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Dive into the research topics where Paul A. Renhowe is active.

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Featured researches published by Paul A. Renhowe.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Identification and structure-activity relationship of 2-morpholino 6-(3-hydroxyphenyl) pyrimidines, a class of potent and selective PI3 kinase inhibitors.

Sabina Pecchi; Paul A. Renhowe; Clarke Taylor; Susan Kaufman; Hanne Merritt; Marion Wiesmann; Kevin Shoemaker; Mark Knapp; Elizabeth Ornelas; Thomas Hendrickson; Wendy J. Fantl; Charles Voliva

PI3 Kinases are a family of lipid kinases mediating numerous cell processes such as proliferation, migration, and differentiation. The PI3 kinase pathway is often de-regulated in cancer through PI3Kα overexpression, gene amplification, mutations, and PTEN phosphatase deletion. PI3K inhibitors represent therefore an attractive therapeutic modality for cancer treatment. Herein we describe a novel series of PI3K inhibitors sharing a pyrimidine core and showing significant potency against class I PI3 kinases in the biochemical assay and in cells. The discovery, synthesis and SAR of this chemotype are described.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Design and synthesis of 5,6-fused heterocyclic amides as Raf kinase inhibitors.

Savithri Ramurthy; Abran Costales; Johanna M. Jansen; Barry Haskell Levine; Paul A. Renhowe; Cynthia Shafer; Sharadha Subramanian

Two scaffolds based on 5,6-fused heterocyclic backbones were designed and synthesized as Raf kinase inhibitors. The scaffolds were assessed for in vitro pan-Raf inhibition, activity in cell proliferation and target modulation assays, and pharmacokinetic parameters.


Molecular Cancer Research | 2014

Abstract B38: Inhibiting mutated KRAS, a broken switch of effector pathways

Johanna M. Jansen; Wolfgang Jahnke; Susan Fong; Laura Tandeske; Charles Wartchow; Keith B. Pfister; Tatiana Zavorotinskaya; Anke Blechschmidt; Dirksen E. Bussiere; Yumin Dai; Jeff Dove; Eric Fang; David Farley; Jean-Michel Florent; John Fuller; Simona Gokhin; Alvar D. Gossert; Mohammad Hekmat-Nejad; Chrystèle Henry; Julia Klopp; Bill Lenahan; Andreas Lingel; Arndt Meyer; Jamie Narberes; Gwynn Pardee; C. Gregory Paris; Savithri Ramurthy; Paul A. Renhowe; Sebastien Rieffel; Kevin Shoemaker

Mutated forms of KRAS are no longer able to switch effectors between “on” and “off” states. It is known that the function of KRAS is controlled by key parts in the C-terminus, including six consecutive lysines, a terminal prenyl moiety and a terminal carboxymethyl functional group. We set out to discover compounds which would inhibit the function of mutated KRAS as an activator for effectors. This campaign yielded several compounds that blocked biochemical and cellular functions of KRAS with low micromolar activity while not affecting markers outside of KRAS pathways in cells. In order to understand the mode of binding of these compounds to KRAS, we generated different forms of the protein, including unprenylated truncated and fully processed full-length protein. NMR studies with truncated protein (amino acids 1-169) identified a site at which compound binding stabilized the inactive conformation of KRAS. This site is located adjacent to switch-II and is similar to sites described by others. The Kd determined for this binding event is almost 3 orders of magnitude higher than the IC50 and EC50 values measured in biochemical and cellular assays. In order to understand this difference, we developed a biophysical assay using the Fortebio system which enabled binding studies in a system with full-length prenylated protein in the presence of lipids, to match the context of the biochemical and cellular assays. Micromolar binding to the full-length prenylated KRAS protein was observed in the Fortebio assay and binding was not observed in the absence of prenylation, consistent with the near millimolar Kd observed by NMR for truncated KRAS. Curiously, similar micromolar binding was seen to a peptide derived from the C-terminus of KRAS (amino acids 168-185) with and without prenyl modification while related compounds that do not bind to the full-length prenylated KRAS also do not bind to these peptides. It is still unclear whether binding to the terminal peptide in lipid context is related to the binding site adjacent to switch-II. From a drug discovery perspective, it remains to be confirmed whether current inhibitors can be optimized. Citation Format: Johanna Jansen, Wolfgang Jahnke, Susan Fong, Laura Tandeske, Charles Wartchow, Keith Pfister, Tatiana Zavorotinskaya, Anke Blechschmidt, Dirksen Bussiere, Yumin Dai, Jeff Dove, Eric Fang, David Farley, Jean-Michel Florent, John Fuller, Simona Gokhin, Alvar Gossert, Mohammad Hekmat-Nejad, Chrystele Henry, Julia Klopp, Bill Lenahan, Andreas Lingel, Arndt Meyer, Jamie Narberes, Gwynn Pardee, C Gregory Paris, Savithri Ramurthy, Paul Renhowe, Sebastien Rieffel, Kevin Shoemaker, Sharadha Subramanian, Tiffany Tsang, Stephania Widger, Armin Widmer, Isabel Zaror, Stephen Hardy. Inhibiting mutated KRAS, a broken switch of effector pathways. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the AACR Special Conference on RAS Oncogenes: From Biology to Therapy; Feb 24-27, 2014; Lake Buena Vista, FL. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Mol Cancer Res 2014;12(12 Suppl):Abstract nr B38. doi: 10.1158/1557-3125.RASONC14-B38


Archive | 2003

Substituted benzazoles and use thereof as raf kinase inhibitors

Paul A. Renhowe; Savithri Ramurthy; Payman Amiri; Barry Haskell Levine; Daniel J. Poon; Sharadha Subramanian; Leonard Sung; Wendy J. Fantl


Archive | 2009

Novel heterocyclic compounds and uses therof

Zilin Hunag; Jeff Jin; Timothy D. Machajewski; William R. Antonios-McCrea; Maureen Mckenna; Daniel Poon; Paul A. Renhowe; Martin Sendzik; Cynthia Shafer; Aaron Smith; Yongjin Xu; Qiong Zhang; Zheng Chen


Archive | 2006

2-amino-7,8-dihydro-6h-pyrido[4,3-d] pyrimidin-5-ones

Timothy D. Machajewski; Cynthia Shafer; Christopher Mcbride; William R. Antonios-McCrea; Brandon M. Doughan; Barry Haskell Levine; Yi Xia; Maureen Mckenna; X. Michael Wang; Kris Mendenhall; Yasheen Zhou; Baoqing Gong; Dan Gu; John Dolan; John Tulinsky; Kristin Brinner; Zhenhai Gao; Daniel Poon; Paul A. Barsanti; Xiaodong Lin; Abran Costales; Alice Rico; Nathan Brammeier; Teresa E. Pick; Paul A. Renhowe


Archive | 2010

Substituted benzimidazoles and methods of their use

Mina E. Aikawa; Payman Amiri; Jeffrey H. Dove; Barry Haskell Levine; Christopher Mcbride; Teresa E. Pick; Daniel J. Poon; Savithri Ramurthy; Paul A. Renhowe; Cynthia Shafer; Darrin Stuart; Sharadha Subramanian


Archive | 2009

Substituted imidazole derivatives

Weibo Wang; Paul A. Barsanti; Yia Xia; Rustum Boyce; Sabina Pecchi; Nathan Brammeier; Megan C. Phillips; Kris Mendenhall; Kelly Wayman; Liana Marie Lagniton; Ryan Constantine; Hong Yang; Elizabeth Mieuli; Savithri Ramurthy; Elisa Jazan; Anu Sharma; Rama Jain; Sharadha Subramanian; Paul A. Renhowe; Kenneth W. Bair; David Duhl; Annette Walter; Tinya Abrams; Kay Huh; Eric J. Martin; Mark Knapp; Vincent P. Le


Archive | 2012

Substituted bi-heteroaryl compounds as cdk9 inhibitors and their uses

William R. Antonios-McCrea; Paul A. Barsanti; Cheng Hu; Xianming Jin; Eric J. Martin; Yue Pan; Xiaodong Lin; Keith B. Pfister; Paul A. Renhowe; Martin Sendzik; James Sutton; Lifeng Wan


Archive | 2006

Substituted imidazole compounds as KSP inhibitors

Paul A. Barsanti; Yi Xia; Weibo Wang; Kris Mendenhall; Liana Marie Lagniton; Savithri Ramurthy; Megan C. Phillips; Sharadha Subramanian; Rustum Boyce; Nathan Brammeier; Ryan Constantine; David Duhl; Annette Walter; Tinya Abrams; Paul A. Renhowe

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