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Featured researches published by Paige E. Mahaney.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Discovery of Piragliatin—First Glucokinase Activator Studied in Type 2 Diabetic Patients

Ramakanth Sarabu; Fred T. Bizzarro; Wendy Lea Corbett; Mark T. Dvorozniak; Wanping Geng; Joseph F. Grippo; Nancy-Ellen Haynes; Stanley D. Hutchings; Lisa M. Garofalo; Kevin Richard Guertin; Darryl W. Hilliard; Marek M. Kabat; Robert Francis Kester; Wang Ka; Zhenmin Liang; Paige E. Mahaney; Linda Marcus; Franz M. Matschinsky; David Moore; Jagdish Kumar Racha; Roumen Nikolaev Radinov; Yi Ren; Lida Qi; Michael Pignatello; Cheryl L. Spence; Thomas G. Steele; John Tengi; Joseph Grimsby

Glucokinase (GK) activation as a potential strategy to treat type 2 diabetes (T2D) is well recognized. Compound 1, a glucokinase activator (GKA) lead that we have previously disclosed, caused reversible hepatic lipidosis in repeat-dose toxicology studies. We hypothesized that the hepatic lipidosis was due to the structure-based toxicity and later established that it was due to the formation of a thiourea metabolite, 2. Subsequent SAR studies of 1 led to the identification of a pyrazine-based lead analogue 3, lacking the thiazole moiety. In vivo metabolite identification studies, followed by the independent synthesis and profiling of the cyclopentyl keto- and hydroxyl- metabolites of 3, led to the selection of piragliatin, 4, as the clinical lead. Piragliatin was found to lower pre- and postprandial glucose levels, improve the insulin secretory profile, increase β-cell sensitivity to glucose, and decrease hepatic glucose output in patients with T2D.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Discovery, structure-activity relationships, pharmacokinetics, and efficacy of glucokinase activator (2R)-3-cyclopentyl-2-(4-methanesulfonylphenyl)-N-thiazol-2-yl-propionamide (RO0281675).

Nancy-Ellen Haynes; Wendy Lea Corbett; Fred T. Bizzarro; Kevin Richard Guertin; Darryl W. Hilliard; George W. Holland; Robert Francis Kester; Paige E. Mahaney; Lida Qi; Cheryl L. Spence; John Tengi; Mark T. Dvorozniak; Aruna Railkar; Franz M. Matschinsky; Joseph F. Grippo; Joseph Grimsby; Ramakanth Sarabu

Glucokinase (GK) is a glucose sensor that couples glucose metabolism to insulin release. The important role of GK in maintaining glucose homeostasis is illustrated in patients with GK mutations. In this publication, identification of the hit molecule 1 and its SAR development, which led to the discovery of potent allosteric GK activators 9a and 21a, is described. Compound 21a (RO0281675) was used to validate the clinical relevance of targeting GK to treat type 2 diabetes.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015

Synthesis, SAR, and series evolution of novel oxadiazole-containing 5-lipoxygenase activating protein inhibitors: discovery of 2-[4-(3-{(r)-1-[4-(2-amino-pyrimidin-5-yl)-phenyl]-1-cyclopropyl-ethyl}-[1,2,4]oxadiazol-5-yl)-pyrazol-1-yl]-N,N-dimethyl-acetamide (BI 665915).

Hidenori Takahashi; Doris Riether; Alessandra Bartolozzi; Todd Bosanac; Valentina Berger; Ralph Binetti; John Alan Broadwater; Zhidong Chen; Rebecca Crux; Stéphane De Lombaert; Rajvee Dave; Jonathon Alan Dines; Tazmeen Fadra-Khan; Adam Flegg; Michael Garrigou; Ming-Hong Hao; John D. Huber; J. Matthew Hutzler; Steven Kerr; Adrian Kotei Kotey; Weimin Liu; Ho Yin Lo; Pui Leng Loke; Paige E. Mahaney; Tina Morwick; Spencer Napier; Alan Olague; Edward J. Pack; Anil K. Padyana; David S. Thomson

The synthesis, structure-activity relationship (SAR), and evolution of a novel series of oxadiazole-containing 5-lipoxygenase-activating protein (FLAP) inhibitors are described. The use of structure-guided drug design techniques provided compounds that demonstrated excellent FLAP binding potency (IC50 < 10 nM) and potent inhibition of LTB4 synthesis in human whole blood (IC50 < 100 nM). Optimization of binding and functional potencies, as well as physicochemical properties resulted in the identification of compound 69 (BI 665915) that demonstrated an excellent cross-species drug metabolism and pharmacokinetics (DMPK) profile and was predicted to have low human clearance. In addition, 69 was predicted to have a low risk for potential drug-drug interactions due to its cytochrome P450 3A4 profile. In a murine ex vivo whole blood study, 69 demonstrated a linear dose-exposure relationship and a dose-dependent inhibition of LTB4 production.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2015

Development of an asymmetric synthesis of a chiral quaternary FLAP inhibitor.

Keith R. Fandrick; Jason A. Mulder; Nitinchandra D. Patel; Joe Gao; Michael Konrad; Elizabeth Archer; Frederic G. Buono; Adil Duran; Rolf Schmid; Juergen Daeubler; Jean-Nicolas Desrosiers; Xingzhong Zeng; Sonia Rodriguez; Shengli Ma; Bo Qu; Zhibin Li; Daniel R. Fandrick; Nelu Grinberg; Heewon Lee; Todd Bosanac; Hidenori Takahashi; Zhidong Chen; Alessandra Bartolozzi; Peter Allen Nemoto; Carl A. Busacca; Jinhua J. Song; Nathan K. Yee; Paige E. Mahaney; Chris H. Senanayake

A practical sequence involving a noncryogenic stereospecific boronate rearrangement followed by a robust formylation with an in situ generated DCM anion has been developed for the asymmetric construction of an all-carbon quaternary stereogenic center of a FLAP inhibitor. The key boronate rearrangement was rendered noncryogenic and robust by using LDA as the base and instituting an in situ trapping of the unstable lithiated benzylic carbamate with the boronic ester. A similar strategy was implemented for the DCM formylation reaction. It was found that the 1,2-boronate rearrangement for the formylation reaction could be temperature-controlled, thus preventing overaddition of the DCM anion and rendering the process reproducible. The robust stereospecific boronate rearrangement and formylation were utilized for the practical asymmetric synthesis of a chiral quaternary FLAP inhibitor.


Science | 2003

Allosteric activators of glucokinase: potential role in diabetes therapy.

Joseph Grimsby; Ramakanth Sarabu; Wendy Lea Corbett; Nancy-Ellen Haynes; Fred T. Bizzarro; John W. Coffey; Kevin Richard Guertin; Darryl W. Hilliard; Robert Francis Kester; Paige E. Mahaney; Linda Marcus; Lida Qi; Cheryl L. Spence; John Tengi; Mark A. Magnuson; Chang An Chu; Mark T. Dvorozniak; Franz M. Matschinsky; Joseph F. Grippo


Archive | 2001

Fused heteroaromatic glucokinase activators

Wendy Lea Corbett; Joseph Grimsby; Nancy-Ellen Haynes; Robert Francis Kester; Paige E. Mahaney; Ramakanth Sarabu


Archive | 2000

Heteroaromatic glucokinase activators

Fred T. Bizzarro; Wendy Lea Corbett; Joseph F. Grippo; Nancy-Ellen Haynes; George W. Holland; Robert Francis Kester; Paige E. Mahaney; Ramakanth Sarabu


Organic Process Research & Development | 2017

Early Development Scale-Up of a Structurally-Challenging 5-Lipoxygenase Activating Protein (FLAP) Inhibitor

Jason A. Mulder; Joe Gao; Keith R. Fandrick; Xingzhong Zeng; Jean-Nicolas Desrosiers; Nitinchandra D. Patel; Zhibin Li; Sonia Rodriguez; Jon C. Lorenz; Jun Wang; Shengli Ma; Daniel R. Fandrick; Nelu Grinberg; Heewon Lee; Todd Bosanac; Hidenori Takahashi; Zhidong Chen; Alessandra Bartolozzi; Peter Allen Nemoto; Carl A. Busacca; Jinhua J. Song; Nathan K. Yee; Paige E. Mahaney; Chris H. Senanayake


Archive | 2003

Substituted phenylacetamide and empleo0 as glucokinase activators.

Wendy Lea Corbett; Joseph Grimsby; Nancy-Ellen Haynes; Robert Francis Kester; Paige E. Mahaney; Jagdish Kumar Racha; Ramakanth Sarabu; Ka Wang


Archive | 2003

Substituerede phenylacetamider og anvendelse deraf som glucokinaseaktivatorer

Joseph Grimsby; Paige E. Mahaney; Jagdish Kumar Racha; Ka Wang; Nancy-Ellen Haynes; Robert Francis Kester; Ramakanth Sarabu; Wendy Lea Corbett

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Wendy Lea Corbett

University of Pennsylvania

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Cheryl L. Spence

University of Pennsylvania

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