Michael J. Grogan
Eli Lilly and Company
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Featured researches published by Michael J. Grogan.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009
Martin R. Tremblay; Andre Lescarbeau; Michael J. Grogan; Eddy Tan; Grace Ruiting Lin; Brian C. Austad; Lin-Chen Yu; Mark L. Behnke; Somarajan J. Nair; Margit Hagel; Kerry White; James Conley; Joseph D. Manna; Teresa M. Alvarez-Diez; Jennifer Hoyt; Caroline N. Woodward; Jens R. Sydor; Melissa Pink; John R. Macdougall; Matthew Campbell; Jill Cushing; Jeanne Ferguson; Michael Curtis; Karen McGovern; Margaret Read; Vito J. Palombella; Julian Adams; Alfredo C. Castro
Recent evidence suggests that blocking aberrant hedgehog pathway signaling may be a promising therapeutic strategy for the treatment of several types of cancer. Cyclopamine, a plant Veratrum alkaloid, is a natural product antagonist of the hedgehog pathway. In a previous report, a seven-membered D-ring semisynthetic analogue of cyclopamine, IPI-269609 (2), was shown to have greater acid stability and better aqueous solubility compared to cyclopamine. Further modifications of the A-ring system generated three series of analogues with improved potency and/or solubility. Lead compounds from each series were characterized in vitro and evaluated in vivo for biological activity and pharmacokinetic properties. These studies led to the discovery of IPI-926 (compound 28), a novel semisynthetic cyclopamine analogue with substantially improved pharmaceutical properties and potency and a favorable pharmacokinetic profile relative to cyclopamine and compound 2. As a result, complete tumor regression was observed in a Hh-dependent medulloblastoma allograft model after daily oral administration of 40 mg/kg of compound 28.
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2018
Zahid Q. Bonday; Guillermo S. Cortez; Michael J. Grogan; Stephen Antonysamy; Ken Weichert; Wayne P. Bocchinfuso; Fengling Li; Steven Kennedy; Binghui Li; Mary M. Mader; Cheryl H. Arrowsmith; Peter J. Brown; Mohammad S. Eram; Magdalena M. Szewczyk; Dalia Barsyte-Lovejoy; Masoud Vedadi; Ernesto Guccione; Robert M. Campbell
Protein arginine methyltransferase 5 (PRMT5) is a type II arginine methyltransferase that catalyzes the formation of symmetric dimethylarginine in a number of nuclear and cytoplasmic proteins. Although the cellular functions of PRMT5 have not been fully unraveled, it has been implicated in a number of cellular processes like RNA processing, signal transduction, and transcriptional regulation. PRMT5 is ubiquitously expressed in most tissues and its expression has been shown to be elevated in several cancers including breast cancer, gastric cancer, glioblastoma, and lymphoma. Here, we describe the identification and characterization of a novel and selective PRMT5 inhibitor with potent in vitro and in vivo activity. Compound 1 (also called LLY-283) inhibited PRMT5 enzymatic activity in vitro and in cells with IC50 of 22 ± 3 and 25 ± 1 nM, respectively, while its diastereomer, compound 2 (also called LLY-284), was much less active. Compound 1 also showed antitumor activity in mouse xenografts when dosed orally and can serve as an excellent probe molecule for understanding the biological function of PRMT5 in normal and cancer cells.
Xenobiotica | 2013
Sherri Smith; Jennifer Hoyt; Nigel Whitebread; Joseph D. Manna; Marisa Peluso; Kerrie Faia; Veronica Campbell; Martin R. Tremblay; Somarajan J. Nair; Michael J. Grogan; Alfredo C. Castro; Matthew Campbell; Jeanne Ferguson; Brendan Arsenault; Jylle Nevejans; Bennett Carter; John M. Lee; Joi Dunbar; Karen McGovern; Margaret Read; Julian Adams; Alexander Constan; Gordon Loewen; Jens R. Sydor; Vito J. Palombella; John Soglia
Abstract 1. IPI-926 is a novel semisynthetic cyclopamine derivative that is a potent and selective Smoothened inhibitor that blocks the hedgehog signal transduction pathway. 2. The in vivo clearance of IPI-926 is low in mouse and dog and moderate in monkey. The volume of distribution is high across species. Oral bioavailability ranges from moderate in monkey to high in mouse and dog. Predicted human clearance using simple allometry is low (24 L h−1), predicted volume of distribution is high (469 L) and predicted half-life is long (20 h). 3. IPI-926 is highly bound to plasma proteins and has minimal interaction with human α-1-acid glycoprotein. 4. In vitro metabolic stability ranges from stable to moderately stable. Twelve oxidative metabolites were detected in mouse, rat, dog, monkey and human liver microsome incubations and none were unique to human. 5. IPI-926 is not a potent reversible inhibitor of CYP1A2, 2C8, 2C9 or 3A4 (testosterone). IPI-926 is a moderate inhibitor of CYP2C19, 2D6 and 3A4 (midazolam) with KI values of 19, 16 and 4.5 µM, respectively. IPI-926 is both a substrate and inhibitor (IC50 = 1.9 µM) of P-glycoprotein. 6. In summary, IPI-926 has desirable pre-clinical absorption, distribution, metabolism and excretion properties.
Archive | 2010
Julian Adams; Mark L. Behnke; Alfredo C. Castro; Catherine A. Evans; Louis Grenier; Michael J. Grogan; Tao Liu; Daniel A. Snyder; Thomas T. Tibbitts
Archive | 2008
Alfredo C. Castro; Michael J. Grogan; Martin R. Tremblay
Archive | 2011
Brian C. Austad; Louis Grenier; Michael J. Grogan; Tao Liu; Ching Kam Lo; Theodore A. Martinot; Lin-Chen Yu
Archive | 2008
Alfredo C. Castro; Michael J. Grogan; Andre Lescarbeau; Martin R. Tremblay
Archive | 2012
Alfredo C. Castro; Michael J. Grogan; Karen McGovern; Martin R. Tremblay
Archive | 2010
Mark L. Behnke; Alfredo C. Castro; Lawrence K. Chan; Catherine A. Evans; Louis Grenier; Michael J. Grogan; Yves LeBlanc; Tao Liu; Stephane Peluso; Daniel A. Snyder; Thomas T. Tibbitts
Archive | 2007
Alfredo C. Castro; Michael J. Grogan; William Matsui; Karen McGovern; Martin R. Tremblay