Michele Pachanski
Merck & Co.
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Featured researches published by Michele Pachanski.
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2017
Jason M. Cox; Hong D. Chu; Mariappan V. Chelliah; John S. Debenham; Keith Eagen; Ping Lan; Matthew Lombardo; Clare London; Michael A. Plotkin; Unmesh G. Shah; Zhongxiang Sun; Henry M. Vaccaro; Srikanth Venkatraman; Takao Suzuki; Nengxue Wang; Eric R. Ashley; Alejandro Crespo; Maria Madeira; Dennis Leung; Candice Alleyne; Aimie M. Ogawa; Sarah Souza; Brande Thomas-Fowlkes; Jerry Di Salvo; Adam B. Weinglass; Melissa Kirkland; Michele Pachanski; Mary Ann Powles; Effie Tozzo; Taro E. Akiyama
Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is an ever increasing worldwide epidemic, and the identification of safe and effective insulin sensitizers, absent of weight gain, has been a long-standing goal of diabetes research. G-protein coupled receptor 120 (GPR120) has recently emerged as a potential therapeutic target for treating T2DM. Natural occurring, and more recently, synthetic agonists have been associated with insulin sensitizing, anti-inflammatory, and fat metabolism effects. Herein we describe the design, synthesis, and evaluation of a novel spirocyclic GPR120 agonist series, which culminated in the discovery of potent and selective agonist 14. Furthermore, compound 14 was evaluated in vivo and demonstrated acute glucose lowering in an oral glucose tolerance test (oGTT), as well as improvements in homeostatic measurement assessment of insulin resistance (HOMA-IR; a surrogate marker for insulin sensitization) and an increase in glucose infusion rate (GIR) during a hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp in diet-induced obese (DIO) mice.
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015
Shrenik K. Shah; Shuwen He; Liangqin Guo; Quang Truong; Hongbo Qi; Wu Du; Zhong Lai; Jian Liu; Tianying Jian; Qingmei Hong; Peter H. Dobbelaar; Zhixiong Ye; Edward C. Sherer; Zhe Feng; Yang Yu; Frederick Wong; Koppara Samuel; Maria Madiera; Bindhu V. Karanam; Vijay Bhasker G. Reddy; Stan Mitelman; Sharon Tong; Gary G. Chicchi; Kwei-Lan Tsao; Dorina Trusca; Yue Feng; Margaret Wu; Qing Shao; Maria E. Trujillo; George J. Eiermann
The imidazolyl-tetrahydro-β-carboline class of sstr3 antagonists have demonstrated efficacy in a murine model of glucose excursion and may have potential as a treatment for type 2 diabetes. The first candidate in this class caused unacceptable QTc interval prolongation in oral, telemetrized cardiovascular (CV) dogs. Herein, we describe our efforts to identify an acceptable candidate without CV effects. These efforts resulted in the identification of (1R,3R)-3-(4-(5-fluoropyridin-2-yl)-1H-imidazol-2-yl)-1-(1-ethyl-pyrazol-4-yl)-1-(3-methyl-1,3,4-oxadiazol-3H-2-one-5-yl)-2,3,4,9-tetrahydro-1H-β-carboline (17e, MK-1421).
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2017
Gregory L. Adams; Francisco Velazquez; Charles Lee Jayne; Unmesh G. Shah; Shouwu Miao; Eric R. Ashley; Maria Madeira; Taro E. Akiyama; Jerry Di Salvo; Takao Suzuki; Nengxue Wang; Quang Truong; Eric J. Gilbert; Dan Zhou; Andreas Verras; Melissa Kirkland; Michele Pachanski; Maryann Powles; Wu Yin; Feroze Ujjainwalla; Srikanth Venkatraman; Scott D. Edmondson
GPR120 (FFAR4) is a fatty acid sensing G protein coupled receptor (GPCR) that has been identified as a target for possible treatment of type 2 diabetes. A selective activator of GPR120 containing a chromane scaffold has been designed, synthesized, and evaluated in vivo. Results of these efforts suggest that chromane propionic acid 18 is a suitable tool molecule for further animal studies. Compound 18 is selective over the closely related target GPR40 (FFAR1), has a clean off-target profile, demonstrates suitable pharmacokinetic properties, and has been evaluated in wild-type/knockout GPR120 mouse oGTT studies.
American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2017
Judith N. Gorski; Michele Pachanski; Joel Mane; Christopher W. Plummer; Sarah Souza; Brande Thomas-Fowlkes; Aimie M. Ogawa; Adam Weinglass; Jerry Di Salvo; Boonlert Cheewatrakoolpong; Andrew D. Howard; Steven L. Colletti; Maria E. Trujillo
G protein-coupled receptor 40 (GPR40) partial agonists lower glucose through the potentiation of glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, which is believed to provide significant glucose lowering without the weight gain or hypoglycemic risk associated with exogenous insulin or glucose-independent insulin secretagogues. The class of small-molecule GPR40 modulators, known as AgoPAMs (agonist also capable of acting as positive allosteric modulators), differentiate from partial agonists, binding to a distinct site and functioning as full agonists to stimulate the secretion of both insulin and glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1). Here we show that GPR40 AgoPAMs significantly increase active GLP-1 levels and reduce acute and chronic food intake and body weight in diet-induced obese (DIO) mice. These effects of AgoPAM treatment on food intake are novel and required both GPR40 and GLP-1 receptor signaling pathways, as demonstrated in GPR40 and GLP-1 receptor-null mice. Furthermore, weight loss associated with GPR40 AgoPAMs was accompanied by a significant reduction in gastric motility in these DIO mice. Chronic treatment with a GPR40 AgoPAM, in combination with a dipeptidyl peptidase IV inhibitor, synergistically decreased food intake and body weight in the mouse. The effect of GPR40 AgoPAMs on GLP-1 secretion was recapitulated in lean, healthy rhesus macaque demonstrating that the putative mechanism mediating weight loss translates to higher species. Together, our data indicate effects of AgoPAMs that go beyond glucose lowering previously observed with GPR40 partial agonist treatment with additional potential for weight loss.
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2017
Christopher W. Plummer; Matthew J. Clements; Helen Chen; Murali Rajagopalan; Hubert Josien; William K. Hagmann; Michael D. Miller; Maria E. Trujillo; Melissa Kirkland; Daniel T. Kosinski; Joel Mane; Michele Pachanski; Boonlert Cheewatrakoolpong; Andrew Nolting; Robert K. Orr; Melodie Christensen; Louis-Charles Campeau; Michael Wright; Randal M. Bugianesi; Sarah Souza; Xiaoping Zhang; Jerry Di Salvo; Adam B. Weinglass; Richard Tschirret-Guth; Ravi P. Nargund; Andrew D. Howard; Steven L. Colletti
GPR40 is a G-protein-coupled receptor expressed primarily in pancreatic islets and intestinal L-cells that has been a target of significant recent therapeutic interest for type II diabetes. Activation of GPR40 by partial agonists elicits insulin secretion only in the presence of elevated blood glucose levels, minimizing the risk of hypoglycemia. GPR40 agoPAMs have shown superior efficacy to partial agonists as assessed in a glucose tolerability test (GTT). Herein, we report the discovery and optimization of a series of potent, selective GPR40 agoPAMs. Compound 24 demonstrated sustained glucose lowering in a chronic study of Goto Kakizaki rats, showing no signs of tachyphylaxis for this mechanism.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2017
Jiayi Xu; Songnian Lin; Robert W. Myers; George H. Addona; Joel P. Berger; Brian Campbell; Hsuan-shen Chen; Zhesheng Chen; George J. Eiermann; Nadine Elowe; Brian T. Farrer; Wen Feng; Qinghong Fu; Roman Kats-Kagan; Michael Kavana; Sunita Malkani; Daniel R. McMasters; Kaushik Mitra; Michele Pachanski; Xinchun Tong; Maria E. Trujillo; Libo Xu; Bei Zhang; Fengqi Zhang; Rui Zhang; Emma R. Parmee
Glucokinase (GK, hexokinase IV) is a unique hexokinase that plays a central role in mammalian glucose homeostasis. Glucose phosphorylation by GK in the pancreatic β-cell is the rate-limiting step that controls glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. Similarly, GK-mediated glucose phosphorylation in hepatocytes plays a major role in increasing hepatic glucose uptake and metabolism and possibly lowering hepatic glucose output. Small molecule GK activators (GKAs) have been identified that increase enzyme activity by binding to an allosteric site. GKAs offer a novel approach for the treatment of Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (T2DM) and as such have garnered much attention. We now report the design, synthesis, and biological evaluation of a novel series of 2,5,6-trisubstituted indole derivatives that act as highly potent GKAs. Among them, Compound 1 was found to possess high in vitro potency, excellent physicochemical properties, and good pharmacokinetic profile in rodents. Oral administration of Compound 1 at doses as low as 0.03mg/kg led to robust blood glucose lowering efficacy in 3week high fat diet-fed mice.
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2014
Derun Li; Zhicai Wu; Yang Yu; Richard G. Ball; Liangqin Guo; Edward C. Sherer; Shuwen He; Qingmei Hong; Zhong Lai; Hongbo Qi; Quang Truong; David X. Yang; Gary G. Chicchi; Kwei-Lan Tsao; Dorina Trusca; Maria E. Trujillo; Michele Pachanski; George J. Eiermann; Andrew D. Howard; Yun-Ping Zhou; Bei B. Zhang; Ravi P. Nargund; William K. Hagmann
A novel class of small-molecule, highly potent, and subtype-selective somatostatin SST3 agonists was discovered through modification of a SST3 antagonist. As an example, (1R,2S)-9 demonstrated not only potent in vitro SST3 agonist activity but also in vivo SST3 agonist activity in a mouse oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT). These agonists may be useful reagents for studying the physiological roles of the SST3 receptor and may potentially be useful as therapeutic agents.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2017
Jiayi Xu; Songnian Lin; Robert W. Myers; Maria E. Trujillo; Michele Pachanski; Sunita Malkani; Hsuan-shen Chen; Zhesheng Chen; Brian Campbell; George J. Eiermann; Nadine Elowe; Brian T. Farrer; Wen Feng; Qinghong Fu; Roman Kats-Kagan; Michael Kavana; Daniel R. McMasters; Kaushik Mitra; Xinchun Tong; Libo Xu; Fengqi Zhang; Rui Zhang; George H. Addona; Joel P. Berger; Bei Zhang; Emma R. Parmee
Systemically acting glucokinase activators (GKA) have been demonstrated in clinical trials to effectively lower blood glucose in patients with type II diabetes. However, mechanism-based hypoglycemia is a major adverse effect that limits the therapeutic potential of these agents. We hypothesized that the predominant mechanism leading to hypoglycemia is GKA-induced excessive insulin secretion from pancreatic β-cells at (sub-)euglycemic levels. We further hypothesized that restricting GK activation to hepatocytes would maintain glucose-lowering efficacy while significantly reducing hypoglycemic risk. Here we report the discovery of a novel series of carboxylic acid substituted GKAs based on pyridine-2-carboxamide. These GKAs exhibit preferential distribution to the liver versus the pancreas in mice. SAR studies led to the identification of a potent and orally active hepatoselective GKA, compound 6. GKA 6 demonstrated robust glucose lowering efficacy in high fat diet-fed mice at doses ⩾10mpk, with ⩾70-fold liver:pancreas distribution, minimal effects on plasma insulin levels, and significantly reduced risk of hypoglycemia.
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2018
Helen Chen; Christopher W. Plummer; Dong Xiao; Harry R. Chobanian; Duane E. Demong; Michael D. Miller; Maria E. Trujillo; Melissa Kirkland; Daniel T. Kosinski; Joel Mane; Michele Pachanski; Boonlert Cheewatrakoolpong; Jerry Di Salvo; Brande Thomas-Fowlkes; Sarah Souza; Daniel Tatosian; Qing Chen; Michael J. Hafey; Robert Houle; Andrew Nolting; Robert K. Orr; Juliann Ehrhart; Adam B. Weinglass; Richard Tschirret-Guth; Andrew D. Howard; Steven L. Colletti
A series of biaryl chromans exhibiting potent and selective agonism for the GPR40 receptor with positive allosteric modulation of endogenous ligands (AgoPAM) were discovered as potential therapeutics for the treatment of type II diabetes. Optimization of physicochemical properties through modification of the pendant aryl rings resulted in the identification of compound AP5, which possesses an improved metabolic profile while demonstrating sustained glucose lowering.
PLOS ONE | 2017
Michele Pachanski; Melissa Kirkland; Daniel T. Kosinski; Joel Mane; Boonlert Cheewatrakoolpong; Jiyan Xue; Daphne Szeto; Gail Forrest; Corin Miller; Michelle Bunzel; Christopher W. Plummer; Harry R. Chobanian; Michael W. Miller; Sarah Souza; Brande Thomas-Fowlkes; Aimie M. Ogawa; Adam B. Weinglass; Jerry Di Salvo; Xiaoyan Li; Yue Feng; Daniel Tatosian; Andrew D. Howard; Steven L. Colletti; Maria E. Trujillo
GPR40 agonists are effective antidiabetic agents believed to lower glucose through direct effects on the beta cell to increase glucose stimulated insulin secretion. However, not all GPR40 agonists are the same. Partial agonists lower glucose through direct effects on the pancreas, whereas GPR40 AgoPAMs may incorporate additional therapeutic effects through increases in insulinotrophic incretins secreted by the gut. Here we describe how GPR40 AgoPAMs stimulate both insulin and incretin secretion in vivo over time in diabetic GK rats. We also describe effects of AgoPAMs in vivo to lower glucose and body weight beyond what is seen with partial GPR40 agonists in both the acute and chronic setting. Further comparisons of the glucose lowering profile of AgoPAMs suggest these compounds may possess greater glucose control even in the presence of elevated glucagon secretion, an unexpected feature observed with both acute and chronic treatment with AgoPAMs. Together these studies highlight the complexity of GPR40 pharmacology and the potential additional benefits AgoPAMs may possess above partial agonists for the diabetic patient.