Nikolai Kley
GPC Biotech
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Publication
Featured researches published by Nikolai Kley.
FEBS Letters | 2002
Yoichi Ohiro; Igor Garkavtsev; Shinichiro Kobayashi; Kodangattil R. Sreekumar; Regan Nantz; Bryan T. Higashikubo; Shannon L. Duffy; Anny Usheva; David Gius; Nikolai Kley; Nobuo Horikoshi
The p53 tumor suppressor protein induces cell cycle arrest or apoptosis in response to cellular stresses. We have identified PRG3 ( 53‐ esponsive ene 3), which is induced specifically under p53‐dependent apoptotic conditions in human colon cancer cells, and encodes a novel polypeptide of 373 amino acids with a predicted molecular mass of 40.5 kDa. PRG3 has significant homology to bacterial oxidoreductases and the apoptosis‐inducing factor, AIF, and the gene was assigned to chromosome 10q21.3–q22.1. Expression of PRG3 was induced by the activation of endogenous p53 and it contains a p53‐responsive element. Unlike AIF, PRG3 localizes in the cytoplasm and its ectopic expression induces apoptosis. An amino‐terminal deletion mutant of PRG3 that lacks a putative oxidoreductase activity retains its apoptotic activity, suggesting that the oxidoreductase activity is dispensable for the apoptotic function of PRG3. The PRG3 gene is thus a novel p53 target gene in a p53‐dependent apoptosis pathway.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013
Xiaozhang Zheng; Paul H. Bauer; Timm Baumeister; Alexandre J. Buckmelter; Maureen Caligiuri; Karl H. Clodfelter; Bingsong Han; Yen-Ching Ho; Nikolai Kley; Jian Lin; Dominic J. Reynolds; Geeta Sharma; Chase Smith; Zhongguo Wang; Peter S. Dragovich; Janet Gunzner-Toste; Bianca M. Liederer; Justin Ly; Thomas O’Brien; Angela Oh; Leslie Wang; Weiru Wang; Yang Xiao; Mark Zak; Guiling Zhao; Po-wai Yuen; Kenneth W. Bair
Crystal structures of several urea- and thiourea-derived compounds in complex with the nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase (Nampt) protein were utilized to design a potent amide-containing inhibitor bearing an aza-indole moiety (7, Nampt BC IC50 = 9.0 nM, A2780 cell proliferation IC50 = 10 nM). The Nampt-7 cocrystal structure was subsequently obtained and enabled the design of additional amide-containing inhibitors which incorporated various other fused 6,5-heterocyclic moieties and biaryl sulfone or sulfonamide motifs. Additional modifications of these molecules afforded many potent biaryl sulfone-containing Nampt inhibitors which also exhibited favorable in vitro ADME properties (microsomal and hepatocyte stability, MDCK permeability, plasma protein binding). An optimized compound (58) was a potent inhibitor of multiple cancer cell lines (IC50 <10 nM vs U251, HT1080, PC3, MiaPaCa2, and HCT116 lines), displayed acceptable mouse PK properties (F = 41%, CL = 52.4 mL/min/kg), and exhibited robust efficacy in a U251 mouse xenograft model.
Oncogene | 2001
Igor Garkavtsev; Nikolai Kley; Irina A. Grigorian; Andrei V. Gudkov
Bloom syndrome is an autosomal recessive disorder associated with mutations in BLM gene encoding protein that belongs to the family of DNA helicases. It is characterized by predisposition to cancer, immunodeficiency, high sensitivity to UV and genomic instability of somatic cells. Here we show physical and functional cooperation between BLM and p53 proteins. Ectopic expression of BLM causes anti-proliferative effect in p53 wild type, but not in p53-deficient cells; p53-mediated transactivation is attenuated in primary fibroblasts from Bloom syndrome patients. BLM and p53 proteins physically interact in the cells as demonstrated in yeast and mammalian two-hybrid systems; interaction sites are mapped to 237–272 aa residues of BML and 285–340 aa of p53. Ectopic expression of the fragment of wild type BML containing p53-interactive domain suppresses p53-mediated transcription and interferes with p53-mediated growth inhibition. These observations indicate that BLM might be an important component of p53 function and suggest that Bloom Syndrome phenotype may in part be the result of the deregulation of the p53 tumor suppressor pathway.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013
Xiaozhang Zheng; Paul H. Bauer; Timm Baumeister; Alexandre J. Buckmelter; Maureen Caligiuri; Karl H. Clodfelter; Bingsong Han; Yen-Ching Ho; Nikolai Kley; Jian Lin; Dominic J. Reynolds; Geeta Sharma; Chase Smith; Zhongguo Wang; Peter S. Dragovich; Angela Oh; Weiru Wang; Mark Zak; Janet Gunzner-Toste; Guiling Zhao; Po-wai Yuen; Kenneth W. Bair
Nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase (Nampt) is a promising anticancer target. Virtual screening identified a thiourea analogue, compound 5, as a novel highly potent Nampt inhibitor. Guided by the cocrystal structure of 5, SAR exploration revealed that the corresponding urea compound 7 exhibited similar potency with an improved solubility profile. These studies also indicated that a 3-pyridyl group was the preferred substituent at one inhibitor terminus and also identified a urea moiety as the optimal linker to the remainder of the inhibitor structure. Further SAR optimization of the other inhibitor terminus ultimately yielded compound 50 as a urea-containing Nampt inhibitor which exhibited excellent biochemical and cellular potency (enzyme IC50 = 0.007 μM; A2780 IC50 = 0.032 μM). Compound 50 also showed excellent in vivo antitumor efficacy when dosed orally in an A2780 ovarian tumor xenograft model (TGI of 97% was observed on day 17).
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013
Xiaozhang Zheng; Kenneth W. Bair; Paul H. Bauer; Timm Baumeister; Krista K. Bowman; Alexandre J. Buckmelter; Maureen Caligiuri; Karl H. Clodfelter; Yezhen Feng; Bingsong Han; Yen-Ching Ho; Nikolai Kley; Hong Li; Xiaorong Liang; Bianca M. Liederer; Jian Lin; Justin Ly; Thomas O’Brien; Jason Oeh; Angela Oh; Dominic J. Reynolds; Deepak Sampath; Geeta Sharma; Nicholas J. Skelton; Chase Smith; Jarrod Tremayne; Leslie Wang; Weiru Wang; Zhongguo Wang; Hongxing Wu
Potent, 1H-pyrazolo[3,4-b]pyridine-containing inhibitors of the human nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase (NAMPT) enzyme were identified using structure-based design techniques. Many of these compounds exhibited nanomolar antiproliferation activities against human tumor lines in in vitro cell culture experiments, and a representative example (compound 26) demonstrated encouraging in vivo efficacy in a mouse xenograft tumor model derived from the A2780 cell line. This molecule also exhibited reduced rat retinal exposures relative to a previously studied imidazo-pyridine-containing NAMPT inhibitor. Somewhat surprisingly, compound 26 was only weakly active in vitro against mouse and monkey tumor cell lines even though it was a potent inhibitor of NAMPT enzymes derived from these species. The compound also exhibited only minimal effects on in vivo NAD levels in mice, and these changes were considerably less profound than those produced by an imidazo-pyridine-containing NAMPT inhibitor. The crystal structures of compound 26 and the corresponding PRPP-derived ribose adduct in complex with NAMPT were also obtained.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013
Janet Gunzner-Toste; Guiling Zhao; Paul H. Bauer; Timm Baumeister; Alexandre J. Buckmelter; Maureen Caligiuri; Karl H. Clodfelter; B Fu; Bingsong Han; Yen-Ching Ho; Nikolai Kley; Xiaorong Liang; Bianca M. Liederer; Jian Lin; S Mukadam; Thomas O'Brien; Angela Oh; Dominic J. Reynolds; Geeta Sharma; Nicholas J. Skelton; Chase Smith; J Sodhi; Weiru Wang; Zhongguo Wang; Yang Xiao; Po-wai Yuen; Mark Zak; Lei Zhang; Xiaozhang Zheng; Kenneth W. Bair
Potent, reversible inhibition of the cytochrome P450 CYP2C9 isoform was observed in a series of urea-containing nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase (NAMPT) inhibitors. This unwanted property was successfully removed from the described inhibitors through a combination of structure-based design and medicinal chemistry activities. An optimized compound which did not inhibit CYP2C9 exhibited potent anti-NAMPT activity (17; BC NAMPT IC50=3 nM; A2780 antiproliferative IC50=70 nM), good mouse PK properties, and was efficacious in an A2780 mouse xenograft model. The crystal structure of this compound in complex with the NAMPT protein is also described.
Pharmacogenomics | 2004
Nikolai Kley; Igor Ivanov; Sebastian Meier-Ewert
A broad range of genomics and proteomics technologies are increasingly being integrated into emerging research fields such as pharmacogenomics, pharmacoproteomics, chemogenomics, chemical genetics, and chemical biology. Here we review applications of genomic and proteomic technologies to drug mechanism-of-action studies and how these are beginning to impact the drug discovery process.
Current Drug Targets | 2006
Gabriele Zybarth; Nikolai Kley
The genomics and proteomics sciences have fundamentally changed the ways in which drug targets are being identified, characterized and validated. Here we review how genomics and proteomics research is improving our understanding of genetic determinants of drug susceptibility and response and, conversely, how organic small molecules mediate their pharmacological effects by modulating genome and proteome activities. We also examine the effect this improved understanding has on the drug discovery and development process.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013
Xiaozhang Zheng; Timm Baumeister; Alexandre J. Buckmelter; Maureen Caligiuri; Karl H. Clodfelter; Bingsong Han; Yen-Ching Ho; Nikolai Kley; Jian Lin; Dominic J. Reynolds; Geeta Sharma; Chase Smith; Zhongguo Wang; Peter S. Dragovich; Angela Oh; Weiru Wang; Mark Zak; Yunli Wang; Po-wai Yuen; Kenneth W. Bair
A co-crystal structure of amide-containing compound (4) in complex with the nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase (Nampt) protein and molecular modeling were utilized to design and discover a potent novel cyanoguanidine-containing inhibitor bearing a sulfone moiety (5, Nampt Biochemical IC50=2.5nM, A2780 cell proliferation IC50=9.7nM). Further SAR exploration identified several additional cyanoguanidine-containing compounds with high potency and good microsomal stability. Among these, compound 15 was selected for in vivo profiling and demonstrated good oral exposure in mice. It also exhibited excellent in vivo antitumor efficacy when dosed orally in an A2780 ovarian tumor xenograft model. The co-crystal structure of this compound in complex with the NAMPT protein was also determined.
Chemistry & Biology | 2004
Frank Becker; Krishna Murthi; Chase Smith; Jon Come; Nuria Costa-Roldán; Christine Kaufmann; Urs Hanke; Carsten Degenhart; Sabine Baumann; Wolfgang Wallner; Andrea Huber; Severine Dedier; Simone Dill; David Kinsman; Mark Hediger; Nicholas Bockovich; Sebastian Meier-Ewert; Arthur F. Kluge; Nikolai Kley