Monica J. Kochanny
Scripps Research Institute
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Featured researches published by Monica J. Kochanny.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2003
Yuo-Ling Chou; David D. Davey; Keith Eagen; Brian D. Griedel; Rushad E Karanjawala; Gary Phillips; Karna Lyn Sacchi; Kenneth J. Shaw; Shung C. Wu; Dao Lentz; Amy Liang; Lan Trinh; Michael M. Morrissey; Monica J. Kochanny
Compound 1 was identified by high throughput screening as a novel, potent, non-amidine factor Xa inhibitor with good selectivity against thrombin and trypsin. A series of modifications of the three aromatic groups of 1 was investigated. Substitution of chlorine or bromine for fluorine on the aniline ring led to the discovery of subnanomolar factor Xa inhibitors. Positions on the anthranilic acid ring that can accommodate further substitution were also identified.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2008
Thomas Kirkland; Marc Adler; John G. Bauman; Ming Chen; Jesper Z. Haeggström; Beverly King; Monica J. Kochanny; Amy Liang; Lisa Mendoza; Gary Phillips; Marjolein Thunnissen; Lan Trinh; Marc Whitlow; Bin Ye; Hong Ye; John A. Parkinson; William J. Guilford
Leukotriene B(4) (LTB(4)) is a potent pro-inflammatory mediator that has been implicated in the pathogenesis of multiple diseases, including psoriasis, inflammatory bowel disease, multiple sclerosis and asthma. As a method to decrease the level of LTB(4) and possibly identify novel treatments, inhibitors of the LTB(4) biosynthetic enzyme, leukotriene A(4) hydrolase (LTA(4)-h), have been explored. Here we describe the discovery of a potent inhibitor of LTA(4)-h, arylamide of glutamic acid 4f, starting from the corresponding glycinamide 2. Analogs of 4f are then described, focusing on compounds that are both active and stable in whole blood. This effort culminated in the identification of amino alcohol 12a and amino ester 6b which meet these criteria.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 1998
Dale L. Boger; Monica J. Kochanny; Hui Cai; Diane Wyatt; Paul A. Kitos; Mark S. Warren; Joseph Ramcharan; Lata T. Gooljarsingh; Stephen J. Benkovic
Abstract The synthesis and evaluation of 1 – 4 as potential inhibitors of GAR Tfase and AICAR Tfase are detailed.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008
Bin Ye; John G. Bauman; Ming Chen; David D. Davey; Seock-Kyu Khim; Beverly King; Thomas Kirkland; Monica J. Kochanny; Amy Liang; Dao Lentz; Karen May; Lisa Mendoza; Gary Phillips; Victor Selchau; Sabine Schlyer; Jih-Lie Tseng; Robert G. Wei; Hong Ye; John A. Parkinson; William J. Guilford
The synthesis and biological evaluation of a series of N-alkyl glycine amide analogs as LTA(4)-h inhibitors and the importance of the introduction of a benzoic acid group to the potency and pharmacokinetic parameters of our analogs are described. The lead compound in the series, 4q, has excellent potency and oral bioavailability.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008
Seock-Kyu Khim; John G. Bauman; Jarred Evans; Beverly Freeman; Beverly King; Thomas Kirkland; Monica J. Kochanny; Dao Lentz; Amy Liang; Lisa Mendoza; Gary Phillips; Jih-Lie Tseng; Robert G. Wei; Hong Ye; Limei Yu; John A. Parkinson; William J. Guilford
The synthesis and biological evaluation of a series of aryl diamines as inhibitors of LTA(4)-h inhibitors are described. The optimization which led to the identification of the optimal para-substitution on the diphenyl ether moiety and diamine spacer is discussed. The resulting compounds such as 3l have excellent enzyme and cellular potency as well as desirable pharmacokinetic properties.
Biochemical Pharmacology | 2003
Amy Liang; David Light; Monica J. Kochanny; Galina Rumennik; Lan Trinh; Dao Lentz; Joseph Post; John Morser; Michael Snider
Benzothiophene-anthranilamide 1 (3-chloro-N-[2-[[(4-fluorophenyl)amino]carbonyl]-4-methylphenyl]benzo[b]thiophene-2-carboxamide) was discovered by high throughput screening to be a highly potent and selective non-amidine inhibitor of human factor Xa with a K(i) of 15+/-4nM. Compound 1 is a selective inhibitor of human factor Xa as suggested by the K(i)((app)) determined for nine other human serine proteases and bovine trypsin. The activity of reconstituted human prothrombinase complex was inhibited by compound 1 when assayed in physiological concentrations of the substrate prothrombin. However, 27-fold higher inhibitor concentrations were needed to achieve the same level of inhibition than were required for the inhibition of free factor Xa, due in part to non-specific binding of the inhibitor to phospholipid under the assay conditions. Failure to demonstrate enzymatic cleavage of compound 1 suggests that compound 1 is solely an inhibitor rather than a substrate for factor Xa. The inhibition of factor Xa by compound 1 was reversible upon dilution of the enzyme/inhibitor mixture. Analyses of the inhibition mechanism with Dixon, Cornish-Bowden, and Lineweaver-Burk plots showed that compound 1 is a linear mixed-type inhibitor with 5-fold higher affinity for free factor Xa than the factor Xa/substrate complex. The linear mixed-type inhibition suggests that compound 1 binds to the active site region of factor Xa, but its binding cannot be fully displaced by the substrate S2222 (1:1 mixture of N-benzoyl-Ile-Glu-Gly-Arg-p-nitroanilide and N-benzoyl-Ile-Glu(gamma-OMe)-Gly-Arg-p-nitroanilide hydrochloride). Thus, the inhibition mechanism for compound 1 is novel compared to most serine protease inhibitors including amidine-containing factor Xa inhibitors, which rely on binding to the S1 pocket of the enzyme active site. Compound 1 represents an attractive, novel structural template for further development of efficacious, safe, and potentially orally active human factor Xa inhibitors.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2002
Howard P. Ng; Brad O. Buckman; Keith A. Eagen; William J. Guilford; Monica J. Kochanny; Raju Mohan; Kenneth J. Shaw; Shung C. Wu; Dao Lentz; Amy Liang; Lan Trinh; Elena Ho; David E. Smith; Babu Subramanyam; Ron Vergona; Janette Walters; Kathy White; Mark E. Sullivan; Michael M. Morrissey; Gary Phillips
A novel series of triaryloxypyridines have been designed to inhibit factor Xa, a serine protease strategically located in the coagulation cascade. Inhibitor 5e has a K(I) against factor Xa of 0.12nM and is greater than 8000- and 2000-fold selective over two related serine proteases, thrombin and trypsin, respectively. The 4-position of the central pyridine has been identified as a site that tolerates various substitutions without deleterious effects on potency and selectivity. This suggests that the 4-position of the pyridine ring is an ideal site for chemical modifications to identify inhibitors with improved pharmacokinetic characteristics. This investigation has resulted in inhibitor 5d, which has an oral availability of 6% in dogs. The synthesis, in vitro activity, and in vivo profile of this class of inhibitors is outlined.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005
Richard I. Feldman; James M. Wu; Mark Polokoff; Monica J. Kochanny; Harald Dinter; Daguang Zhu; Sandra L. Biroc; Bruno Alicke; Judi Bryant; Shendong Yuan; Brad O. Buckman; Dao Lentz; Mike Ferrer; Marc Whitlow; Marc Adler; Silke Finster; Zheng Chang; Damian O. Arnaiz
Archive | 1998
Damian O. Arnaiz; Yuo-Ling Chou; Brian D. Griedel; Rushad E Karanjawala; Monica J. Kochanny; Wheeseong Lee; Amy Liang; Michael M. Morrissey; Gary Phillips; Karna Lyn Sacchi; Stephen T Sakata; Kenneth J. Shaw; R Michael Snider; Shung C. Wu; Bin Ye; Zuchun Zhao
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2007
Imadul Islam; Judi Bryant; Yuo-Ling Chou; Monica J. Kochanny; Wheeseong Lee; Gary Phillips; Hongyi Yu; Marc Adler; Marc Whitlow; Elena Ho; Dao Lentz; Mark A. Polokoff; Babu Subramanyam; James M. Wu; Daguang Zhu; Richard I. Feldman; Damian O. Arnaiz