merritt; Isabelle Lee; Marion Wiesmann; Susan Kaufman; Kenneth Crawford; Michael Chin; Dirksen E. Bussiere; Kevin Shoemaker; Isabel Zaror; Sauveur-Michel Maira; Charles Voliva

Phosphoinositide-3-kinases (PI3Ks) are important oncology targets due to the deregulation of this signaling pathway in a wide variety of human cancers. Herein we describe the structure guided optimization of a series of 2-morpholino, 4-substituted, 6-heterocyclic pyrimidines where the pharmacokinetic properties were improved by modulating the electronics of the 6-position heterocycle, and the overall druglike properties were fine-tuned further by modification of the 4-position substituent. The resulting 2,4-bismorpholino 6-heterocyclic pyrimidines are potent class I PI3K inhibitors showing mechanism modulation in PI3K dependent cell lines and in vivo efficacy in tumor xenograft models with PI3K pathway deregulation (A2780 ovarian and U87MG glioma). These efforts culminated in the discovery of 15 (NVP-BKM120), currently in Phase II clinical trials for the treatment of cancer.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Discovery of novel 3,5-disubstituted indole derivatives as potent inhibitors of Pim-1, Pim-2, and Pim-3 protein kinases.

Gisele Nishiguchi; Gordana Atallah; Cornelia Bellamacina; Matthew Burger; Yu Ding; Paul Feucht; Pablo Garcia; Wooseok Han; Liana M. Klivansky; Mika Lindvall

A series of novel 3,5-disubstituted indole derivatives as potent and selective inhibitors of all three members of the Pim kinase family is described. High throughput screen identified a pan-Pim kinase inhibitor with a promiscuous scaffold. Guided by structure-based drug design, SAR of the series afforded a highly selective indole chemotype that was further developed into a potent set of compounds against Pim-1, 2, and 3 (Pim-1 and Pim-3: IC(50)≤2nM and Pim-2: IC(50)≤100nM).


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

Structure Guided Optimization, in Vitro Activity, and in Vivo Activity of Pan-PIM Kinase Inhibitors.

Matthew Burger; Wooseok Han; Jiong Lan; Gisele Nishiguchi; Cornelia Bellamacina; Mika Lindval; Gordana Atallah; Yu Ding; Michelle Mathur; Christopher Mcbride; Elizabeth L. Beans; Kristine M. Muller; Victoriano Tamez; Yanchen Zhang; Kay Huh; Paul Feucht; Tatiana Zavorotinskaya; Yumin Dai; Jocelyn Holash; Joseph Castillo; John L. Langowski; Yingyun Wang; Min Y. Chen; Pablo Garcia

Proviral insertion of Moloney virus (PIM) 1, 2, and 3 kinases are serine/threonine kinases that normally function in survival and proliferation of hematopoietic cells. As high expression of PIM1, 2, and 3 is frequently observed in many human malignancies, including multiple myeloma, non-Hodgkins lymphoma, and myeloid leukemias, there is interest in determining whether selective PIM inhibition can improve outcomes of these human cancers. Herein, we describe our efforts toward this goal. The structure guided optimization of a singleton high throughput screening hit in which the potency against all three PIM isoforms was increased >10,000-fold to yield compounds with pan PIM K is < 10 pM, nanomolar cellular potency, and in vivo activity in an acute myeloid leukemia Pim-dependent tumor model is described.


Cancer Research | 2010

Abstract 4498: Biological characterization of NVP-BKM120, a novel inhibitor of phosphoinosotide 3-kinase in Phase I/II clinical trials

Charles Voliva; Sabina Pecchi; Matthew Burger; Tobi Nagel; Christian Schnell; Christine Fritsch; Saskia M. Brachmann; Daniel Menezes; Mark Knapp; Kevin Shoemaker; Marion Wiesmann; Kay Huh; Isabel Zaror; Marion Dorsch; William R. Sellers; Carlos Garcia-Echeverria; Michel Maira

Proceedings: AACR 101st Annual Meeting 2010‐‐ Apr 17‐21, 2010; Washington, DC The PI3K/Akt/mTor signaling pathway plays an important role in controlling cell growth, proliferation and survival. Through various mechanisms, the pathway is frequently dysregulated in human cancers, suggesting the use of PI3K inhibitors as novel targeted anticancer therapeutic agents. To this end, substantial drug discovery efforts have been devoted both in pharmaceutical companies and in academia to identify and develop therapeutic agents able to specifically down regulate PI3K or other components of this pathway in tumors cells. Following the discovery of NVP-BEZ235, our first dual pan-PI3K/mTOR clinical compound, we sought to identify additional PI3K inhibitors from different chemical classes with more stringent selectivity profiles. The key to achieve these objectives was to pursue a structure-based design approach coupled with intensive pharmacological evaluation of selected compounds during the medicinal chemistry optimization process. Here we report on the biological characterization of the pan-PI3K pyrimidine-derived inhibitor NVP-BKM120. This compound inhibits all four Class I PI3K isoforms (IC50 values in the 35 to 248 nM range) with at least 50-fold selectivity (compared to p110α) towards protein kinases. The compound is also active against the most common somatic PI3Kα mutations (H1047R, E542K and E545K). NVP-BKM120 does not significantly inhibit the related Class III (Vps34) and Class IV (mTOR, DNA-PK) PI3K kinases. Consistent with its mechanism of action, NVP-BKM120 decreases the cellular levels of p-Akt in mechanistic and relevant tumor cell lines (e.g., IC50 for S473P-Akt in Rat1-p110α cells of 93 nM). This biological activity correlates with inhibition of various Akt downstream signaling pathway components, and with its anti-proliferative activity. Thus, the compound demonstrates significant, concentration dependent cell growth inhibition and induction of apoptosis in a variety of tumor cancer cells, particularly for those harboring p110α mutants and/or over-expressing erbB2. In addition, NVP-BKM120 demonstrates significant, dose dependent in vivo pharmacodynamic activity as measured by inhibition of p-Akt in relevant xenograft models. The pharmacological, biological and preclinical safety profile of NVP-BKM120 supports its clinical development and the compound is currently undergoing Phase 1/II clinical trials in cancer patients. Citation Format: {Authors}. {Abstract title} [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 101st Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2010 Apr 17-21; Washington, DC. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2010;70(8 Suppl):Abstract nr 4498.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Synthesis and in Vitro and in Vivo Evaluation of Phosphoinositide-3-kinase Inhibitors.

Matthew Burger; Mark Knapp; Allan S. Wagman; Zhi-Jie Ni; Thomas Hendrickson; Gordana Atallah; Yanchen Zhang; Kelly Frazier; Joelle Verhagen; Keith B. Pfister; Simon Ng; Aaron Smith; Sarah Bartulis; Hanne Merrit; Marion Weismann; Xiaohua Xin; Joshua Haznedar; Charles Voliva; Ed Iwanowicz; Sabina Pecchi

Phospoinositide-3-kinases (PI3K) are important oncology targets due to the deregulation of this signaling pathway in a wide variety of human cancers. A series of 2-morpholino, 4-substituted, 6-(3-hydroxyphenyl) pyrimidines have been reported as potent inhibitors of PI3Ks. Herein, we describe the structure-guided optimization of these pyrimidines with a focus on replacing the phenol moiety, while maintaining potent target inhibition and improving in vivo properties. A series of 2-morpholino, 4-substituted, 6-heterocyclic pyrimidines, which potently inhibit PI3K, were discovered. Within this series a compound, 17, was identified with suitable pharmacokinetic (PK) properties, which allowed for the establishment of a PI3K PK/pharmacodynamic-efficacy relationship as determined by in vivo inhibition of AKT(Ser473) phosphorylation and tumor growth inhibition in a mouse A2780 tumor xenograft model.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015

Identification of N-(4-((1R,3S,5S)-3-Amino-5-methylcyclohexyl)pyridin-3-yl)-6-(2,6-difluorophenyl)-5-fluoropicolinamide (PIM447), a Potent and Selective Proviral Insertion Site of Moloney Murine Leukemia (PIM) 1, 2, and 3 Kinase Inhibitor in Clinical Trials for Hematological Malignancies.

Matthew Burger; Gisele Nishiguchi; Wooseok Han; Jiong Lan; R Simmons; Gordana Atallah; Yu Ding; Tamez; Y Zhang; Michelle Mathur; K Muller; Cornelia Bellamacina; M.K Lindvall; R Zang; Kay Huh; Paul Feucht; T Zavorotinskaya; Y Dai; S Basham; J Chan; E Ginn; A Aycinena; J Holash; J Castillo; J.L Langowski; Y Wang; M.Y Chen; A Lambert; C Fritsch; A Kauffmann

Pan proviral insertion site of Moloney murine leukemia (PIM) 1, 2, and 3 kinase inhibitors have recently begun to be tested in humans to assess whether pan PIM kinase inhibition may provide benefit to cancer patients. Herein, the synthesis, in vitro activity, in vivo activity in an acute myeloid leukemia xenograft model, and preclinical profile of the potent and selective pan PIM kinase inhibitor compound 8 (PIM447) are described. Starting from the reported aminopiperidyl pan PIM kinase inhibitor compound 3, a strategy to improve the microsomal stability was pursued resulting in the identification of potent aminocyclohexyl pan PIM inhibitors with high metabolic stability. From this aminocyclohexyl series, compound 8 entered the clinic in 2012 in multiple myeloma patients and is currently in several phase 1 trials of cancer patients with hematological malignancies.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017

Design and Discovery of N-(2-Methyl-5′-morpholino-6′-((tetrahydro-2H-pyran-4-yl)oxy)-[3,3′-bipyridin]-5-yl)-3-(trifluoromethyl)benzamide (RAF709): A Potent, Selective, and Efficacious RAF Inhibitor Targeting RAS Mutant Cancers

Gisele Nishiguchi; Alice Rico; Huw Tanner; Robert Aversa; Benjamin Taft; Sharadha Subramanian; Lina Setti; Matthew Burger; Lifeng Wan; Victoriano Tamez; Aaron Smith; Yan Lou; Paul A. Barsanti; Brent A. Appleton; Mulugeta Mamo; Laura Tandeske; Ina Dix; John E. Tellew; Shenlin Huang; Lesley A. Mathews Griner; Vesselina G. Cooke; Anne Van Abbema; Hanne Merritt; Sylvia Ma; Kalyani Gampa; Fei Feng; Jing Yuan; Yingyun Wang; Jacob R Haling; Sepideh Vaziri

RAS oncogenes have been implicated in >30% of human cancers, all representing high unmet medical need. The exquisite dependency on CRAF kinase in KRAS mutant tumors has been established in genetically engineered mouse models and human tumor cells. To date, many small molecule approaches are under investigation to target CRAF, yet kinase-selective and cellular potent inhibitors remain challenging to identify. Herein, we describe 14 (RAF709) [ Aversa , Biaryl amide compounds as kinase inhibitors and their preparation . WO 2014151616, 2014 ], a selective B/C RAF inhibitor, which was developed through a hypothesis-driven approach focusing on drug-like properties. A key challenge encountered in the medicinal chemistry campaign was maintaining a balance between good solubility and potent cellular activity (suppression of pMEK and proliferation) in KRAS mutant tumor cell lines. We investigated the small molecule crystal structure of lead molecule 7 and hypothesized that disruption of the crystal packing would improve solubility, which led to a change from N-methylpyridone to a tetrahydropyranyl oxy-pyridine derivative. 14 proved to be soluble, kinase selective, and efficacious in a KRAS mutant xenograft model.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2016

Design, synthesis and structure activity relationship of potent pan-PIM kinase inhibitors derived from the pyridyl carboxamide scaffold

Gisele Nishiguchi; Matthew Burger; Wooseok Han; Jiong Lan; Gordana Atallah; Victoriano Tamez; Mika Lindvall; Cornelia Bellamacina; Pablo Garcia; Paul Feucht; Tatiana Zavorotinskaya; Yumin Dai; Kent Wong

The Pim proteins (1, 2 and 3) are serine/threonine kinases that have been found to be upregulated in many hematological malignancies and solid tumors. As a result of overlapping functions among the three isoforms, inhibition of all three Pim kinases has become an attractive strategy for cancer therapy. Herein we describe our efforts in identifying potent pan-PIM inhibitors that are derived from our previously reported pyridyl carboxamide scaffold as part of a medicinal chemistry strategy to address metabolic stability.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

Structure guided optimization of a fragment hit to imidazopyridine inhibitors of PI3K.

Sabina Pecchi; Zhi-Jie Ni; Wooseok Han; Aaron Smith; Jiong Lan; Matthew Burger; Hanne Merritt; Marion Wiesmann; John Chan; Susan Kaufman; Mark Knapp; Johanna Janssen; Kay Huh; Charles Voliva

PI3 kinases are a family of lipid kinases mediating numerous cell processes such as proliferation, migration and differentiation. The PI3 Kinase pathway is often de-regulated in cancer through PI3Kα overexpression, gene amplification, mutations and PTEN phosphatase deletion. PI3K inhibitors represent therefore an attractive therapeutic modality for cancer treatment. Herein we describe how the potency of a benzothiazole fragment hit was quickly improved based on structural information and how this early chemotype was further optimized through scaffold hopping. This effort led to the identification of a series of 2-acetamido-5-heteroaryl imidazopyridines showing potent in vitro activity against all class I PI3Ks and attractive pharmacokinetic properties.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Human CD180 Transmits Signals via the PIM-1L Kinase.

Nicole Egli; Alexandra Zajonz; Matthew Burger; Tamás Schweighoffer

Toll-like receptors (TLRs) are important sensors of the innate immune system that recognize conserved structural motifs and activate cells via a downstream signaling cascade. The CD180/MD1 molecular complex is an unusual member of the TLR family, since it lacks the components that are normally required for signal transduction by other TLRs. Therefore the CD180/MD 1 complex has been considered of being incapable of independently initiating cellular signals. Using chemogenetic approaches we identified specifically the membrane bound long form of PIM-1 kinase, PIM-1L as the mediator of CD180-dependent signaling. A dominant negative isoform of PIM-1L, but not of other PIM kinases, inhibited signaling elicited by cross-linking of CD180, and this effect was phenocopied by PIM inhibitors. PIM-1L was directed to the cell membrane by its N-terminal extension, where it colocalized and physically associated with CD180. Triggering CD180 also induced increased phosphorylation of the anti-apoptotic protein BAD in a PIM kinase-dependent fashion. Also in primary human B cells, which are the main cells expressing CD180 in man, cross-linking of CD180 by monoclonal antibodies stimulated cell survival and proliferation that was abrogated by specific inhibitors. By associating with PIM-1L, CD180 can thus obtain autonomous signaling capabilities, and this complex is then channeling inflammatory signals into B cell survival programs. Pharmacological inhibition of PIM-1 should therefore provide novel therapeutic options in diseases that respond to innate immune stimulation with subsequently increased B cell activity, such as lupus erythematosus or myasthenia gravis.

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