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Featured researches published by Phieng Siliphaivanh.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Purine derivatives as potent γ-secretase modulators

Alexey Rivkin; Sean P. Ahearn; Stephanie M. Chichetti; Christopher Hamblett; Yudith Garcia; Michelle Martinez; Jed L. Hubbs; Michael H. Reutershan; Matthew H. Daniels; Phieng Siliphaivanh; Karin M. Otte; Chaomin Li; Andrew Rosenau; Laura Surdi; Joon Jung; Bethany Hughes; Jamie L. Crispino; George Nikov; Richard E. Middleton; Christopher M. Moxham; Alexander A. Szewczak; Sanjiv Shah; Lily Y. Moy; Candia M. Kenific; Flobert Tanga; Jonathan C. Cruz; Paula Andrade; Minilik Angagaw; Nirah H. Shomer; Thomas A. Miller

The development of a novel series of purines as gamma-secretase modulators for potential use in the treatment of Alzheimers disease is disclosed herein. Optimization of a previously disclosed pyrimidine series afforded a series of potent purine-based gamma-secretase modulators with 300- to 2000-fold in vitro selectivity over inhibition of Notch cleavage and that selectively reduces Alphabeta42 in an APP-YAC transgenic mouse model.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008

Phenylglycine and phenylalanine derivatives as potent and selective HDAC1 inhibitors (SHI-1)

Kevin J. Wilson; David J. Witter; Jonathan Grimm; Phieng Siliphaivanh; Karin M. Otte; Astrid M. Kral; Judith C. Fleming; Andreas Harsch; Julie E. Hamill; Jonathan C. Cruz; Melissa Chenard; Alexander A. Szewczak; Richard E. Middleton; Bethany Hughes; William K. Dahlberg; J. Paul Secrist; Thomas A. Miller

An HTS screening campaign identified a series of low molecular weight phenols that showed excellent selectivity (>100-fold) for HDAC1/HDAC2 over other Class I and Class II HDACs. Evolution and optimization of this HTS hit series provided HDAC1-selective (SHI-1) compounds with excellent anti-proliferative activity and improved physical properties. Dose-dependent efficacy in a mouse HCT116 xenograft model was demonstrated with a phenylglycine SHI-1 analog.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016

Discovery of 1-(1H-Pyrazolo[4,3-c]pyridin-6-yl)urea Inhibitors of Extracellular Signal-Regulated Kinase (ERK) for the Treatment of Cancers

Jongwon Lim; Elizabeth Helen Kelley; Joey L. Methot; Hua Zhou; Alessia Petrocchi; Hongmin Chen; Susan E. Hill; Marlene C. Hinton; Alan Hruza; Joon Jung; John Maclean; My Mansueto; George N. Naumov; Ulrike Philippar; Shruti Raut; Peter Spacciapoli; Dongyu Sun; Phieng Siliphaivanh

The ERK/MAPK pathway plays a central role in the regulation of critical cellular processes and is activated in more than 30% of human cancers. Specific BRAF and MEK inhibitors have shown clinical efficacy in patients for the treatment of BRAF-mutant melanoma. However, the majority of responses are transient, and resistance is often associated with pathway reactivation of the ERK signal pathway. Acquired resistance to these agents has led to greater interest in ERK, a downstream target of the MAPK pathway. De novo design efforts of a novel scaffold derived from SCH772984 by employing hydrogen bond interactions specific for ERK in the binding pocket identified 1-(1H-pyrazolo[4,3-c]pyridin-6-yl)ureas as a viable lead series. Sequential SAR studies led to the identification of highly potent and selective ERK inhibitors with low molecular weight and high LE. Compound 21 exhibited potent target engagement and strong tumor regression in the BRAF(V600E) xenograft model.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2014

Delayed and Prolonged Histone Hyperacetylation with a Selective HDAC1/HDAC2 Inhibitor.

Joey L. Methot; Dawn Mampreian Hoffman; David J. Witter; Matthew G. Stanton; Paul Harrington; Christopher Hamblett; Phieng Siliphaivanh; Kevin J. Wilson; Jed L. Hubbs; Richard Heidebrecht; Astrid M. Kral; Nicole Ozerova; Judith C. Fleming; Hongmei Wang; Alexander A. Szewczak; Richard E. Middleton; Bethany Hughes; Jonathan C. Cruz; Brian B. Haines; Melissa Chenard; Candia M. Kenific; Andreas Harsch; J. Paul Secrist; Thomas A. Miller

The identification and in vitro and in vivo characterization of a potent SHI-1:2 are described. Kinetic analysis indicated that biaryl inhibitors exhibit slow binding kinetics in isolated HDAC1 and HDAC2 preparations. Delayed histone hyperacetylation and gene expression changes were also observed in cell culture, and histone acetylation was observed in vivo beyond disappearance of drug from plasma. In vivo studies further demonstrated that continuous target inhibition was well tolerated and efficacious in tumor-bearing mice, leading to tumor growth inhibition with either once-daily or intermittent administration.


European Journal of Pharmacology | 2014

Anti-inflammatory actions of Chemoattractant Receptor-homologous molecule expressed on Th2 by the antagonist MK-7246 in a novel rat model of Alternaria alternata elicited pulmonary inflammation

Malgorzata Gil; Michael Caniga; Janice D. Woodhouse; Joseph Eckman; Hyun-Hee Lee; Michael Salmon; John R. Naber; Valerie T. Hamilton; Raquel Sevilla; Kimberly A. Bettano; Joel A. Klappenbach; Lily Y. Moy; Craig Correll; François G. Gervais; Phieng Siliphaivanh; Weisheng Zhang; Jie Zhang-Hoover; Robbie McLeod; Milenko Cicmil

Alternaria alternata is a fungal allergen linked to the development of severe asthma in humans. In view of the clinical relationship between A. alternata and asthma, we sought to investigate the allergic activity of this antigen after direct application to the lungs of Brown Norway rats. Here we demonstrate that a single intratracheal instillation of A. alternata induces dose and time dependent eosinophil influx, edema and Type 2 helper cell cytokine production in the lungs of BN rats. We established the temporal profile of eosinophilic infiltration and cytokine production, such as Interleukin-5 and Interleukin-13, following A. alternata challenge. These responses were comparable to Ovalbumin induced models of asthma and resulted in peak inflammatory responses 48h following a single challenge, eliminating the need for multiple sensitizations and challenges. The initial perivascular and peribronchiolar inflammation preceded alveolar inflammation, progressing to a more sub-acute inflammatory response with notable epithelial cell hypertrophy. To limit the effects of an A. alternata inflammatory response, MK-7246 was utilized as it is an antagonist for Chemoattractant Receptor-homologous molecule expressed in Th2 cells. In a dose-dependent manner, MK-7246 decreased eosinophil influx and Th2 cytokine production following the A. alternata challenge. Furthermore, therapeutic administration of corticosteroids resulted in a dose-dependent decrease in eosinophil influx and Th2 cytokine production. Reproducible asthma-related outcomes and amenability to pharmacological intervention by mechanisms relevant to asthma demonstrate that an A. alternata induced pulmonary inflammation in BN rats is a valuable preclinical pharmacodynamic in vivo model for evaluating the pharmacological inhibitors of allergic pulmonary inflammation.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2014

Quality by design (QbD) of amide isosteres: 5,5-Disubstituted isoxazolines as potent CRTh2 antagonists with favorable pharmacokinetic and drug-like properties.

Dong Xiao; Xiaohong Zhu; Younong Yu; Ning Shao; Jie Wu; Kevin D. McCormick; Pawan Dhondi; Jun Qin; Robert Mazzola; Haiqun Tang; Ashwin U. Rao; Phieng Siliphaivanh; Hongchen Qiu; Xiaoxin Yang; Maria A. Rivelli; Charles G. Garlisi; Steve Eckel; Gitali Mukhopadhyay; Craig Correll; Diane Rindgen; Robert Aslanian; Anandan Palani

Isoxazoles are frequently used amide isosteres, as shown in the context of discovery of CRTh2 antagonists from amide 1 to isoxazole 2. However, persistent agonism and poor solubility in isoxazole series presented challenges to its further development. Based on the concept of quality by design (QbD), 5,5-disubstituted isoxazolines 3 were introduced. The chirality at 5 position of isoxazolines controlled the switch between two modes of actions, which led to a novel series of pure antagonists. This non-planar motif also conferred a change of shape of these molecules, which avoided flat structures and improved their physical properties.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2018

Discovery of MK-8318, a Potent and Selective CRTh2 Receptor Antagonist for the Treatment of Asthma

Xianhai Huang; Jason Brubaker; Wei Zhou; Purakkattle J. Biju; Li Xiao; Ning Shao; Ying Huang; Li Dong; Zhidan Liu; Rema Bitar; Alexei V. Buevich; Joon Jung; Scott L. Peterson; John W. Butcher; Joshua Close; Michelle Martinez; Rachel N. Maccoss; Hongjun Zhang; Scott Crawford; Kevin D. Mccormick; Robert G. Aslanian; Ravi P. Nargund; Craig Correll; François G. Gervais; Hongchen Qiu; Xiaoxin Yang; Charles G. Garlisi; Diane Rindgen; Kevin M. Maloney; Phieng Siliphaivanh

A novel series of tricyclic tetrahydroquinolines were identified as potent and selective CRTh2 receptor antagonists. The agonism and antagonism switch was achieved through structure-based drug design (SBDD) using a CRTh2 receptor homologue model. The challenge of very low exposures in pharmacokinetic studies was overcome by exhaustive medicinal chemistry lead optimization through focused SAR studies on the tricyclic core. Further optimization resulted in the identification of the preclinical candidate 4-(cyclopropyl((3aS,9R,9aR)-7-fluoro-4-(4-(trifluoromethoxy)benzoyl)-2,3,3a,4,9,9a-hexahydro-1H-cyclopenta[b]quinolin-9-yl)amino)-4-oxobutanoic acid (15c, MK-8318) with potent and selective CRTh2 antagonist activity and a favorable PK profile suitable for once daily oral dosing for potential treatment of asthma.


SLAS DISCOVERY: Advancing Life Sciences R&D | 2017

Label-Free, LC-MS-Based Assays to Quantitate Small-Molecule Antagonist Binding to the Mammalian BLT1 Receptor

Xun Chen; Steven J. Stout; Uwe Mueller; George Boykow; Richard Visconti; Phieng Siliphaivanh; Kerrie Spencer; Michael Kavana; Andrea D. Basso; David G. McLaren; Robert W. Myers

We have developed and validated label-free, liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry (LC-MS)-based equilibrium direct and competition binding assays to quantitate small-molecule antagonist binding to recombinant human and mouse BLT1 receptors expressed in HEK 293 cell membranes. Procedurally, these binding assays involve (1) equilibration of the BLT1 receptor and probe ligand, with or without a competitor; (2) vacuum filtration through cationic glass fiber filters to separate receptor-bound from free probe ligand; and (3) LC-MS analysis in selected reaction monitoring mode for bound probe ligand quantitation. Two novel, optimized probe ligands, compounds 1 and 2, were identified by screening 20 unlabeled BLT1 antagonists for direct binding. Saturation direct binding studies confirmed the high affinity, and dissociation studies established the rapid binding kinetics of probe ligands 1 and 2. Competition binding assays were established using both probe ligands, and the affinities of structurally diverse BLT1 antagonists were measured. Both binding assay formats can be executed with high specificity and sensitivity and moderate throughput (96-well plate format) using these approaches. This highly versatile, label-free method for studying ligand binding to membrane-associated receptors should find broad application as an alternative to traditional methods using labeled ligands.


Archive | 2014

Novel compounds that are erk inhibitors

Kevin J. Wilson; David J. Witter; Matthew H. Daniels; Angie R. Angeles; Phieng Siliphaivanh; David L. Sloman; Brendan M. O'boyle; Danielle Falcone; Catherine White; Ron Ferguson; Wei Zhou; Kathryn Lipford; Umar Faruk Mansoor; Salem Fevrier; Xianhai Huang; Ravi Kurukulasuriya; Judson E. Richard; Shuyi Tang; Christopher W. Boyce; Joseph A. Kozlowski; Raman K. Bakshi; Ganesh Babu Karunakaran


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2007

Design of novel histone deacetylase inhibitors

Phieng Siliphaivanh; Paul Harrington; David J. Witter; Karin M. Otte; Paul Tempest; Sam Kattar; Astrid M. Kral; Judith C. Fleming; Sujal V. Deshmukh; Andreas Harsch; Paul Secrist; Thomas A. Miller

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