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Dive into the research topics where Omar D. Lopez is active.

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Featured researches published by Omar D. Lopez.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

HCV NS5A replication complex inhibitors. Part 2: investigation of stilbene prolinamides.

Denis R. St. Laurent; Makonen Belema; Min Gao; Jason Goodrich; Ramesh Kakarla; Jay O. Knipe; Julie A. Lemm; Mengping Liu; Omar D. Lopez; Van N. Nguyen; Peter T. Nower; Donald R. O’Boyle; Yuping Qiu; Jeffrey L. Romine; Michael H. Serrano-Wu; Jin-Hua Sun; Lourdes Valera; Fukang Yang; Xuejie Yang; Nicholas A. Meanwell; Lawrence B. Snyder

In a previous disclosure,(1) we reported the dimerization of an iminothiazolidinone to form 1, a contributor to the observed inhibition of HCV genotype 1b replicon activity. The dimer was isolated via bioassay-guided fractionation experiments and shown to be a potent inhibitor of genotype 1b HCV replication for which resistance mapped to the NS5A protein. The elements responsible for governing HCV inhibitory activity were successfully captured in the structurally simplified stilbene prolinamide 2. We describe herein the early SAR and profiling associated with stilbene prolinamides that culminated in the identification of analogs with PK properties sufficient to warrant continued commitment to this chemotype. These studies represent the key initial steps toward the discovery of daclatasvir (BMS-790052), a compound that has demonstrated clinical proof-of-concept for inhibiting the NS5A replication complex in the treatment of HCV infection.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

HCV NS5A replication complex inhibitors. Part 3: discovery of potent analogs with distinct core topologies

Omar D. Lopez; Van N. Nguyen; Denis R. St. Laurent; Makonen Belema; Michael H. Serrano-Wu; Jason Goodrich; Fukang Yang; Yuping Qiu; Amy Ripka; Peter T. Nower; Lourdes Valera; Mengping Liu; Donald R. O’Boyle; Jin-Hua Sun; Robert A. Fridell; Julie A. Lemm; Min Gao; Andrew C. Good; Nicholas A. Meanwell; Lawrence B. Snyder

In a recent disclosure, we described the discovery of dimeric, prolinamide-based NS5A replication complex inhibitors exhibiting excellent potency towards an HCV genotype 1b replicon. That disclosure dealt with the SAR exploration of the peripheral region of our lead chemotype, and herein is described the SAR uncovered from a complementary effort that focused on the central core region. From this effort, the contribution of the core region to the overall topology of the pharmacophore, primarily vector orientation and planarity, was determined, with a set of analogs exhibiting <10 nM EC(50) in a genotype 1b replicon assay.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

HCV NS5A replication complex inhibitors. Part 5: discovery of potent and pan-genotypic glycinamide cap derivatives.

Makonen Belema; Van N. Nguyen; Denis R. St. Laurent; Omar D. Lopez; Yuping Qiu; Andrew C. Good; Peter T. Nower; Lourdes Valera; Donald R. O’Boyle; Jin-Hua Sun; Mengping Liu; Robert A. Fridell; Julie A. Lemm; Min Gao; Jay O. Knipe; Nicholas A. Meanwell; Lawrence B. Snyder

The isoquinolinamide series of HCV NS5A inhibitors exemplified by compounds 2b and 2c provided the first dual genotype-1a/1b (GT-1a/1b) inhibitor class that demonstrated a significant improvement in potency toward GT-1a replicons compared to that of the initial program lead, stilbene 2a. Structure-activity relationship (SAR) studies that uncovered an alternate phenylglycine-based cap series that exhibit further improvements in virology profile, along with some insights into the pharmacophoric elements associated with the GT-1a potency, are described.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2016

Synergistic Activity of Combined NS5A Inhibitors

Donald R. O'Boyle; Peter T. Nower; Min Gao; Robert A. Fridell; Chunfu Wang; Piyasena Hewawasam; Omar D. Lopez; Yong Tu; Nicholas A. Meanwell; Makonen Belema; Susan B. Roberts; Mark Cockett; Jin-Hua Sun

ABSTRACT Daclatasvir (DCV) is a first-in-class hepatitis C virus (HCV) nonstructural 5A replication complex inhibitor (NS5A RCI) that is clinically effective in interferon-free combinations with direct-acting antivirals (DAAs) targeting alternate HCV proteins. Recently, we reported NS5A RCI combinations that enhance HCV inhibitory potential in vitro, defining a new class of HCV inhibitors termed NS5A synergists (J. Sun, D. R. O’Boyle II, R. A. Fridell, D. R. Langley, C. Wang, S. Roberts, P. Nower, B. M. Johnson F. Moulin, M. J. Nophsker, Y. Wang, M. Liu, K. Rigat, Y. Tu, P. Hewawasam, J. Kadow, N. A. Meanwell, M. Cockett, J. A. Lemm, M. Kramer, M. Belema, and M. Gao, Nature 527:245–248, 2015, doi:10.1038/nature15711). To extend the characterization of NS5A synergists, we tested new combinations of DCV and NS5A synergists against genotype (gt) 1 to 6 replicons and gt 1a, 2a, and 3a viruses. The kinetics of inhibition in HCV-infected cells treated with DCV, an NS5A synergist (NS5A-Syn), or a combination of DCV and NS5A-Syn were distinctive. Similar to activity observed clinically, DCV caused a multilog drop in HCV, followed by rebound due to the emergence of resistance. DCV–NS5A-Syn combinations were highly efficient at clearing cells of viruses, in line with the trend seen in replicon studies. The retreatment of resistant viruses that emerged using DCV monotherapy with DCV–NS5A-Syn resulted in a multilog drop and rebound in HCV similar to the initial decline and rebound observed with DCV alone on wild-type (WT) virus. A triple combination of DCV, NS5A-Syn, and a DAA targeting the NS3 or NS5B protein cleared the cells of viruses that are highly resistant to DCV. Our data support the observation that the cooperative interaction of DCV and NS5A-Syn potentiates both the genotype coverage and resistance barrier of DCV, offering an additional DAA option for combination therapy and tools for explorations of NS5A function.


Drug Metabolism and Disposition | 2016

Biotransformation of Daclatasvir In Vitro and in Nonclinical Species: Formation of the Main Metabolite by Pyrrolidine δ-Oxidation and Rearrangement

Wenying Li; Weiping Zhao; Xiaohong Liu; Omar D. Lopez; John E. Leet; R. Marcus Fancher; Van N. Nguyen; Jason Goodrich; John A. Easter; Yang Hong; Janet Caceres-Cortes; Shu Y. Chang; Li Ma; Makonen Belema; Lawrence G. Hamann; Min Gao; Mingshe Zhu; Yue-Zhong Shu; W. Griffith Humphreys; Benjamin M. Johnson

Daclatasvir is a first-in-class, potent, and selective inhibitor of the hepatitis C virus nonstructural protein 5A replication complex. In support of nonclinical studies during discovery and exploratory development, liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry and nuclear magnetic resonance were used in connection with synthetic and radiosynthetic approaches to investigate the biotransformation of daclatasvir in vitro and in cynomolgus monkeys, dogs, mice, and rats. The results of these studies indicated that disposition of daclatasvir was accomplished mainly by the release of unchanged daclatasvir into bile and feces and, secondarily, by oxidative metabolism. Cytochrome P450s were the main enzymes involved in the metabolism of daclatasvir. Oxidative pathways included δ-oxidation of the pyrrolidine moiety, resulting in ring opening to an aminoaldehyde intermediate followed by an intramolecular reaction between the aldehyde and the proximal imidazole nitrogen atom. Despite robust formation of the resulting metabolite in multiple systems, rates of covalent binding to protein associated with metabolism of daclatasvir were modest (55.2–67.8 pmol/mg/h) in nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (reduced form)–supplemented liver microsomes (human, monkey, rat), suggesting that intramolecular rearrangement was favored over intermolecular binding in the formation of this metabolite. This biotransformation profile supported the continued development of daclatasvir, which is now marketed for the treatment of chronic hepatitis C virus infection.


Archive | 2009

Bi-1h-benzimidazoles as hepatitis c virus inhibitors

Makonen Belema; Andrew C. Good; Jason Goodrich; Ramesh Kakarla; Guo Li; Omar D. Lopez; Van N. Nguyen; Jayne Kapur; Yuping Qiu; Jeffrey L. Romine; R Laurent Denis; Michael H. Serrano-Wu; Lawrence B. Snyder; Fukang Yang


Archive | 2009

Conformationally restricted biphenyl derivatives for use as hepatitis c virus inhibitors

Carol Bachand; Makonen Belema; Daniel H. Deon; Andrew C. Good; Jason Goodrich; Clint A. James; Rico Lavoie; Omar D. Lopez; Alain Martel; Nicholas A. Meanwell; Van N. Nguyen; Jeffrey L. Romine; Edward H. Ruediger; Lawrence B. Snyder; R Laurent Denis; Fukang Yang; David R. Langley; Gan Wang; Lawrence G. Hamann


Archive | 2008

Imidazolyl biphenyl imidazoles as hepatitis c virus inhibitors

Carol Bachand; Makonen Belema; Daniel H. Deon; Andrew C. Good; Jason Goodrich; Clint A. James; Rico Lavoie; Omar D. Lopez; Alain Martel; Nicholas A. Meanwell; Van N. Nguyen; Jeffrey L. Romine; Edward H. Ruediger; Lawrence B. Snyder; R Laurent Denis; Fukang Yang; David R. Langley; Gan Wang; Lawrence G. Hamann


Archive | 2009

Heterocyclic derivatives as hepatitis c virus inhibitors

Carol Bachand; Belema Makonen; Daniel H. Deon; Andrew C. Good; Jason Goodrich; Clint A. James; Rico Lavoie; Omar D. Lopez; Alain Martel; Nicholas A. Meanwell; Van N. Nguyen; Jeffrey L. Romine; Edward H. Ruediger; Lawrence B. Snyder; R Laurent Denis; Fukang Yang; David R. Langley; Gan Wang; Lawrence G. Hamann


Archive | 2005

N-substituted prodrugs of fluorooxindoles

John E. Starrett; Omar D. Lopez; Piyasena Hewawasam; Min Ding

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Min Gao

Bristol-Myers Squibb

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Gan Wang

Bristol-Myers Squibb

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