Michael John Bohanon
Upjohn
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Featured researches published by Michael John Bohanon.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009
Allen J. Duplantier; Stacey L. Becker; Michael John Bohanon; Kris A. Borzilleri; Boris A. Chrunyk; James T. Downs; Lain-Yen Hu; Ayman El-Kattan; Larry C. James; Shenping Liu; Jiemin Lu; Noha Maklad; Mahmoud N. Mansour; Scot Mente; Mary Piotrowski; Subas M. Sakya; Susan Sheehan; Stefanus J. Steyn; Christine A. Strick; Victoria A. Williams; Lei Zhang
3-Hydroxyquinolin-2(1H)-one (2) was discovered by high throughput screening in a functional assay to be a potent inhibitor of human DAAO, and its binding affinity was confirmed in a Biacore assay. Cocrystallization of 2 with the human DAAO enzyme defined the binding site and guided the design of new analogues. The SAR, pharmacokinetics, brain exposure, and effects on cerebellum D-serine are described. Subsequent evaluation against the rat DAAO enzyme revealed a divergent SAR versus the human enzyme and may explain the high exposures of drug necessary to achieve significant changes in rat or mouse cerebellum D-serine.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2001
Atli Thorarensen; Alice L. Presley-Bodnar; Keith R. Marotti; Timothy P. Boyle; Charlotte L. Heckaman; Michael John Bohanon; Paul K. Tomich; Gary E. Zurenko; Michael T. Sweeney; Betty H. Yagi
Important resistance patterns in Gram-negative pathogens include active efflux of antibiotics out of the cell via a cellular pump and decreased membrane permeability. A 3-arylpiperidine derivative (1) has been identified by high-throughput assay as a potentiator with an IC(50) approximately 90 microM. This report details the evaluation of the tether length, aryl substitution and the importance of the fluorine on antibiotic accumulation. Evaluation of various tether lengths demonstrated that the two-carbon tethered analogues are optimal. Removal of the fluorine has a modest effect on antibiotic accumulation and the defluorinated analogue 17 is equally potent to the original lead 1.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2001
Atli Thorarensen; Martin R. Douglas; Douglas C. Rohrer; Anne F. Vosters; Anthony W. Yem; Vincent D. Marshall; Janet C. Lynn; Michael John Bohanon; Paul K. Tomich; Gary E. Zurenko; Michael T. Sweeney; Randy M. Jensen; James W. Nielsen; Eric P. Seest; Lester A. Dolak
Peptidyl deformylase (PDF) is a metallo protease that catalyzes the removal of a formyl group from the N-termini of prokaryotic prepared polypeptides, an essential step in bacterial protein synthesis. Screening of our compound collection using Staphylococcus aureus PDF afforded a very potent inhibitor with an IC(50) in the low nanomolar range. Unfortunately, the compound that contains a hydroxamic acid did not exhibit antibacterial activity (MIC). In order to address the lack of activity in the MIC assay and to determine what portion of the molecule was responsible for binding to PDF, we prepared several analogues. This paper describes our findings that the hydroxamic acid functionality found in 1 is mainly responsible for the high affinity to PDF. In addition, we identified an alternative class of PDF inhibitors, the N-hydroxy urea 18, which has both PDF and antibacterial activity.
Pharmaceutical Research | 1993
Karen F. Wilkinson; Bob D. Rush; Satish K. Sharma; David B. Evans; Mary J. Ruwart; Janice M. Friis; Michael John Bohanon; Paul K. Tomich
We showed previously that a commercially available synthetic tetradecapeptide, Asp-Arg-Val-Tyr-Ile-His-Pro-Phe-His-Leu-Leu-Val-Tyr-Ser, produces authentic angiotensin I (Ang I) upon incubation with the HIV-1 protease (S. K. Sharma et al., Anal. Biochem. 198:363, 1991). Therefore, we developed an Ang-I based activity assay for HIV protease inhibitors based on the technology developed earlier (M. J. Ruwart et al., Pharm. Res. 7:407, 1990; S. K. Sharma et al., Anal. Biochem. 186:24, 1990) for tracking renin inhibitors in rat sera. Ditekiren was either extracted from sera with ethyl acetate or assayed after the interfering substances in sera were precipitated with acetonitrile. Purified recombinant HIV-1 protease was added to extracted rat serum and the enzymatic reaction was initiated in the presence of the tetradecapeptide substrate. The inhibition of Ang I production was measured by a commercially available RIA kit. The cleanup methodology also enabled a commercially available Proteinase Scintillation Proximity Assay (SPA, Amersham) to quantify ditekiren in rat serum through the addition of recombinant HIV-1 protease and cleavage of substrate from SPA beads. Results were confirmed by HPLC or by the renin assay for ditekiren, which inhibits both aspartyl proteases. These technologies should prove useful for assessing serum levels of HIV protease inhibitors in rat.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2001
Atli Thorarensen; Martin R. Deibel; Douglas C. Rohrer; Anne F. Vosters; Anthony W. Yem; Vincent D. Marshall; Janet C. Lynn; Michael John Bohanon; Paul K. Tomich; Gary E. Zurenko; Michael T. Sweeney; Randy M. Jensen; James W. Nielsen; Eric P. Seest; Lester A. Dolak
Medicinal Chemistry 7254-209-615, Pharmacia, Kalamazoo, MI 49001-0199, USA Protein Science, Pharmacia, Kalamazoo, MI 49001-0199, USA Computer Aided Drug Discovery Research, Pharmacia, Kalamazoo, MI 49001-0199, USA Discovery Technologies, Pharmacia, Kalamazoo, MI 49001-0199, USA Biology I, Pharmacia, Kalamazoo, MI 49001-0199, USA Structural, Analytical & Medicinal Chemistry Research, Pharmacia, Kalamazoo, MI 49001-0199, USA
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017
Antonia F. Stepan; Michelle Marie Claffey; Matthew R. Reese; Gayatri Balan; Gabriela Barreiro; Jason Barricklow; Michael John Bohanon; Brian P. Boscoe; Gregg D. Cappon; Lois K. Chenard; Julie Cianfrogna; Laigao Chen; Karen J. Coffman; Susan E. Drozda; Joshua R. Dunetz; Somraj Ghosh; Xinjun Hou; Christopher Houle; Kapil Karki; John T. Lazzaro; Jessica Y. Mancuso; John M. Marcek; Emily L. Miller; Mark A. Moen; Steven V. O’Neil; Isao Sakurada; Marc B. Skaddan; Vinod D. Parikh; Deborah L. Smith; Patrick Trapa
We previously observed a cutaneous type IV immune response in nonhuman primates (NHP) with the mGlu5 negative allosteric modulator (NAM) 7. To determine if this adverse event was chemotype- or mechanism-based, we evaluated a distinct series of mGlu5 NAMs. Increasing the sp3 character of high-throughput screening hit 40 afforded a novel morpholinopyrimidone mGlu5 NAM series. Its prototype, (R)-6-neopentyl-2-(pyridin-2-ylmethoxy)-6,7-dihydropyrimido[2,1-c][1,4]oxazin-4(9H)-one (PF-06462894, 8), possessed favorable properties and a predicted low clinical dose (2 mg twice daily). Compound 8 did not show any evidence of immune activation in a mouse drug allergy model. Additionally, plasma samples from toxicology studies confirmed that 8 did not form any reactive metabolites. However, 8 caused the identical microscopic skin lesions in NHPs found with 7, albeit with lower severity. Holistically, this work supports the hypothesis that this unique toxicity may be mechanism-based although additional work is required to confirm this and determine clinical relevance.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 1998
Steve R. Turner; Joseph Walter Strohbach; Ruben Tommasi; Paul A. Aristoff; Paul D. Johnson; Harvey I. Skulnick; Lester A. Dolak; Eric P. Seest; Paul K. Tomich; Michael John Bohanon; Miao-Miao Horng; Janet C. Lynn; Chong Kt; Roger R. Hinshaw; Keith D. Watenpaugh; Musiri N. Janakiraman; Suvit Thaisrivongs
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 1994
Suvit Thaisrivongs; Paul K. Tomich; Keith D. Watenpaugh; Chong Kt; Howe Wj; Yang Cp; Joseph Walter Strohbach; Turner; McGrath Jp; Michael John Bohanon
Archive | 1999
Michael John Bohanon
Archive | 1994
Paul K. Tomich; Michael John Bohanon; Steven Ronald Turner; Joseph Walter Strohbach; Suvit Thaisrivongs; Richard C. Thomas; Karen Rene Romines; Chih-Ping Yang; Paul A. Aristoff; Harvey I. Skulnick; Paul D. Johnson; Ronald B. Gammill; Qingwei Zhang; Gordon L. Bundy; David John Anderson; Lee S Banitt