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Dive into the research topics where Michael Croghan is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael Croghan.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Design and preparation of a potent series of hydroxyethylamine containing β-secretase inhibitors that demonstrate robust reduction of central β-amyloid.

Matthew Weiss; Toni Williamson; Safura Babu-Khan; Michael D. Bartberger; James Brown; Kui Chen; Yuan Cheng; Martin Citron; Michael Croghan; Thomas Dineen; Joel Esmay; Russell Graceffa; Scott Harried; Dean Hickman; Stephen A. Hitchcock; Daniel B. Horne; Hongbing Huang; Ronke Imbeah-Ampiah; Ted Judd; Matthew R. Kaller; Charles Kreiman; Daniel S. La; Vivian Li; Patricia Lopez; Steven W. Louie; Holger Monenschein; Thomas Nguyen; Lewis D. Pennington; Claire Rattan; Tisha San Miguel

A series of potent hydroxyethyl amine (HEA) derived inhibitors of β-site APP cleaving enzyme (BACE1) was optimized to address suboptimal pharmacokinetics and poor CNS partitioning. This work identified a series of benzodioxolane analogues that possessed improved metabolic stability and increased oral bioavailability. Subsequent efforts focused on improving CNS exposure by limiting susceptibility to Pgp-mediated efflux and identified an inhibitor which demonstrated robust and sustained reduction of CNS β-amyloid (Aβ) in Sprague-Dawley rats following oral administration.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2003

Design of a new peptidomimetic agonist for the melanocortin receptors based on the solution structure of the peptide ligand, Ac-Nle-cyclo[Asp-Pro-dPhe-Arg-Trp-Lys]-NH2

Christopher Fotsch; Duncan M. Smith; Jeffrey Adams; Janet Cheetham; Michael Croghan; Elizabeth M. Doherty; Clarence Hale; Mark A. Jarosinski; Michael G. Kelly; Mark H. Norman; Nuria A. Tamayo; Ning Xi; James W. Baumgartner

The solution structure of a potent melanocortin receptor agonist, Ac-Nle-cyclo[Asp-Pro-DPhe-Arg-Trp-Lys]-NH(2) (1) was calculated using distance restraints determined from 1H NMR spectroscopy. Eight of the lowest energy conformations from this study were used to identify non-peptide cores that mimic the spatial arrangement of the critical tripeptide region, DPhe-Arg-Trp, found in 1. From these studies, compound 2a, containing the cis-cyclohexyl core, was identified as a functional agonist of the melanocortin-4 receptor (MC4R) with an IC(50) and EC(50) below 10 nM. Compound 2a also showed 36- and 7-fold selectivity over MC3R and MC1R, respectively, in the binding assays. Subtle changes in cyclohexane stereochemistry and removal of functional groups led to analogues with lower affinity for the MC receptors.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Design and synthesis of potent, orally efficacious hydroxyethylamine derived β-site amyloid precursor protein cleaving enzyme (BACE1) inhibitors.

Thomas Dineen; Matthew Weiss; Toni Williamson; Paul D. Acton; Safura Babu-Khan; Michael D. Bartberger; James Brown; Kui Chen; Yuan Cheng; Martin Citron; Michael Croghan; Robert Dunn; Joel Esmay; Russell Graceffa; Scott Harried; Dean Hickman; Stephen A. Hitchcock; Daniel B. Horne; Hongbing Huang; Ronke Imbeah-Ampiah; Ted Judd; Matthew R. Kaller; Charles Kreiman; Daniel S. La; Vivian Li; Patricia Lopez; Steven W. Louie; Holger Monenschein; Thomas Nguyen; Lewis D. Pennington

We have previously shown that hydroxyethylamines can be potent inhibitors of the BACE1 enzyme and that the generation of BACE1 inhibitors with CYP 3A4 inhibitory activities in this scaffold affords compounds (e.g., 1) with sufficient bioavailability and pharmacokinetic profiles to reduce central amyloid-β peptide (Aβ) levels in wild-type rats following oral dosing. In this article, we describe further modifications of the P1-phenyl ring of the hydroxyethylamine series to afford potent, dual BACE1/CYP 3A4 inhibitors which demonstrate improved penetration into the CNS. Several of these compounds caused robust reduction of Aβ levels in rat CSF and brain following oral dosing, and compound 37 exhibited an improved cardiovascular safety profile relative to 1.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

A Potent and Orally Efficacious, Hydroxyethylamine-Based Inhibitor of β-Secretase.

Matthew R. Kaller; Scott Harried; Brian K. Albrecht; Patricia Amarante; Safura Babu-Khan; Michael D. Bartberger; James Brown; Ryan Brown; Kui Chen; Yuan Cheng; Martin Citron; Michael Croghan; Russell Graceffa; Dean Hickman; Ted Judd; Chuck Kriemen; Daniel La; Vivian Li; Patricia Lopez; Yi Luo; Craig E. Masse; Holger Monenschein; Thomas Nguyen; Lewis D. Pennington; Tisha San Miguel; E. Allen Sickmier; Robert C. Wahl; Matthew Weiss; Paul H. Wen; Toni Williamson

β-Secretase inhibitors are potentially disease-modifying treatments for Alzheimers disease. Previous efforts in our laboratory have resulted in hydroxyethylamine-derived inhibitors such as 1 with low nanomolar potency against β-site amyloid precursor protein cleaving enzyme (BACE). When dosed intravenously, compound 1 was also shown to significantly reduce Aβ40 levels in plasma, brain, and cerebral spinal fluid. Herein, we report further optimizations that led to the discovery of inhibitor 16 as a novel, potent, and orally efficacious BACE inhibitor.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2009

Stereoselective Synthesis of anti-N-Protected 3-Amino-1,2-epoxides by Nucleophilic Addition to N-tert-Butanesulfinyl Imine of a Glyceraldehyde Synthon†

Scott Harried; Michael Croghan; Matthew R. Kaller; Patricia Lopez; Wenge Zhong; Randall W. Hungate; Paul J. Reider

A di-O-TBS protected glyceraldehyde synthon was condensed with Ellmans reagent to form a bench-stable N-tert-butanesulfinyl imine 6, which served as a common intermediate for the stereoselective introduction of various R groups. The Ellman adducts were converted to useful multifunctional intermediates 18a-i in one pot. The alcohols 18a-i were efficiently elaborated to both known and novel anti-N-protected-3-amino-1,2-epoxides in two steps. Compound 2a is a key intermediate toward HIV protease inhibitors.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Small Molecule Disruptors of the Glucokinase–Glucokinase Regulatory Protein Interaction: 1. Discovery of a Novel Tool Compound for in Vivo Proof-of-Concept

Kate S. Ashton; Kristin L. Andrews; Marion C. Bryan; Jie Chen; Kui Chen; Michelle Chen; Samer Chmait; Michael Croghan; Rod Cupples; Christopher Fotsch; Joan Helmering; Steve R. Jordan; Robert J.M. Kurzeja; Klaus Michelsen; Lewis D. Pennington; Steve F. Poon; Glenn Sivits; Gwyneth Van; Steve L. Vonderfecht; Robert C. Wahl; Jiandong Zhang; David J. Lloyd; Clarence Hale; David J. St. Jean

Small molecule activators of glucokinase have shown robust efficacy in both preclinical models and humans. However, overactivation of glucokinase (GK) can cause excessive glucose turnover, leading to hypoglycemia. To circumvent this adverse side effect, we chose to modulate GK activity by targeting the endogenous inhibitor of GK, glucokinase regulatory protein (GKRP). Disrupting the GK-GKRP complex results in an increase in the amount of unbound cytosolic GK without altering the inherent kinetics of the enzyme. Herein we report the identification of compounds that efficiently disrupt the GK-GKRP interaction via a previously unknown binding pocket. Using a structure-based approach, the potency of the initial hit was improved to provide 25 (AMG-1694). When dosed in ZDF rats, 25 showed both a robust pharmacodynamic effect as well as a statistically significant reduction in glucose. Additionally, hypoglycemia was not observed in either the hyperglycemic or normal rats.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

4-Methoxy-N-[2-(trifluoromethyl)biphenyl-4-ylcarbamoyl]nicotinamide: A Potent and Selective Agonist of S1P1

Lewis D. Pennington; Kelvin Sham; Alexander J. Pickrell; Paul Harrington; Michael J. Frohn; Brian A. Lanman; Anthony B. Reed; Michael Croghan; Matthew R. Lee; Han Xu; Michele McElvain; Yang Xu; Xuxia Zhang; Michael Fiorino; Michelle Horner; Henry Morrison; Heather A. Arnett; Christopher Fotsch; Min Wong; Victor J. Cee

The sphingosine-1-phosphate-1 receptor (S1P1) and its endogenous ligand sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) cooperatively regulate lymphocyte trafficking from the lymphatic system. Herein, we disclose 4-methoxy-N-[2-(trifluoromethyl)biphenyl-4-ylcarbamoyl]nicotinamide (8), an uncommon example of a synthetic S1P1 agonist lacking a polar headgroup, which is shown to effect dramatic reduction of circulating lymphocytes (POC = -78%) in rat 24 h after a single oral dose (1 mg/kg). The excellent potency that 8 exhibits toward S1P1 (EC50 = 0.035 μM, 96% efficacy) and the >100-fold selectivity that it displays against receptor subtypes S1P2-5 suggest that it may serve as a valuable tool to understand the clinical relevance of selective S1P1 agonism.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015

Discovery and Structure-Guided Optimization of Diarylmethanesulfonamide Disrupters of Glucokinase–Glucokinase Regulatory Protein (GK–GKRP) Binding: Strategic Use of a N → S (nN → σ*S–X) Interaction for Conformational Constraint

Lewis D. Pennington; Michael D. Bartberger; Michael Croghan; Kristin L. Andrews; Kate S. Ashton; Matthew P. Bourbeau; Jie Chen; Samer Chmait; Rod Cupples; Christopher Fotsch; Joan Helmering; Fang-Tsao Hong; Randall W. Hungate; Steven R. Jordan; Ke Kong; Longbin Liu; Klaus Michelsen; Carolyn Moyer; Nobuko Nishimura; Mark H. Norman; Andreas Reichelt; Aaron C. Siegmund; Glenn Sivits; Seifu Tadesse; Christopher M. Tegley; Gwyneth Van; Kevin C. Yang; Guomin Yao; Jiandong Zhang; David J. Lloyd

The HTS-based discovery and structure-guided optimization of a novel series of GKRP-selective GK-GKRP disrupters are revealed. Diarylmethanesulfonamide hit 6 (hGK-hGKRP IC50 = 1.2 μM) was optimized to lead compound 32 (AMG-0696; hGK-hGKRP IC50 = 0.0038 μM). A stabilizing interaction between a nitrogen atom lone pair and an aromatic sulfur system (nN → σ*S-X) in 32 was exploited to conformationally constrain a biaryl linkage and allow contact with key residues in GKRP. Lead compound 32 was shown to induce GK translocation from the nucleus to the cytoplasm in rats (IHC score = 0; 10 mg/kg po, 6 h) and blood glucose reduction in mice (POC = -45%; 100 mg/kg po, 3 h). X-ray analyses of 32 and several precursors bound to GKRP were also obtained. This novel disrupter of GK-GKRP binding enables further exploration of GKRP as a potential therapeutic target for type II diabetes and highlights the value of exploiting unconventional nonbonded interactions in drug design.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

Optimization of a Potent, Orally Active S1P1 Agonist Containing a Quinolinone Core

Paul Harrington; Michael Croghan; Christopher Fotsch; Mike Frohn; Brian A. Lanman; Lewis D. Pennington; Alexander J. Pickrell; Anthony B. Reed; Kelvin Sham; Andrew Tasker; Heather A. Arnett; Michael Fiorino; Matthew R. Lee; Michele McElvain; Henry Morrison; Han Xu; Yang Xu; Xuxia Zhang; Min Wong; Victor J. Cee

The optimization of a series of S1P1 agonists with limited activity against S1P3 is reported. A polar headgroup was used to improve the physicochemical and pharmacokinetic parameters of lead quinolinone 6. When dosed orally at 1 and 3 mg/kg, the azahydroxymethyl analogue 22 achieved statistically significant lowering of circulating blood lymphocytes 24 h postdose. In rats, a dose-proportional increase in exposure was measured when 22 was dosed orally at 2 and 100 mg/kg.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

The discovery of an orally efficacious positive allosteric modulator of the calcium sensing receptor containing a dibenzylamine core

Paul E. Harrington; David J. St. Jean; Jeffrey Clarine; Thomas S. Coulter; Michael Croghan; Adam Davenport; James O. Davis; Chiara Ghiron; Jonathan Hutchinson; Michael G. Kelly; Fred D. Lott; Jenny Ying-Lin Lu; David Martin; Sean Morony; Steve F. Poon; Elena Portero-Larragueta; Jeff D. Reagan; Kelly Regal; Andrew Tasker; Minghan Wang; Yuhua Yang; Guomin Yao; Qingping Zeng; Charles Henley; Christopher Fotsch

The discovery of a series of novel and orally efficacious type II calcimimetics, developed from the lead compound 1, is described herein. Compound 22 suppressed plasma PTH levels relative to vehicle when dosed orally in a rat pharmacodynamic model.

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