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Dive into the research topics where Monish Jain is active.

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Featured researches published by Monish Jain.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

Metabolically Stable tert-Butyl Replacement

David Barnes-Seeman; Monish Jain; Leslie Bell; Suzie Ferreira; Scott Louis Cohen; Xiaohui Chen; Jakal Amin; Brad Snodgrass; Panos Hatsis

Susceptibility to metabolism is a common issue with the tert-butyl group on compounds of medicinal interest. We demonstrate an approach of removing all the fully sp(3) C-Hs from a tert-butyl group: replacing some C-Hs with C-Fs and increasing the s-character of the remaining C-Hs. This approach gave a trifluoromethylcyclopropyl group, which increased metabolic stability. Trifluoromethylcyclopropyl-containing analogues had consistently higher metabolic stability in vitro and in vivo compared to their tert-butyl-containing counterparts.


Frontiers in Pharmacology | 2014

Implementation of pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic strategies in early research phases of drug discovery and development at Novartis Institute of Biomedical Research

Tove Tuntland; Brian T. Ethell; Takatoshi Kosaka; Francesca Blasco; Richard Zang; Monish Jain; Ty Gould; Keith Hoffmaster

Characterizing the relationship between the pharmacokinetics (PK, concentration vs. time) and pharmacodynamics (PD, effect vs. time) is an important tool in the discovery and development of new drugs in the pharmaceutical industry. The purpose of this publication is to serve as a guide for drug discovery scientists toward optimal design and conduct of PK/PD studies in the research phase. This review is a result of the collaborative efforts of DMPK scientists from various Metabolism and Pharmacokinetic (MAP) departments of the global organization Novartis Institute of Biomedical Research (NIBR). We recommend that PK/PD strategies be implemented in early research phases of drug discovery projects to enable successful transition to drug development. Effective PK/PD study design, analysis, and interpretation can help scientists elucidate the relationship between PK and PD, understand the mechanism of drug action, and identify PK properties for further improvement and optimal compound design. Additionally, PK/PD modeling can help increase the translation of in vitro compound potency to the in vivo setting, reduce the number of in vivo animal studies, and improve translation of findings from preclinical species into the clinical setting. This review focuses on three important elements of successful PK/PD studies, namely partnership among key scientists involved in the study execution; parameters that influence study designs; and data analysis and interpretation. Specific examples and case studies are highlighted to help demonstrate key points for consideration. The intent is to provide a broad PK/PD foundation for colleagues in the pharmaceutical industry and serve as a tool to promote appropriate discussions on early research project teams with key scientists involved in PK/PD studies.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

Intestinally Targeted Diacylglycerol Acyltransferase 1 (DGAT1) Inhibitors Robustly Suppress Postprandial Triglycerides.

Michael H. Serrano-Wu; Gary M. Coppola; Yongjin Gong; Alan D. Neubert; Ricardo E. Chatelain; Kevin B. Clairmont; Renee Commerford; Theresa Cosker; Thomas Daniels; Ying Hou; Monish Jain; Marlene Juedes; Lisha Li; Tara L. Mullarkey; Erik C. Rocheford; Moo Je Sung; Andrew Tyler; Qing Yang; Taeyoung Yoon; Brian K. Hubbard

High DGAT1 expression levels in the small intestine highlight the critical role this enzyme plays in nutrient absorption. Identification of inhibitors which predominantly inhibit DGAT1 in the gut is an attractive drug discovery strategy with anticipated benefits of reduced systemic toxicity. In this report we describe our discovery and optimization of DGAT1 inhibitors whose plasma exposure is minimized by the action of transporters, including the P-glycoprotein transporter. The impact of this unique absorption profile on efficacy in rat and dog efficacy models is presented.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017

Discovery of an Orally Bioavailable Benzimidazole Diacylglycerol Acyltransferase 1 (DGAT1) Inhibitor That Suppresses Body Weight Gain in Diet-Induced Obese Dogs and Postprandial Triglycerides in Humans

Katsumasa Nakajima; Ricardo E. Chatelain; Kevin B. Clairmont; Renee Commerford; Gary M. Coppola; Thomas Daniels; Cornelia Forster; Thomas A. Gilmore; Yongjin Gong; Monish Jain; Aaron Kanter; Young-Shin Kwak; Jingzhou Li; Charles Meyers; Alan D. Neubert; Paul Szklennik; Vivienne Tedesco; James B. Thompson; David Truong; Qing Yang; Brian K. Hubbard; Michael H. Serrano-Wu

Modification of a gut restricted class of benzimidazole DGAT1 inhibitor 1 led to 9 with good oral bioavailability. The key structural changes to 1 include bioisosteric replacement of the amide with oxadiazole and α,α-dimethylation of the carboxylic acid, improving DGAT1 potency and gut permeability. Since DGAT1 is expressed in the small intestine, both 1 and 9 can suppress postprandial triglycerides during acute oral lipid challenges in rats and dogs. Interestingly, only 9 was found to be effective in suppressing body weight gain relative to control in a diet-induced obese dog model, suggesting the importance of systemic inhibition of DGAT1 for body weight control. 9 has advanced to clinical investigation and successfully suppressed postprandial triglycerides during an acute meal challenge in humans.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

A new structural alert for benzimidazoles: 2,6-dimethylphenyl substituents increase mutagenic potential and time-dependent CYP3A4 inhibition risk.

Young-Shin Kwak; Gary M. Coppola; Cornelia J. Forster; Thomas A. Gilmore; Yongjin Gong; Aaron Kanter; Alan D. Neubert; Bryan W. Stroup; Paul Szklennik; Susanne Glowienke; Pascal Stadelmann; Leslie Bell; Shari Bickford; Eric Gangl; Mithat Gunduz; Monish Jain; Jenny Zhan; Michael H. Serrano-Wu

A series of 2-[(2,6)-dimethylphenyl]benzimidazole analogs displayed strong potential for mutagenicity following metabolic activation in either TA98 or TA100 Salmonella typhimurium strains. The number of revertants was significantly reduced by replacing the 2,6-dimethylphenyl group with a 2,6-dichlorophenyl moiety. Time-dependent CYP3A4 inhibition was also observed with a compound containing a 2-[(2,6)-dimethylphenyl] benzimidazole ring, implying risk for this scaffold to generate reactive metabolites.


Archive | 2011

BICYCLIC ACETYL-COA CARBOXYLASE INHIBITORS

David Barnes; Gregory Raymond Bebernitz; Kevin B. Clairmont; Scott Louis Cohen; Robert E. Damon; Robert Francis Day; Stephanie Kay Dodd; Christoph Gaul; Efthymiou Hatice Belgin Gulgeze; Monish Jain; Rajeshri Ganesh Karki; Louise Kirman; Kai Lin; Justin Yik Ching Mao; Tajesh Jayprakash Patel; Brian Kenneth Raymer; Liansheng Su


Archive | 2010

Cyclohexane derivatives as inhibitors of acetyl-coa carboxylase (acc)

David Barnes; Gregory Raymond Bebernitz; Scott Louis Cohen; Robert E. Damon; Robert Francis Day; Monish Jain; Rajeshri Ganesh Karki; Louise Kirman; Tajesh Jayprakash Patel; Brian Kenneth Raymer; Herbert F. Schuster; Wei Zhang


Archive | 2010

Cyclohexane derivatives and uses thereof

David Barnes; Gregory Raymond Bebernitz; Scott Louis Cohen; Robert E. Damon; Robert Francis Day; Monish Jain; Rajeshri Ganesh Karki; Louise Kirman; Tajesh Jayprakash Patel; Brian Kenneth Raymer; Herbert F. Schuster; Wei Zhang


Archive | 2011

BICYCLIC ACETYL-COA CARBOXYLASE INHIBITORS AND USES THEREOF

David Barnes; Gregory Raymond Bebernitz; Kevin B. Clairmont; Scott Louis Cohen; Robert E. Damon; Robert Francis Day; Stephanie Kay Dodd; Christoph Gaul; Hatice Belgin Gulgeze Efthymiou; Monish Jain; Rajeshri Ganesh Karki; Louise Kirman; Kai Lin; Justin Yik Ching Mao; Tajesh Jayprakash Patel; Brian Kenneth Raymer; Liansheng Su


Archive | 2012

INHIBIDORES BICÍCLICOS DE ACETIL-CoA-CARBOXILASA Y USOS DE LOS MISMOS

Rajeshri Ganesh Karki; Cohen Scott Louis; Barnes David Weniger; Bebernitz Gregory Raymond; Kevin B. Clairmont; Damon Robert Edson; Day Robert Francis; Dodd Stephanie Kay; Christoph Gaul; Efthymiu Hatice Belgin Gulgeze; Monish Jain; Kirman Louise Clare; Kai Lin; Mao Justin Yik Ching; Patel Takesh Jayprakash; Liansheng Su; Raymer Brian Kenneth

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