Michael Paul Capparelli
Novartis
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Featured researches published by Michael Paul Capparelli.
FEBS Letters | 2010
Lauren G. Monovich; Richard B. Vega; Erik Meredith; Karl Miranda; Chang Rao; Michael Paul Capparelli; Douglas D. Lemon; Dillon Phan; Keith A. Koch; Joseph A. Chapo; David B. Hood; Timothy A. McKinsey
Class IIa histone deacetylases (HDACs) repress genes involved in pathological cardiac hypertrophy. The anti‐hypertrophic action of class IIa HDACs is overcome by signals that promote their phosphorylation‐dependent nuclear export. Several kinases have been shown to phosphorylate class IIa HDACs, including calcium/calmodulin‐dependent protein kinase (CaMK), protein kinase D (PKD) and G protein‐coupled receptor kinase (GRK). However, the identity of the kinase(s) responsible for phosphorylating class IIa HDACs during cardiac hypertrophy has remained controversial. We describe a novel and selective small molecule inhibitor of PKD, bipyridyl PKD inhibitor (BPKDi). BPKDi blocks signal‐dependent phosphorylation and nuclear export of class IIa HDACs in cardiomyocytes and concomitantly suppresses hypertrophy of these cells. These studies define PKD as a principal cardiac class IIa HDAC kinase.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010
Erik Meredith; Kimberly Beattie; Robin Burgis; Michael Paul Capparelli; Joseph A. Chapo; Lucian DiPietro; Gabriel G. Gamber; Istvan J. Enyedy; David B. Hood; Vinayak Hosagrahara; Charles Jewell; Keith A. Koch; Wendy Lee; Douglas D. Lemon; Timothy A. McKinsey; Karl Miranda; Nikos Pagratis; Dillon Phan; Craig F. Plato; Chang Rao; Olga Rozhitskaya; Nicolas Soldermann; Clayton Springer; Maurice J. van Eis; Richard B. Vega; Wanlin Yan; Qingming Zhu; Lauren G. Monovich
The synthesis and biological evaluation of potent and selective PKD inhibitors are described herein. The compounds described in the present study selectively inhibit PKD among other putative HDAC kinases. The PKD inhibitors of the present study blunt phosphorylation and subsequent nuclear export of HDAC4/5 in response to diverse agonists. These compounds further establish the central role of PKD as an HDAC4/5 kinase and enhance the current understanding of cardiac myocyte signal transduction. The in vivo efficacy of a representative example compound on heart morphology is reported herein.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011
Gabriel G. Gamber; Erik Meredith; Qingming Zhu; Wanlin Yan; Chang Rao; Michael Paul Capparelli; Robin Burgis; Istvan J. Enyedy; Ji-Hu Zhang; Nicolas Soldermann; Kimberley Beattie; Olga Rozhitskaya; Keith A. Koch; Nikos Pagratis; Vinayak P. Hosagrahara; Richard B. Vega; Timothy A. McKinsey; Lauren G. Monovich
The synthesis and preliminary studies of the SAR of novel 3,5-diarylazole inhibitors of Protein Kinase D (PKD) are reported. Notably, optimized compounds in this class have been found to be active in cellular assays of phosphorylation-dependant HDAC5 nuclear export, orally bioavailable, and highly selective versus a panel of additional putative histone deacetylase (HDAC) kinases. Therefore these compounds could provide attractive tools for the further study of PKD/HDAC5 signaling.
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013
Erik Meredith; Gary Michael Ksander; Lauren G. Monovich; Julien Papillon; Qian Liu; Karl Miranda; Patrick Morris; Chang Rao; Robin Burgis; Michael Paul Capparelli; Qi-Ying Hu; Alok Singh; Dean F. Rigel; Arco Y. Jeng; Michael E. Beil; Fumin Fu; Chii-Whei Hu; Daniel LaSala
Aldosterone is a key signaling component of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system and as such has been shown to contribute to cardiovascular pathology such as hypertension and heart failure. Aldosterone synthase (CYP11B2) is responsible for the final three steps of aldosterone synthesis and thus is a viable therapeutic target. A series of imidazole derived inhibitors, including clinical candidate 7n, have been identified through design and structure-activity relationship studies both in vitro and in vivo. Compound 7n was also found to be a potent inhibitor of 11β-hydroxylase (CYP11B1), which is responsible for cortisol production. Inhibition of CYP11B1 is being evaluated in the clinic for potential treatment of hypercortisol diseases such as Cushings syndrome.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014
Jiping Fu; Meiliana Tjandra; Christopher Becker; Dallas Bednarczyk; Michael Paul Capparelli; Robert A. Elling; Imad Hanna; Roger Aki Fujimoto; Markus Furegati; Subramanian Karur; Theresa Kasprzyk; Mark Knapp; Kwan Leung; Xiaolin Li; Peichao Lu; Wosenu Mergo; Charlotte Miault; Simon Ng; David Thomas Parker; Yunshan Peng; Silvio Roggo; Alexey Rivkin; Robert Lowell Simmons; Michael Wang; Brigitte Wiedmann; Andrew Weiss; Linda Xiao; Lili Xie; Wenjian Xu; Aregahegn Yifru
Nonimmunosuppressive cyclophilin inhibitors have demonstrated efficacy for the treatment of hepatitis C infection (HCV). However, alisporivir, cyclosporin A, and most other cyclosporins are potent inhibitors of OATP1B1, MRP2, MDR1, and other important drug transporters. Reduction of the side chain hydrophobicity of the P4 residue preserves cyclophilin binding and antiviral potency while decreasing transporter inhibition. Representative inhibitor 33 (NIM258) is a less potent transporter inhibitor relative to previously described cyclosporins, retains anti-HCV activity in cell culture, and has an acceptable pharmacokinetic profile in rats and dogs. An X-ray structure of 33 bound to rat cyclophilin D is reported.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2018
Takeru Ehara; Christopher Michael Adams; Doug Bevan; Nan Ji; Erik Meredith; David Belanger; James J. Powers; Mitsunori Kato; Catherine Solovay; Donglei Liu; Michael Paul Capparelli; Philippe Bolduc; Jonathan E. Grob; Matthew H. Daniels; Luciana Ferrara; Louis Yang; Byron Li; Christopher Towler; Rebecca C. Stacy; Ganesh Prasanna; Muneto Mogi
Soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC), the endogenous receptor for nitric oxide (NO), has been implicated in several diseases associated with oxidative stress. In a pathological oxidative environment, the heme group of sGC can be oxidized becoming unresponsive to NO leading to a loss in the ability to catalyze the production of cGMP. Recently a dysfunctional sGC/NO/cGMP pathway has been implicated in contributing to elevated intraocular pressure associated with glaucoma. Herein we describe the discovery of molecules specifically designed for topical ocular administration, which can activate oxidized sGC restoring the ability to catalyze the production of cGMP. These efforts culminated in the identification of compound (+)-23, which robustly lowers intraocular pressure in a cynomolgus model of elevated intraocular pressure over 24 h after a single topical ocular drop and has been selected for clinical evaluation.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 1997
Lawrence J. MacPherson; Erol K. Bayburt; Michael Paul Capparelli; Brian J. Carroll; Robert Goldstein; Michael R. Justice; Lijuan Zhu; Shou-Ih Hu; Richard Melton; Lynn Fryer; Ronald L. Goldberg; J. R. Doughty; Salvatore Spirito; V. Blancuzzi; Doug Wilson; E. M. O'Byrne; Vishwas Ganu; David Thomas Parker
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 1993
Lawrence J. MacPherson; Erol K. Bayburt; Michael Paul Capparelli; Regine Bohacek; Frank H. Clarke; Rajendra D. Ghai; Yumi Sakane; Carol Berry; Jane V. Peppard; Angelo J. Trapani
Archive | 2009
Robin Burgis; Michael Paul Capparelli; Lucian DiPietro; Gabriel G. Gamber; Jr. Charles Francis Jewell; Erik Meredith; Karl Miranda; Lauren G. Monovich; Chang Rao; Nicolas Soldermann; Taeyoung Yoon; Qingming Zhu
Archive | 2009
Michael Paul Capparelli; Gabriel G. Gamber; Erik Meredith; Lauren G. Monovich; Chang Rao; Nicolas Soldermann