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Dive into the research topics where Melissa Hill-Drzewi is active.

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Featured researches published by Melissa Hill-Drzewi.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Imidazo[1,2-a]pyrazine diaryl ureas: Inhibitors of the receptor tyrosine kinase EphB4

Scott Mitchell; Mihaela Diana Danca; Peter Blomgren; James W. Darrow; Kevin S. Currie; Jeffrey E. Kropf; Seung Ho Lee; Steven L. Gallion; Jin-Ming Xiong; Douglas A. Pippin; Robert W. DeSimone; David R. Brittelli; David C. Eustice; Aaron Bourret; Melissa Hill-Drzewi; Patricia Maciejewski; Lisa Elkin

Inhibition of receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) such as vascular endothelial growth factor receptors (VEGFRs) and platelet-derived growth factor receptors (PDGFRs) has been validated by recently launched small molecules Sutent and Nexavar, both of which display activities against several angiogenesis-related RTKs. EphB4, a receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) involved in the processes of embryogenesis and angiogenesis, has been shown to be aberrantly up regulated in many cancer types such as breast, lung, bladder and prostate. We propose that inhibition of EphB4 in addition to other validated RTKs would enhance the anti-angiogenic effect and ultimately result in more pronounced anti-cancer efficacy. Herein we report the discovery and SAR of a novel series of imidazo[1,2-a]pyrazine diarylureas that show nanomolar potency for the EphB4 receptor, in addition to potent activity against several other RTKs.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015

Discovery of 1,3-dihydro-2,1,3-benzothiadiazole 2,2-dioxide analogs as new RORC modulators.

Ingo Muegge; Delphine Collin; Brian Nicholas Cook; Melissa Hill-Drzewi; Josh Horan; Stanley Kugler; Mark E. Labadia; Xiang Li; Lana Smith; Yunlong Zhang

Structure-based and pharmacophore-based virtual screening in combination with combinatorial chemistry and X-ray crystallography led to the discovery of a new class of benzothiadiazole dioxide analogs with functional activity as RORC inverse agonists. The early RORC SAR compound 14 exhibited RORC inhibition in a cell based reporter gene assay of 5.7 μM and bound to RORC with an affinity of 1.6 μM in a fluorescence polarization assay displacing a ligand binding site probe. Crystallography confirmed the binding mode of the compound in the ligand binding domain displaying the engagement of a novel sub pocket close to Ser404. Subsequent optimization yielded compounds with enhanced RORC inverse agonist activity. The most active compound 19 showed an IC50 of 440 nM in a human PBMC assay.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Discovery of Potent, Selective Chymase Inhibitors via Fragment Linking Strategies

Steven John Taylor; Anil K. Padyana; Asitha Abeywardane; S Liang; Ming-Hong Hao; S De Lombaert; John R. Proudfoot; B.S Farmer; X Li; B Collins; Leslie Martin; Daniel R. Albaugh; Melissa Hill-Drzewi; Steven S. Pullen; Hidenori Takahashi

Chymase plays an important and diverse role in the homeostasis of a number of cardiovascular processes. Herein, we describe the identification of potent, selective chymase inhibitors, developed using fragment-based, structure-guided linking and optimization techniques. High-concentration biophysical screening methods followed by high-throughput crystallography identified an oxindole fragment bound to the S1 pocket of the protein exhibiting a novel interaction pattern hitherto not observed in chymase inhibitors. X-ray crystallographic structures were used to guide the elaboration/linking of the fragment, ultimately leading to a potent inhibitor that was >100-fold selective over cathepsin G and that mitigated a number of liabilities associated with poor physicochemical properties of the series it was derived from.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Benzimidazolone as potent chymase inhibitor: modulation of reactive metabolite formation in the hydrophobic (P1) region.

Ho Yin Lo; Peter Allen Nemoto; Jin Mi Kim; Ming-Hong Hao; Kevin Chungeng Qian; Neil A. Farrow; Daniel R. Albaugh; Danielle M. Fowler; Richard D. Schneiderman; E. Michael August; Leslie Martin; Melissa Hill-Drzewi; Steven S. Pullen; Hidenori Takahashi; Stephane De Lombaert

A new class of chymase inhibitor featuring a benzimidazolone core with an acid side chain and a P(1) hydrophobic moiety is described. Incubation of the lead compound with GSH resulted in the formation of a GSH conjugate on the benzothiophene P(1) moiety. Replacement of the benzothiophene with different heterocyclic systems such as indoles and benzoisothiazole is feasible. Among the P(1) replacements, benzoisothiazole prevents the formation of GSH conjugate and an in silico analysis of oxidative potentials agreed with the experimental outcome.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2014

Piperazinyl-oxadiazoles as selective sphingosine-1-phosphate receptor agonists.

Joshua Courtney Horan; Sulagna Sanyal; Younggi Choi; Melissa Hill-Drzewi; Lori Patnaude; Shawn Anderson; Steve Fogal; Can Mao; Brian Nicholas Cook; Kristina Gueneva-Boucheva; Michael B. Fisher; Eugene R. Hickey; Edward Pack; Lynne Canne Bannen; Diva Sze-Ming Chan; Morrison B. Mac; Stephanie Ng; Yong Wang; Wei Xu; Louise K. Modis; Rene Marc Lemieux

The discovery of a new series of selective S1P1 agonists is described. This series of piperazinyl-oxadiazole derivatives was rapidly optimized starting from high-throughput screening hit 1 to afford potent and selective lead compound 10d. Further SAR studies showed that 10d was converted to the active phosphate metabolite 29 in vivo. Oral administration of compound 10d to rats was shown to induce lymphopenia at 3 mg/kg.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2014

No Differences Observed among Multiple Clinical S1P1 Receptor Agonists (Functional Antagonists) in S1P1 Receptor Down-regulation and Degradation

Susan Lukas; Lori Patnaude; Sokol Haxhinasto; Anthony J. Slavin; Melissa Hill-Drzewi; Josh Horan; Louise K. Modis

Sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) is a bioactive metabolite with pleiotropic effects on multiple cellular processes in health and disease. Responses elicited by S1P are a result of binding to five specific G-protein–coupled receptors. We have developed multiple assays to systematically study the downstream signaling of these receptors, including early events such as direct receptor activation (GTPγS) as well as more distal events such as S1P1 receptor degradation. Employing such assays, we have characterized and compared multiple S1P1 agonists that are in clinical development including FTY720, BAF312, CS-0777, and other molecules from the S1P1 patent literature. Our parallel assessment has allowed us to compare their potency against S1P1, their selectivity against the four other S1P receptors, as well as species cross-reactivity. We note that all of the compounds studied signal in an identical manner through S1P1, leading to receptor degradation.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2011

Bioluminescent method for assaying multiple semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidase (SSAO) family members in both 96- and 384-well formats.

Gregory W. Peet; Susan Lukas; Melissa Hill-Drzewi; Leslie Martin; Irina Rybina; Teresa Roma; Alycia Shoultz; Xiang Zhu; Daniela Cazacu; Anthony Kronkaitis; Alistair Baptiste; Brian Christopher Raudenbush; E. Michael August; Louise K. Modis

Vascular adhesion protein–1 (VAP-1), also known as semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidase (SSAO) or copper-containing amine oxidase (AOC3, EC 1.4.3.6), catalyzes oxidative deamination of primary amines. One endogenous substrate has recently been described (Siglec 10), and although its mechanism of action in vivo is not completely understood, it is suggested to play a role in immune cell trafficking, making it a target of interest for autoimmune and inflammatory diseases. Much of the enzymology performed around this target has been conducted with absorbance, fluorescent, or radiometric formats that can have some limitations for high-throughput screening and subsequent compound profiling. The authors present the use of a bioluminescent assay, originally developed for monoamine oxidase enzymes, in a high-throughput format. It can be used for related SSAOs such as AOC1 given their substrate similarity with VAP-1. The authors also demonstrate that it is compatible with different sources of VAP-1, both purified recombinant and VAP-1 overexpressed on live cells.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2016

Late-stage optimization of a tercyclic class of S1P3-sparing, S1P1 receptor agonists.

Joshua Courtney Horan; Daniel Kuzmich; Pingrong Liu; Darren Disalvo; John Lord; Can Mao; Tamara Denise Hopkins; Hui Yu; Christian Harcken; Raj Betageri; Melissa Hill-Drzewi; Lori Patenaude; Monica Patel; Kimberly Fletcher; Donna Terenzzio; Brian Linehan; Heather Xia; Mita Patel; Debbie Studwell; Craig Andrew Miller; Eugene R. Hickey; Jeremy I. Levin; Dustin Smith; Raymond A. Kemper; Louise K. Modis; Lynne Canne Bannen; Diva Sze-Ming Chan; Morrison B. Mac; Stephanie Ng; Yong Wang

Poor solubility and cationic amphiphilic drug-likeness were liabilities identified for a lead series of S1P3-sparing, S1P1 agonists originally developed from a high-throughput screening campaign. This work describes the subsequent optimization of these leads by balancing potency, selectivity, solubility and overall molecular charge. Focused SAR studies revealed favorable structural modifications that, when combined, produced compounds with overall balanced profiles. The low brain exposure observed in rat suggests that these compounds would be best suited for the potential treatment of peripheral autoimmune disorders.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Improving potency and selectivity of a new class of non-Zn-chelating MMP-13 inhibitors.

Alexander Heim-Riether; Steven John Taylor; Shuang Liang; Donghong Amy Gao; Zhaoming Xiong; E. Michael August; Brandon Collins; Bennett T. Farmer; Kathleen Haverty; Melissa Hill-Drzewi; Hans-Dieter Junker; S. Mariana Margarit; Neil Moss; Thomas Neumann; John R. Proudfoot; Lana Louise Smith Keenan; Renate Sekul; Qiang Zhang; Jun Li; Neil A. Farrow


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

SAR studies of non-zinc-chelating MMP-13 inhibitors: Improving selectivity and metabolic stability

Donghong Amy Gao; Zhaoming Xiong; Alexander Heim-Riether; Laura M Amodeo; E. Michael August; Xianhua Cao; Leonard Ciccarelli; Brandon Collins; Kyle E. Harrington; Kathleen Haverty; Melissa Hill-Drzewi; Xiang Li; Shuang Liang; Steluta Mariana Margarit; Neil Moss; Nelamangala Nagaraja; John R. Proudfoot; Rene Roman; Sabine Schlyer; Lana Louise Smith Keenan; Steven John Taylor; Bernd Wellenzohn; Dieter Wiedenmayer; Jun Li; Neil A. Farrow

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Xiang Li

Boehringer Ingelheim

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