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Dive into the research topics where Nathan D. Waal is active.

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Featured researches published by Nathan D. Waal.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Second-generation antibacterial benzimidazole ureas: discovery of a preclinical candidate with reduced metabolic liability.

Anne-Laure Grillot; Arnaud Le Tiran; Dean Shannon; Elaine Krueger; Yusheng Liao; Hardwin O’Dowd; Qing Tang; Steve Ronkin; Tiansheng Wang; Nathan D. Waal; Pan Li; David Lauffer; Emmanuelle Sizensky; Jerry Tanoury; Emanuele Perola; Trudy H. Grossman; Timothy Doyle; Brian Hanzelka; Steven J.M. Jones; Vaishali Dixit; Nigel Ewing; Shengkai Liao; Brian Boucher; Marc Jacobs; Youssef L. Bennani; Paul S. Charifson

Compound 3 is a potent aminobenzimidazole urea with broad-spectrum Gram-positive antibacterial activity resulting from dual inhibition of bacterial gyrase (GyrB) and topoisomerase IV (ParE), and it demonstrates efficacy in rodent models of bacterial infection. Preclinical in vitro and in vivo studies showed that compound 3 covalently labels liver proteins, presumably via formation of a reactive metabolite, and hence presented a potential safety liability. The urea moiety in compound 3 was identified as being potentially responsible for reactive metabolite formation, but its replacement resulted in loss of antibacterial activity and/or oral exposure due to poor physicochemical parameters. To identify second-generation aminobenzimidazole ureas devoid of reactive metabolite formation potential, we implemented a metabolic shift strategy, which focused on shifting metabolism away from the urea moiety by introducing metabolic soft spots elsewhere in the molecule. Aminobenzimidazole urea 34, identified through this strategy, exhibits similar antibacterial activity as that of 3 and did not label liver proteins in vivo, indicating reduced/no potential for reactive metabolite formation.


Acta Crystallographica Section F-structural Biology and Crystallization Communications | 2005

Structural analysis of caspase‐1 inhibitors derived from Tethering

Thomas W. O'Brien; Bruce T. Fahr; Michelle M. Sopko; Joni W. Lam; Nathan D. Waal; Brian C. Raimundo; Hans E. Purkey; Phuongly Pham; Michael J. Romanowski

Caspase-1 is a key endopeptidase responsible for the post-translational processing of the IL-1beta and IL-18 cytokines and small-molecule inhibitors that modulate the activity of this enzyme are predicted to be important therapeutic treatments for many inflammatory diseases. A fragment-assembly approach, accompanied by structural analysis, was employed to generate caspase-1 inhibitors. With the aid of Tethering with extenders (small molecules that bind to the active-site cysteine and contain a free thiol), two novel fragments that bound to the active site and made a disulfide bond with the extender were identified by mass spectrometry. Direct linking of each fragment to the extender generated submicromolar reversible inhibitors that significantly reduced secretion of IL-1beta but not IL-6 from human peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Thus, Tethering with extenders facilitated rapid identification and synthesis of caspase-1 inhibitors with cell-based activity and subsequent structural analyses provided insights into the enzymes ability to accommodate different inhibitor-binding modes in the active site.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016

Discovery of Novel Thiophene-Based, Thumb Pocket 2 Allosteric Inhibitors of the Hepatitis C NS5B Polymerase with Improved Potency and Physicochemical Profiles

John J. Court; Carl Poisson; Andrzej Ardzinski; Darius Bilimoria; Laval Chan; Kishan Chandupatla; Nathalie Chauret; Philip N. Collier; Sanjoy Kumar Das; Francois Denis; Warren Dorsch; Ganesh Iyer; David Lauffer; Lucille L’Heureux; Pan Li; Brian S. Luisi; Nagraj Mani; Suganthi Nanthakumar; Olivier Nicolas; B. Govinda Rao; Steven Ronkin; Subajini Selliah; Rebecca S. Shawgo; Qing Tang; Nathan D. Waal; Constantin G. Yannopoulos; Jeremy Green

The hepatitis C viral proteins NS3/4A protease, NS5B polymerase, and NS5A are clinically validated targets for direct-acting antiviral therapies. The NS5B polymerase may be inhibited directly through the action of nucleosides or nucleotide analogues or allosterically at a number of well-defined sites. Herein we describe the further development of a series of thiophene carboxylate allosteric inhibitors of NS5B polymerase that act at the thumb pocket 2 site. Lomibuvir (1) is an allosteric HCV NS5B inhibitor that has demonstrated excellent antiviral activity and potential clinical utility in combination with other direct acting antiviral agents. Efforts to further explore and develop this series led to compound 23, a compound with comparable potency and improved physicochemical properties.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2017

Discovery of Novel Allosteric HCV NS5B Inhibitors. 2. Lactam-Containing Thiophene Carboxylates

Pan Li; Warren Dorsch; David Lauffer; Darius Bilimoria; Nathalie Chauret; John J. Court; Sanjoy Kumar Das; Francois Denis; Nagraj Mani; Suganthini Nanthakumar; Olivier Nicolas; B. Govinda Rao; Steven Ronkin; Subajini Selliah; Rebecca S. Shawgo; Ralph Stearns; Qing Tang; Nathan D. Waal; Jeremy Green

Lomibuvir (1) is a non-nucleoside, allosteric inhibitor of the hepatitis C virus NS5B polymerase with demonstrated clinical efficacy. Further development efforts within this class of inhibitor focused on improving the antiviral activity and physicochemical and pharmacokinetic properties. Recently, we reported the development of this series, leading to compound 2, a molecule with comparable potency and an improved physicochemical profile relative to 1. Further exploration of the amino amide-derived side chain led to a series of lactam derivatives, inspired by the X-ray crystal structure of related thiophene carboxylate inhibitors. This series, exemplified by 12f, provided 3-5-fold improvement in potency against HCV replication, as measured by replicon assays. The synthesis, structure-activity relationships, in vitro ADME characterization, and in vivo evaluation of this novel series are discussed.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2003

Discovery of a Potent Small Molecule IL-2 Inhibitor through Fragment Assembly

Andrew C. Braisted; Johan D. Oslob; Warren L. DeLano; Jennifer Hyde; Robert S. McDowell; Nathan D. Waal; Chul H. Yu; Michelle R. Arkin; Brian C. Raimundo


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2004

Integrating Fragment Assembly and Biophysical Methods in the Chemical Advancement of Small-Molecule Antagonists of IL-2: An Approach for Inhibiting Protein−Protein Interactions†

Brian C. Raimundo; Johan D. Oslob; Andrew C. Braisted; Jennifer Hyde; Robert S. McDowell; Mike Randal; Nathan D. Waal; Jennifer Wilkinson; Chul H. Yu; Michelle R. Arkin


Archive | 2002

Small-molecule inhibitors of interleukin-2

Michelle R. Arkin; Robert S. McDowell; Johan D. Oslob; Brian C. Raimundo; Nathan D. Waal; Chul H. Yu


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2005

Identification of nonpeptidic small-molecule inhibitors of interleukin-2

Nathan D. Waal; Wenjin Yang; Johan D. Oslob; Michelle R. Arkin; Jennifer Hyde; Wanli Lu; Robert S. McDowell; Chul H. Yu; Brian C. Raimundo


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2006

Tethering identifies fragment that yields potent inhibitors of human caspase-1

Bruce T. Fahr; Tom O'Brien; Phuongly Pham; Nathan D. Waal; Subramanian Baskaran; Brian C. Raimundo; Joni W. Lam; Michelle M. Sopko; Hans E. Purkey; Michael J. Romanowski


Archive | 2000

Triphenyl compounds as interleukin-4 antagonists

Kenneth J. Barr; Brian C. Cunningham; William Michael Flanagan; Wanli Lu; Brian C. Raimundo; Nathan D. Waal; Jennifer Wilkinson; Jiang Zhu; Wenjin Yang

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Pan Li

Vertex Pharmaceuticals

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Chul H. Yu

Sunesis Pharmaceuticals

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Jeremy Green

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Qing Tang

Vertex Pharmaceuticals

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