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Dive into the research topics where Neil Flynn is active.

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Featured researches published by Neil Flynn.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2009

Enhanced Gastrointestinal Motility with Orally Active Ghrelin Receptor Agonists

Soratree Charoenthongtrakul; Derek J. Giuliana; Kenneth A. Longo; Elizabeth Govek; Anna Nolan; Samantha Gagne; Kristen Morgan; Jeffrey Hixon; Neil Flynn; Brian J. Murphy; Andres S. Hernandez; Jun Li; Joseph A. Tino; David A. Gordon; Peter S. DiStefano; Brad J. Geddes

The orexigenic peptide ghrelin has been shown to have prokinetic activity in the gastrointestinal (GI) system of several species, including humans. In this series of experiments, we have evaluated the prokinetic activity of novel, small-molecule ghrelin receptor (GhrR) agonists after parenteral and peroral dosing in mice and rats. Gastric emptying, small intestinal transport, and fecal output were determined after intraperitoneal and intracerebroventricular dosing of GhrR agonists, using ghrelin as a positive control. These same parameters were evaluated after oral gavage dosing of the synthetic agonists. Regardless of dose route, GhrR agonist treatment increased gastric emptying, small intestinal transit, and fecal output. However, fecal output was only increased by GhrR agonist treatment if mice were able to feed during the stimulatory period. Thus, GhrR agonists can stimulate upper GI motility, and the orexigenic action of the compounds can indirectly contribute to prokinetic activity along the entire GI tract. The orexigenic and prokinetic effects of either ghrelin or small-molecule GhrR agonists were selective for the GhrR because they were absent when evaluated in GhrR knockout mice. We next evaluated the efficacy of the synthetic GhrR agonists dosed in a model of opiate-induced bowel dysfunction induced by a single injection of morphine. Oral dosing of a GhrR agonist normalized GI motility in opiate-induced dysmotility. These data demonstrate the potential utility of GhrR agonists for treating gastrointestinal hypomotility disorders.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Design, synthesis and structure-activity relationships of azole acids as novel, potent dual PPAR alpha/gamma agonists.

Hongjian Zhang; Denis E. Ryono; Pratik Devasthale; Wei Wang; K O'Malley; Dennis Farrelly; Liqun Gu; Tom Harrity; Michael Cap; Cuixia Chu; Kenneth T. Locke; Litao Zhang; Jonathan Lippy; Lori Kunselman; Nathan Morgan; Neil Flynn; Lisa Moore; Hosagrahara; Pathanjali Kadiyala; Cen Xu; Arthur M. Doweyko; A Bell; Jodi K. Muckelbauer; Robert Zahler; Narayanan Hariharan; Peter T. W. Cheng

The design, synthesis and structure-activity relationships of a novel series of N-phenyl-substituted pyrrole, 1,2-pyrazole and 1,2,3-triazole acid analogs as PPAR ligands are outlined. The triazole acid analogs 3f and 4f were identified as potent dual PPARalpha/gamma agonists both in binding and functional assays in vitro. The 3-oxybenzyl triazole acetic acid analog 3f showed excellent glucose and triglyceride lowering in diabetic db/db mice.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Identification of a nonbasic melanin hormone receptor 1 antagonist as an antiobesity clinical candidate.

William N. Washburn; Mark Manfredi; Pratik Devasthale; Guohua Zhao; Saleem Ahmad; Andres Hernandez; Jeffrey A. Robl; Wei Wang; James Mignone; Zhenghua Wang; Khehyong Ngu; Mary Ann Pelleymounter; Daniel Longhi; Rulin Zhao; Bei Wang; Ning Huang; Neil Flynn; Anthony V. Azzara; Joel C. Barrish; Kenneth Rohrbach; James Devenny; Michael J. Thomas; Susan Glick; Helen E. Godonis; Susan J. Harvey; Mary Jane Cullen; Hongwei Zhang; Christian Caporuscio; Paul Stetsko; Mary F. Grubb

Identification of MCHR1 antagonists with a preclinical safety profile to support clinical evaluation as antiobesity agents has been a challenge. Our finding that a basic moiety is not required for MCHR1 antagonists to achieve high affinity allowed us to explore structures less prone to off-target activities such as hERG inhibition. We report the SAR evolution of hydroxylated thienopyrimidinone ethers culminating in the identification of 27 (BMS-819881), which entered obesity clinical trials as the phosphate ester prodrug 35 (BMS-830216).


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008

(D)-2-tert-Butoxycarbonylamino-5,5-difluoro-5-phenyl-pentanoic acid: synthesis and incorporation into the growth hormone secretagogues.

Jun Li; Stephanie Y. Chen; Brian J. Murphy; Neil Flynn; Ramakrishna Seethala; Dorothy Slusarchyk; Mujing Yan; Paul G. Sleph; Hongjian Zhang; William G. Humphreys; William R. Ewing; Jeffrey A. Robl; David A. Gordon; Joseph A. Tino

The first enantioselective synthesis of (D)-2-tert-butoxycarbonylamino-5,5-difluoro-5-phenyl-pentanoic acid 3 was achieved. The incorporation of the titled compound into growth hormone secretagogue (GHS) compounds resulted in new analogs 10 and 16, both of which had significantly increased in vitro potency. The compound 10 also showed improved in vivo efficacy as well as pharmacokinetic properties in rat models.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008

Design and synthesis of tetrazole-based growth hormone secretagogue: the SAR studies of the O-benzyl serine side chain.

Jun Li; Stephanie Y. Chen; Shiwei Tao; Haixia Wang; James J. Li; Steve Swartz; Christa Musial; Andres Hernandez; Neil Flynn; Brian J. Murphy; Blake C. Beehler; Kenneth E.J. Dickinson; Leah Giupponi; Gary J. Grover; Ramakrishna Seethala; Paul G. Sleph; Dorothy Slusarchyk; Mujing Yan; William G. Humphreys; Hongjian Zhang; William R. Ewing; Jeffrey A. Robl; David A. Gordon; Joseph A. Tino

The structure-activity relationship of the O-benzyl serine side chain was investigated based on the tetrazole-based growth hormone secretagogue BMS-317180 (2). The ortho position of the benzyl moiety was found to be favorable for introduction of substituents. A series of ortho-substituted compounds were synthesized with improved in-vitro and in-vivo activity. Among them, the biphenyl compound 2p shows twofold improvement in potency compared to its parent compound BMS-317180 (2).


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017

Discovery of Pyrrolidine-Containing GPR40 Agonists: Stereochemistry Effects a Change in Binding Mode

Elizabeth A. Jurica; Ximao Wu; Kristin N. Williams; Andres S. Hernandez; David S. Nirschl; Richard Rampulla; Arvind Mathur; Min Zhou; Gary Cao; Chunshan Xie; Biji Jacob; Hong Cai; Tao Wang; Brian J. Murphy; Heng Liu; Carrie Xu; Lori Kunselman; Michael B. Hicks; Qin Sun; Dora M. Schnur; Doree Sitkoff; Elizabeth A. Dierks; Atsu Apedo; Douglas B. Moore; Kimberly A. Foster; Mary Ellen Cvijic; Reshma Panemangalore; Neil Flynn; Brad D. Maxwell; Yang Hong

A novel series of pyrrolidine-containing GPR40 agonists is described as a potential treatment for type 2 diabetes. The initial pyrrolidine hit was modified by moving the position of the carboxylic acid, a key pharmacophore for GPR40. Addition of a 4-cis-CF3 to the pyrrolidine improves the human GPR40 binding Ki and agonist efficacy. After further optimization, the discovery of a minor enantiomeric impurity with agonist activity led to the finding that enantiomers (R,R)-68 and (S,S)-68 have differential effects on the radioligand used for the binding assay, with (R,R)-68 potentiating the radioligand and (S,S)-68 displacing the radioligand. Compound (R,R)-68 activates both Gq-coupled intracellular Ca2+ flux and Gs-coupled cAMP accumulation. This signaling bias results in a dual mechanism of action for compound (R,R)-68, demonstrating glucose-dependent insulin and GLP-1 secretion in vitro. In vivo, compound (R,R)-68 significantly lowers plasma glucose levels in mice during an oral glucose challenge, encouraging further development of the series.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008

Discovery and optimization of (R)-prolinol-derived agonists of the Growth Hormone Secretagogue receptor (GHSR).

Weixu Zhai; Neil Flynn; Daniel Longhi; Joseph A. Tino; Brian J. Murphy; Dorothy Slusarchyk; David A. Gordon; Anna Pendri; Shuhao Shi; Robert H. Stoffel; Baoqing Ma; Michael J. Sofia; Samuel W. Gerritz

The discovery and optimization of a novel series of prolinol-derived GHSR agonists is described. This series emerged from a 11,520-member solid-phase library targeting the GPCR protein superfamily, and the rapid optimization of low micromolar hits into single-digit nanomolar leads can be attributed to the solid-phase synthesis of matrix libraries, which revealed multiple non-additive structure-activity relationships. In addition, the separation of potent diastereomers highlighted the influence of the alpha-methyl stereochemistry of the phenoxyacetamide sidechain on GHSR activity.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008

Design, synthesis, and structure–activity relationships of piperidine and dehydropiperidine carboxylic acids as novel, potent dual PPARα/γ agonists

Xiang-Yang Ye; Yi-Xin Li; Dennis Farrelly; Neil Flynn; Liqun Gu; Kenneth T. Locke; Jonathan Lippy; Kevin O’Malley; Celeste Twamley; Litao Zhang; Denis E. Ryono; Robert Zahler; Narayanan Hariharan; Peter T. W. Cheng

Several series of substituted dehydropiperidine and piperidine-4-carboxylic acid analogs have been designed and synthesized as novel, potent dual PPARalpha/gamma agonists. The SAR of these series of analogs is discussed. A rare double bond migration occurred during the basic hydrolysis of the alpha,beta-unsaturated dehydropiperidine esters 12, and the structures of the migration products were confirmed through a series of 2D NMR experiments.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008

Tetrazole based amides as growth hormone secretagogues

James J. Li; Haixia Wang; Jun Li; Fucheng Qu; Stephen G. Swartz; Andres S. Hernandez; Scott A. Biller; Jeffrey A. Robl; Joseph A. Tino; Dorothy Slusarchyk; Ramakrishna Seethala; Paul G. Sleph; Mujing Yan; Gary J. Grover; Neil Flynn; Brian J. Murphy; David A. Gordon

A novel series of N1 substituted tetrazole amides were prepared and showed to be potent growth hormone (GH) secretagogues. Among them, hydroxyl containing analog 31 displayed excellent in vivo activity by increasing plasma GH 10-fold in an anesthetized IV rat model.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015

Synthesis and biological evaluation of novel pyrrolidine acid analogs as potent dual PPARα/γ agonists.

Hao Zhang; Charles Z. Ding; Zhi Lai; Sean S. Chen; Pratik Devasthale; Tim Herpin; George C. Morton; Fucheng Qu; Denis E. Ryono; Rebecca A. Smirk; Wei Wang; Shung Wu; Xiang-Xang Ye; Yi-Xin Li; Atsu Apedo; Dennis Farrelly; Tao Wang; Liqun Gu; Nathan Morgan; Neil Flynn; Cuixia Chu; Lori Kunselman; Jonathan Lippy; Kenneth T. Locke; Kevin O’Malley; Thomas Harrity; Michael Cap; Lisa Zhang; Vinayak Hosagrahara; Pathanjali Kadiyala

The design, synthesis and structure-activity relationships of a novel series of 3,4-disubstituted pyrrolidine acid analogs as PPAR ligands is outlined. In both the 1,3- and 1,4-oxybenzyl pyrrolidine acid series, the preferred stereochemistry was shown to be the cis-3R,4S isomer, as exemplified by the potent dual PPARα/γ agonists 3k and 4i. The N-4-trifluoromethyl-pyrimidinyl pyrrolidine acid analog 4i was efficacious in lowering fasting glucose and triglyceride levels in diabetic db/db mice.

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