Michael Robert Turner
Boehringer Ingelheim
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Publication
Featured researches published by Michael Robert Turner.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009
Jiang-Ping Wu; Roman Wolfgang Fleck; Janice R. Brickwood; Alison Capolino; Katrina Mary Catron; Zhidong Chen; Charles L. Cywin; Jonathan Emeigh; Melissa Foerst; John David Ginn; Matt Hrapchak; Eugene R. Hickey; Ming-Hong Hao; Mohammed A. Kashem; Jun Li; Weimin Liu; Tina Marie Morwick; Richard M. Nelson; Daniel R. Marshall; Leslie Martin; Peter Allen Nemoto; Ian Potocki; Michel Liuzzi; Gregory W. Peet; Erika Scouten; David Stefany; Michael Robert Turner; Steve Weldon; Clare Zimmitti; Denise Spero
An SAR study that identified a series of thienopyridine-based potent IkappaB Kinase beta (IKKbeta) inhibitors is described. With focuses on the structural optimization at C4 and C6 of structure 1 (Fig. 1), the study reveals that small alkyl and certain aromatic groups are preferred at C4, whereas polar groups with proper orientation at C6 efficiently enhance compound potency. The most potent analogues inhibit IKKbeta with IC50s as low as 40 nM, suppress LPS-induced TNF-alpha production in vitro and in vivo, display good kinase selectivity profiles, and are active in a HeLa cell NF-kappaB reporter gene assay, demonstrating that they directly interfere with the NF-kappaB signaling pathway.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010
John David Ginn; Todd Bosanac; Rhonda Chen; Charles L. Cywin; Eugene R. Hickey; Mohammed A. Kashem; Steven Kerr; Stanley Kugler; Xiang Li; Anthony S. Prokopowicz; Sabine Schlyer; James D. Smith; Michael Robert Turner; Frank Wu; Erick Richard Roush Young
Phenylglycine substituted isoquinolones 1 and 2 have previously been described as potent dual ROCK1/ROCK2 inhibitors. Here we describe the further SAR of this series to improve metabolic stability and rat oral exposure. Piperidine analog 20 which demonstrates sustained blood pressure normalization in an SHR blood pressure reduction model was identified through this effort.
Frontiers in Immunology | 2018
Helena Bassolas-Molina; Ernest L. Raymond; Mark E. Labadia; Joseph Wahle; Elena Ferrer-Picón; Mark Panzenbeck; Jie Zheng; Christian Harcken; Robert Owen Hughes; Michael Robert Turner; Dustin Smith; Elisabeth Calderón-Gómez; Miriam Esteller; Anna Carrasco; Maria Esteve; Isabella Dotti; Ana Maria Corraliza; Maria Carme Masamunt; Claudia Arajol; Jordi Guardiola; Elena Ricart; Gerald H. Nabozny; Azucena Salas
Background and Aims: Despite the negative results of blocking IL-17 in Crohns disease (CD) patients, selective modulation of Th17-dependent responses warrants further study. Inhibition of retinoic acid-related orphan receptor gamma (RORγt), the master regulator of the Th17 signature, is currently being explored in inflammatory diseases. Our aim was to determine the effect of a novel oral RORγt antagonist (BI119) in human CD and on an experimental model of intestinal inflammation. Methods: 51 CD patients and 11 healthy subjects were included. The effects of BI119 were tested on microbial-stimulated peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs), intestinal crypts and biopsies from CD patients. The ability of BI119 to prevent colitis in vivo was assessed in the CD4+CD45RBhigh T cell transfer model. Results: In bacterial antigen-stimulated PBMCs from CD patients, BI119 inhibits Th17-related genes and proteins, while upregulating Treg and preserving Th1 and Th2 signatures. Intestinal crypts cultured with supernatants from BI119-treated commensal-specific CD4+ T cells showed decreased expression of CXCL1, CXCL8 and CCL20. BI119 significantly reduced IL17 and IL26 transcription in colonic and ileal CD biopsies and did not affect IL22. BI119 has a more profound effect in ileal CD with additional significant downregulation of IL23R, CSF2, CXCL1, CXCL8, and S100A8, and upregulation of DEFA5. BI119 significantly prevented development of clinical, macroscopic and molecular markers of colitis in the T-cell transfer model. Conclusions: BI119 modulated CD-relevant Th17 signatures, including downregulation of IL23R while preserving mucosa-associated IL-22 responses, and abrogated experimental colitis. Our results provide support to the use of RORγt antagonists as a novel therapy to CD treatment.
Archive | 2003
Jill E. Wood; Donald Bierer; Brian Bear; Catherine Brennan; Brent Chandler; Gang Chen; Yuanwei Chen; Julie Dixon; Wenlang Fu; Leatte Guernon; Donglei Liu; Andrea Mcclure; Karl Miranda; Dhanapalan Nagarathnam; Robert Sibley; Michael Robert Turner; Sharad Verma; Chunguang Wang; Lin Yi; Jin Zhao; Qingming Zhu
Archive | 2013
Asitha Abeywardane; Michael J. Burke; Thomas M. Kirrane; Matthew R. Netherton; Anil K. Padyana; Lana Louise Smith Keenan; Hidenori Takahashi; Michael Robert Turner; Qiang Zhang; Qing Zhang
Archive | 2014
Asitha Abeywardane; Steven Richard Brunette; Michael J. Burke; Thomas M. Kirrane; Chuk Chui Man; Daniel Richard Marshall; Anil K. Padyana; Hossein Razavi; Robert Sibley; Keenan Lana Louise Smith; Roger J. Snow; Ronald John Sorcek; Hidenori Takahashi; Steven John Taylor; Michael Robert Turner; Erick Richard Roush Young; Qiang Zhang; Yunlong Zhang; Renee M. Zindell
Archive | 2014
Brian Nicholas Cook; John D. Huber; Robert Owen Hughes; Xiang Li; Shuang Liang; Ingo Andreas Mugge; Michael Robert Turner; Qiang Zhang
Archive | 2015
Johanna Bakonyi; Steven Richard Brunette; Delphine Collin; Robert Owen Hughes; Xiang Li; Shuang Liang; Robert Sibley; Michael Robert Turner; Lifen Wu; Qiang Zhang
Archive | 2013
Steven Richard Brunette; Asitha Abeywardane; Michael J. Burke; Suresh R. Kapadia; Thomas M. Kirrane; Matthew R. Netherton; Hossein Razavi; Sonia Rodriguez; Anjan Saha; Robert Sibley; Keenan Lana Louise Smith; Hidenori Takahashi; Michael Robert Turner; Jiang-Ping Wu; Erick Richard Roush Young; Qiang Zhang; Qing Zhang; Renee M. Zindell
Archive | 2016
Brian Nicholas Cook; John D. Huber; Robert Owen Hughes; Xiang Li; Shuang Liang; Ingo Andreas Mugge; Michael Robert Turner; Qiang Zhang