Michael Enrico Richett
Eli Lilly and Company
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Featured researches published by Michael Enrico Richett.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 1999
Minsheng Zhang; Dianna L. Bailey; Jolie Anne Bastian; Stephen L. Briggs; Nickolay Y. Chirgadze; David K. Clawson; Michael L. Denney; Donetta S. Gifford-Moore; Richard Waltz Harper; Lea M. Johnson; Valentine J. Klimkowski; Todd J. Kohn; Ho-Shen Lin; Jefferson R. McCowan; Michael Enrico Richett; Daniel Jon Sall; Amy J. Smith; Gerald F. Smith; David W. Snyder; Kumiko Takeuchi; Barbara G. Utterback; Sau-Chi B. Yan
Potent, subnanomolar thrombin inhibitors 4, 5, and 6 are developed through side chain optimization of novel, benzo[b]thiophene-based small organic entities 2 and 3 and through SAR additivity studies of the new structural elements identified. X-ray crystallographic studies of 4b-thrombin complex revealed a hydrophobic and an electrostatic interaction of these new elements with thrombin at the S2 and S3 binding sites. In vitro and in vivo pharmacological studies showed that 4, 5, and 6 are potent anticoagulants in human plasma with demonstrated antithrombotic efficacy in a rat model of thrombosis.
Steroids | 1999
Ho-Shen Lin; Ashraff A. Rampersaud; Michael Enrico Richett; Richard Waltz Harper; Lisa Selsam Beavers; Don B. McClure; Anthony J Gardner; Patrick I. Eacho; Patricia S. Foxworthy; Robert Alan Gadski
4Alpha-(2-propenyl)-5alpha-cholestan-3alpha-ol (LY295427) was previously identified from a Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cell-based low density lipoprotein receptor/luciferase (LDLR/Luc) assay to be a potent transcriptional activator of the LDL receptor promoter in the presence of 25-hydroxycholesterol. To investigate the effect of the 24,25-unsaturation in the D-ring side chain (desmosterol D-ring side chain) on antagonizing the repressing effect of 25-hydroxycholesterol, 4alpha-(2-propenyl)-5alpha-cholest-24-en-3alpha-ol (17), a 24,25-dehydro analog of LY295427, was thus synthesized from lithocholic acid via the formation of 3alpha-[[(1,1-dimethylethyl)dimethylsilyl]oxy]-4alpha- (2-propenyl)-5alpha-cholan-24-al (15). Test results showed that 17 had an EC30 value of 2.6 microM, comparable to 2.9 microM of LY295427, in the CHO cell-based LDLR/Luc assay in the presence of 25-hydroxycholesterol. Apparently, the built-in 24,25-unsaturation in the D-ring side chain of 17 had added little effect to antagonizing the repressing effect of 25-hydroxycholesterol. In the [1-14C-acetate]cholesterol biosynthesis inhibition assay, 17 at 10 microg/ml (23 microM) has been shown to inhibit the cholesterol biosynthesis in CHO cells by 38% relative to the vehicle control; whereas LY295427 showed no inhibition in the same assay in our previous studies. In contrast to LY295427, the built-in 24,25-unsaturation in the D-ring side chain of 17 has conferred an inhibitory effect on cholesterol biosynthesis in CHO cells. In summary, the observed LDL receptor promoter activity of 17 is related to its ability to prevent 25-hydroxycholesterol from exerting the repressing effect via an undetermined mechanism and, in part, to inhibit the cholesterol biosynthesis.
Steroids | 1998
Ho-Shen Lin; Ashraff A. Rampersaud; Michael Enrico Richett; Lisa Selsam Beavers; Don B. McClure; Robert Alan Gadski
Abstract 4α-(2-Propenyl)-5α-cholestan-3α-ol (LY295427) was previously identified from a CHO cell-based assay to be a potent LDL receptor up-regulator and had demonstrated to be an effective agent in lowering plasma cholesterol levels in hypercholesterolemic hamsters. In order to investigate the effect of flexibility of the 3α-hydroxy-bearing A-ring on the activity, 4α-(2-propenyl)-5,6-secocholestan-3α-ol ( 11 ), a B-ring seco analog of LY295427, is thus synthesized from cholest-4-en-3-one. Test results indicate that 11 is not active in the CHO cell-based LDL receptor/luciferase assay at concentrations up to 20 μg/mL. The result underlines the importance of maintaining the A-B-C-D ring rigidity of the 3α-sterols in terms of binding to the putative oxysterol receptor.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2004
Karen Lynn Lobb; Philip Arthur Hipskind; James A. Aikins; Enrique Alvarez; § Yiu-Yin Cheung; Eileen L. Considine; Alfonso De Dios; Gregory L. Durst; Rafael Ferritto; Cora Sue Grossman; Deborah D. Giera; Beth A. Hollister; Zhongping Huang; Philip W. Iversen; Kevin L. Law; Tiechao Li; Ho-Shen Lin; Beatriz López; Jose Eduardo Lopez; Luisa M. Martín Cabrejas; Denis J. McCann; Victoriano Molero; John Reilly; Michael Enrico Richett; Chuan Shih; Beverly A. Teicher; James H. Wikel; and Wesley T. White; Mary M. Mader
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2005
Mary M. Mader; Chuan Shih; Eileen L. Considine; Alfonso De Dios; Cora Sue Grossman; Philip Arthur Hipskind; Ho-Shen Lin; Karen Lynn Lobb; Beatriz López; Jose Eduardo Lopez; Luisa M. Martín Cabrejas; Michael Enrico Richett; Wesley White; § Yiu-Yin Cheung; Zhongping Huang; John Reilly; Sean R. Dinn
Archive | 2004
David Anthony Barda; Kenneth Henry; Jianping Huang; Sajan Joseph; Ho-Shen Lin; Michael Enrico Richett
Archive | 2002
Cora Sue Grossman; Philip Arthur Hipskind; Ho-Shen Lin; Karen Lynn Lobb; Beatriz López de Uralde Garmendia; Jose Eduardo Lopez; Mary M. Mader; Michael Enrico Richett; Chuan Shih; Alfonso De Dios
Archive | 2001
Douglas Wade Beight; Michael Dean Kinnick; Ho-Shen Lin; John Michael Morin; Michael Enrico Richett; Daniel Jon Sall; Jason Scott Sawyer; Edward C. R. Smith
Archive | 2004
Patrick I. Eacho; Patricia Sue Foxworthy-Mason; Ho-Shen Lin; Jose Eduardo Lopez; Marian Mosior; Michael Enrico Richett
Archive | 2004
Patrick I. Eacho; Patricia Sue Foxworthy-Mason; Ho-Shen Lin; Jose Eduardo Lopez; Marian Mosior; Michael Enrico Richett