Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Michael Herr is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Michael Herr.


Organic Letters | 2014

Synthesis of sulfones from organozinc reagents, DABSO, and alkyl halides.

Benjamin N. Rocke; Kevin B. Bahnck; Michael Herr; Sophie Y. Lavergne; Vincent Mascitti; Christian Perreault; Jana Polivkova; Andrei Shavnya

Organozinc reagents react with the SO2 surrogate DABSO, and the resulting zinc sulfinate salts are alkylated in situ to afford sulfones. This transformation has a broad scope and is compatible with a wide range of structural motifs of medicinal chemistry relevance including nitrile, secondary carbamates, and nitrogen-containing heterocycles.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

The discovery of novel calcium sensing receptor negative allosteric modulators.

Gayatri Balan; Jonathan N. Bauman; Shoml Bhattacharya; Castrodad M; David R. Healy; Michael Herr; Peter Humphries; Jennings S; Amit S. Kalgutkar; Brendon Kapinos; Khot; Lazarra K; Madeleine H. Li; Y Li; Constantin Neagu; Robert M. Oliver; David W. Piotrowski; David A. Price; Hong Qi; Simmons Ha; James A. Southers; Liuqing Wei; Yingxin Zhang; Vishwas M. Paralkar

The design and profile of a series of zwitterionic calcium sensing receptor negative allosteric modulators is described. Evaluation of key analogues using a rat model demonstrate a robust response, significantly improved potency over ronacaleret and have the potential as an oral, anabolic treatment for osteoporosis.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

Identification of Tetrahydropyrido[4,3-d]pyrimidine Amides as a New Class of Orally Bioavailable TGR5 Agonists

David W. Piotrowski; Kentaro Futatsugi; Joseph Scott Warmus; Suvi T. M. Orr; Kevin Daniel Freeman-Cook; Allyn T. Londregan; Liuqing Wei; Sandra M. Jennings; Michael Herr; Steven B. Coffey; Wenhua Jiao; Gregory Storer; David Hepworth; Jian Wang; Sophie Y. Lavergne; Janice E. Chin; John R. Hadcock; Martin B. Brenner; Angela Wolford; Ann M. Janssen; Nicole S. Roush; Joanne Buxton; Terri Hinchey; Amit S. Kalgutkar; Raman Sharma; Declan Flynn

Takeda G-protein-coupled receptor 5 (TGR5) represents an exciting biological target for the potential treatment of diabetes and metabolic syndrome. A new class of high-throughput screening (HTS)-derived tetrahydropyrido[4,3-d]pyrimidine amide TGR5 agonists is disclosed. We describe our effort to identify an orally available agonist suitable for assessment of systemic TGR5 agonism. This effort resulted in identification of 16, which had acceptable potency and pharmacokinetic properties to allow for in vivo assessment in dog. A key aspect of this work was the calibration of human and dog in vitro assay systems that could be linked with data from a human ex vivo peripheral blood monocyte assay that expresses receptor at endogenous levels. Potency from the human in vitro assay was also found to correlate with data from an ex vivo human whole blood assay. This calibration exercise provided confidence that 16 could be used to drive plasma exposures sufficient to test the effects of systemic activation of TGR5.


MedChemComm | 2013

Optimization of triazole-based TGR5 agonists towards orally available agents

Kentaro Futatsugi; Kevin B. Bahnck; Martin B. Brenner; Joanne Buxton; Janice E. Chin; Steven B. Coffey; Jeffrey S. Dubins; Declan Flynn; Denise Gautreau; Angel Guzman-Perez; John R. Hadcock; David Hepworth; Michael Herr; Terri Hinchey; Ann M. Janssen; Sandra M. Jennings; Wenhua Jiao; Sophie Y. Lavergne; Bryan Li; Mei Li; Michael John Munchhof; Suvi T. M. Orr; David W. Piotrowski; Nicole S. Roush; Matthew F. Sammons; Benjamin D. Stevens; Gregory Storer; Jian Wang; Joseph Scott Warmus; Liuqing Wei

Reported herein is a medicinal chemistry effort towards the identification of orally available TGR5 agonist 12, which served as a dog tool compound for studies to increase confidence in this mechanism. With the challenge of striking the balance of TGR5 potency and desired clearance profile, the screening strategy as well as medicinal chemistry strategy are discussed in this article.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Discovery and characterization of novel inhibitors of the sodium-coupled citrate transporter (NaCT or SLC13A5)

Kim Huard; Janice A. Brown; Jessica E. C. Jones; Shawn Cabral; Kentaro Futatsugi; Matthew Gorgoglione; Adhiraj Lanba; Nicholas B. Vera; Yimin Zhu; Qingyun Yan; Yingjiang Zhou; Cecile Vernochet; Keith Riccardi; Angela Wolford; David Pirman; Mark Niosi; Gary E. Aspnes; Michael Herr; Nathan E. Genung; Thomas V. Magee; Daniel P. Uccello; Paula M. Loria; Li Di; James R. Gosset; David Hepworth; Timothy P. Rolph; Jeffrey A. Pfefferkorn; Derek M. Erion

Citrate is a key regulatory metabolic intermediate as it facilitates the integration of the glycolysis and lipid synthesis pathways. Inhibition of hepatic extracellular citrate uptake, by blocking the sodium-coupled citrate transporter (NaCT or SLC13A5), has been suggested as a potential therapeutic approach to treat metabolic disorders. NaCT transports citrate from the blood into the cell coupled to the transport of sodium ions. The studies herein report the identification and characterization of a novel small dicarboxylate molecule (compound 2) capable of selectively and potently inhibiting citrate transport through NaCT, both in vitro and in vivo. Binding and transport experiments indicate that 2 specifically binds NaCT in a competitive and stereosensitive manner, and is recognized as a substrate for transport by NaCT. The favorable pharmacokinetic properties of 2 permitted in vivo experiments to evaluate the effect of inhibiting hepatic citrate uptake on metabolic endpoints.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015

Discovery and Optimization of Imidazopyridine-Based Inhibitors of Diacylglycerol Acyltransferase 2 (DGAT2)

Kentaro Futatsugi; Daniel W. Kung; Suvi T. M. Orr; Shawn Cabral; David Hepworth; Gary E. Aspnes; Scott Bader; Jianwei Bian; Markus Boehm; Philip A. Carpino; Steven B. Coffey; Matthew S. Dowling; Michael Herr; Wenhua Jiao; Sophie Y. Lavergne; Qifang Li; Ronald W. Clark; Derek M. Erion; Kou Kou; Kyuha Lee; Brandon Pabst; Sylvie Perez; Julie Purkal; Csilla C. Jorgensen; Theunis C. Goosen; James R. Gosset; Mark Niosi; John C. Pettersen; Jeffrey A. Pfefferkorn; Kay Ahn

The medicinal chemistry and preclinical biology of imidazopyridine-based inhibitors of diacylglycerol acyltransferase 2 (DGAT2) is described. A screening hit 1 with low lipophilic efficiency (LipE) was optimized through two key structural modifications: (1) identification of the pyrrolidine amide group for a significant LipE improvement, and (2) insertion of a sp(3)-hybridized carbon center in the core of the molecule for simultaneous improvement of N-glucuronidation metabolic liability and off-target pharmacology. The preclinical candidate 9 (PF-06424439) demonstrated excellent ADMET properties and decreased circulating and hepatic lipids when orally administered to dyslipidemic rodent models.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Metabolism-guided design of short-acting calcium-sensing receptor antagonists.

James A. Southers; Jonathan N. Bauman; David A. Price; Paul S. Humphries; Gayatri Balan; John F. Sagal; Tristan S. Maurer; Yan Zhang; Robert M. Oliver; Michael Herr; David R. Healy; Mei Li; Brendon Kapinos; Gwendolyn Fate; Keith Riccardi; Vishwas M. Paralkar; Thomas A. Brown; Amit S. Kalgutkar

As part of a strategy to deliver short-acting calcium-sensing receptor (CaSR) antagonists, the metabolically labile thiomethyl functionality was incorporated into the zwitterionic amino alcohol derivative 3 with the hope of increasing human clearance through oxidative metabolism, while delivering a pharmacologically inactive sulfoxide metabolite. The effort led to the identification of thioanisoles 22 and 23 as potent and orally active CaSR antagonists with a rapid onset of action and short pharmacokinetic half-lives, which led to a rapid and transient stimulation of parathyroid hormone in a dose-dependent fashion following oral administration to rats. On the basis of the balance between target pharmacology, safety, and human disposition profiles, 22 and 23 were advanced as clinical candidates for the treatment of osteoporosis.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2014

Design and synthesis of 4-heteroaryl 1,2,3,4-tetrahydroisoquinolines as triple reuptake inhibitors.

Shuang Liu; Congxiang Zha; Kassoum Nacro; Min Hu; Wenge Cui; Yuh-Lin Yang; Ulhas Bhatt; Aruna Sambandam; Matthew Isherwood; Larry Yet; Michael Herr; Sarah M. Ebeltoft; Carla Hassler; Linda Fleming; Anthony D. Pechulis; Anne Payen-Fornicola; Nicholas Holman; Dennis Milanowski; Ian C. Cotterill; Vadim V. Mozhaev; Yuri L. Khmelnitsky; Peter R. Guzzo; Bruce J. Sargent; Bruce F. Molino; Richard E. Olson; Dalton King; Snjezana Lelas; Yu-Wen Li; Kim A. Johnson; Thaddeus F. Molski

A series of 4-bicyclic heteroaryl 1,2,3,4-tetrahydroisoquinoline inhibitors of the serotonin transporter (SERT), norepinephrine transporter (NET), and dopamine transporter (DAT) was discovered. The synthesis and structure-activity relationship (SAR) of these triple reuptake inhibitors (TRIs) will be discussed. Compound 10i (AMR-2), a very potent inhibitor of SERT, NET, and DAT, showed efficacy in the rat forced-swim and mouse tail suspension models with minimum effective doses of 0.3 and 1 mg/kg (po), respectively. At efficacious doses in these assays, 10i exhibited substantial occupancy levels at the three transporters in both rat and mouse brain. The study of the metabolism of 10i revealed the formation of a significant active metabolite, compound 13.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016

Optimization of a Dicarboxylic Series for in Vivo Inhibition of Citrate Transport by the Solute Carrier 13 (SLC13) Family

Kim Huard; James R. Gosset; Justin Ian Montgomery; Adam M. Gilbert; Matthew Merrill Hayward; Thomas V. Magee; Shawn Cabral; Daniel P. Uccello; Kevin B. Bahnck; Janice A. Brown; Julie Purkal; Matthew Gorgoglione; Adhiraj Lanba; Kentaro Futatsugi; Michael Herr; Nathan E. Genung; Gary E. Aspnes; Jana Polivkova; Carmen N. Garcia-Irizarry; Qifang Li; Daniel Canterbury; Mark Niosi; Nicholas B. Vera; Zhenhong Li; Bhagyashree Khunte; Jaclyn Siderewicz; Timothy P. Rolph; Derek M. Erion

Inhibition of the sodium-coupled citrate transporter (NaCT or SLC13A5) has been proposed as a new therapeutic approach for prevention and treatment of metabolic diseases. In a previous report, we discovered dicarboxylate 1a (PF-06649298) which inhibits the transport of citrate in in vitro and in vivo settings via a specific interaction with NaCT. Herein, we report the optimization of this series leading to 4a (PF-06761281), a more potent inhibitor with suitable in vivo pharmacokinetic profile for assessment of in vivo pharmacodynamics. Compound 4a was used to demonstrate dose-dependent inhibition of radioactive [(14)C]citrate uptake in liver and kidney in vivo, resulting in modest reductions in plasma glucose concentrations.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015

Discovery of Selective Small Molecule Inhibitors of Monoacylglycerol Acyltransferase 3.

Kim Huard; Allyn T. Londregan; Gregory Tesz; Kevin B. Bahnck; Thomas V. Magee; David Hepworth; Jana Polivkova; Steven B. Coffey; Brandon Pabst; James R. Gosset; Anu Nigam; Kou Kou; Hao Sun; Kyuha Lee; Michael Herr; Markus Boehm; Philip A. Carpino; Bryan Goodwin; Christian Perreault; Qifang Li; Csilla C. Jorgensen; George T. Tkalcevic; Timothy A. Subashi; Kay Ahn

Inhibition of triacylglycerol (TAG) biosynthetic enzymes has been suggested as a promising strategy to treat insulin resistance, diabetes, dyslipidemia, and hepatic steatosis. Monoacylglycerol acyltransferase 3 (MGAT3) is an integral membrane enzyme that catalyzes the acylation of both monoacylglycerol (MAG) and diacylglycerol (DAG) to generate DAG and TAG, respectively. Herein, we report the discovery and characterization of the first selective small molecule inhibitors of MGAT3. Isoindoline-5-sulfonamide (6f, PF-06471553) selectively inhibits MGAT3 with high in vitro potency and cell efficacy. Because the gene encoding MGAT3 (MOGAT3) is found only in higher mammals and humans, but not in rodents, a transgenic mouse model expressing the complete human MOGAT3 was used to characterize the effects of 6f in vivo. In the presence of a combination of diacylglycerol acyltransferases 1 and 2 (DGAT1 and DGAT2) inhibitors, an oral administration of 6f exhibited inhibition of the incorporation of deuterium-labeled glycerol into TAG in this mouse model. The availability of a potent and selective chemical tool and a humanized mouse model described in this report should facilitate further dissection of the physiological function of MGAT3 and its role in lipid homeostasis.

Collaboration


Dive into the Michael Herr's collaboration.

Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge