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Dive into the research topics where Pierre L. Beaulieu is active.

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Featured researches published by Pierre L. Beaulieu.


Nature | 2003

An NS3 protease inhibitor with antiviral effects in humans infected with hepatitis C virus

Daniel Lamarre; Paul C. Anderson; Murray D. Bailey; Pierre L. Beaulieu; Gordon Bolger; Pierre R. Bonneau; Michael Bös; Dale R. Cameron; Mireille Cartier; Michael G. Cordingley; Anne-Marie Faucher; Nathalie Goudreau; Stephen H. Kawai; George Kukolj; Lisette Lagacé; LaPlante; Narjes H; Poupart Ma; Jean Rancourt; Sentjens Re; St George R; Bruno Simoneau; Gerhard Steinmann; Diane Thibeault; Youla S. Tsantrizos; Weldon Sm; Chan-Loi Yong; Montse Llinas-Brunet

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is a serious cause of chronic liver disease worldwide with more than 170 million infected individuals at risk of developing significant morbidity and mortality. Current interferon-based therapies are suboptimal especially in patients infected with HCV genotype 1, and they are poorly tolerated, highlighting the unmet medical need for new therapeutics. The HCV-encoded NS3 protease is essential for viral replication and has long been considered an attractive target for therapeutic intervention in HCV-infected patients. Here we identify a class of specific and potent NS3 protease inhibitors and report the evaluation of BILN 2061, a small molecule inhibitor biologically available through oral ingestion and the first of its class in human trials. Administration of BILN 2061 to patients infected with HCV genotype 1 for 2 days resulted in an impressive reduction of HCV RNA plasma levels, and established proof-of-concept in humans for an HCV NS3 protease inhibitor. Our results further illustrate the potential of the viral-enzyme-targeted drug discovery approach for the development of new HCV therapeutics.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005

Binding Site Characterization and Resistance to a Class of Non-nucleoside Inhibitors of the Hepatitis C Virus NS5B Polymerase

George Kukolj; Graham A. McGibbon; Ginette McKercher; Martin Marquis; Sylvain Lefebvre; Louise Thauvette; Jean Gauthier; Sylvie Goulet; Marc-André Poupart; Pierre L. Beaulieu

The virally encoded NS5B RNA-dependent RNA polymerase has emerged as a prime target in the search for specific HCV antivirals. A series of benzimidazole 5-carboxamide compounds inhibit the cellular RNA replication of a HCV subgenomic replicon and we have advanced our understanding of this class of inhibitors through a combination of complementary approaches that include biochemical cross-linking experiments with a photoreactive analogue followed by mass spectrometry analysis of the enzyme. A novel binding site has been localized for these inhibitors at the junction of the thumb domain and the N-terminal finger loop. Furthermore, the isolation and characterization of resistant replicon mutants that co-localize to this region distinguished this class of compounds from other non-nucleoside NS5B inhibitors that bind to distinct allosteric sites. Resistant mutations that emerged with the benzimidazole 5-carboxamide and related compounds were found at three amino acid positions in the thumb domain: Pro495 with substitutions to Ser, Leu, Ala, or Thr; Pro496 substitutions to Ser or Ala; and a V499A substitution. Mutations at each of these positions conferred different levels of resistance to this drug class: the Pro495 changes provided the greatest shifts in compound potency, followed by moderate changes in potency with the Pro496 substitutions, and finally only minor shifts in potency with V499A. Combinations that include the benzimidazole 5-carboxamide polymerase inhibitors and compounds that bind other sites or other HCV targets, including HCV protease inhibitors, are complementary in cell culture models of HCV RNA replication at suppressing the emergence of resistant variants. This novel class of compounds and unique binding site expand the diversity of HCV antivirals currently under development and offer the potential to improve the treatment of chronic HCV infection.


Expert Opinion on Therapeutic Patents | 2009

Recent advances in the development of NS5B polymerase inhibitors for the treatment of hepatitis C virus infection.

Pierre L. Beaulieu

Background: 170 to 200 million people worldwide are believed to suffer from chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection, a blood-born disease that targets the liver and progresses to organ cirrhosis and primary cancer in a significant proportion of patients. The currently available treatment has limited efficacy and suffers from restricting side effects. HCV infection is the principal cause of liver transplant in industrialized nations and between 8000 and 10,000 deaths result annually from the disease in the United States alone. Virus-specific, more efficacious, and better-tolerated anti-HCV therapies are thus required to address the unmet medical need. Objective: To review progress achieved since 2005 in the development of HCV NS5B polymerase inhibitors as potential therapy for the treatment of HCV infection with a primary focus on available patent and medical literature. Results/conclusion: Several classes of small-molecule inhibitors of HCV NS5B have progressed into clinical development and demonstrated efficacy in reducing viral load in infected patients. The results so far provide an encouraging foundation for the development of novel, more tolerable therapies and addressing emergence of resistance through combination of antiviral agents with complementary mechanisms of action.


Tetrahedron Letters | 1995

LARGE SCALE PREPARATION OF (2S,3S)-N-BOC-3-AMINO-1,2-EPOXY-4-PHENYLBUTANE : A KEY BUILDING BLOCK FOR HIV-PROTEASE INHIBITORS

Pierre L. Beaulieu; Dominik Wernic; Jean-Simon Duceppe; Yvan Guindon

Abstract (2S,3S)-N-Boc-3-amino-1,2-epoxy-4-phenylbutane is prepared in four steps from commercially available N,N-dibenzyl-L-phenylalaninol. The synthesis is amenable to the preparation of kilogram quantities of enantiomerically pure material.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Compound Aggregation in Drug Discovery: Implementing a Practical NMR Assay for Medicinal Chemists

Steven R. LaPlante; Rebekah Carson; James Gillard; René Coulombe; Sylvain Bordeleau; Pierre R. Bonneau; Michael Little; Jeff O’Meara; Pierre L. Beaulieu

The pharmaceutical industry has recognized that many drug-like molecules can self-aggregate in aqueous media and have physicochemical properties that skew experimental results and decisions. Herein, we introduce the use of a simple NMR strategy for detecting the formation of aggregates using dilution experiments that can be performed on equipment prevalent in most synthetic chemistry departments. We show that (1)H NMR resonances are sensitive to large molecular-size entities and to smaller multimers and mixtures of species. Practical details are provided for sample preparation and for determining the concentrations of single molecule, aggregate entities, and precipitate. The critical concentrations above which aggregation begins can be found and were corroborated by comparisons with light scattering techniques. Disaggregation can also be monitored using detergents. This NMR assay should serve as a practical and readily available tool for medicinal chemists to better characterize how their compounds behave in aqueous media and influence drug design decisions.


Tetrahedron Letters | 1988

Enantiospecific synthesis of D-α, ω-diaminoalkanoic acids

Pierre L. Beaulieu; Peter W. Schiller

Abstract An enantiospecific synthesis of D-N ω -Boc-α, ω-diaminoalkanoic acids starting from L-serine is described.


Organic Letters | 2010

Metal-Free Coupling of Azoles with 2- and 3-Haloindoles Providing Access to Novel 2- or 3-(Azol-1-yl)indole Derivatives

Martin Poirier; Sebastien Goudreau; Jason Poulin; Jolaine Savoie; Pierre L. Beaulieu

Thermal or microwave-mediated heating of 2- or 3-haloindoles with azoles (pK(a) < 8) provides a straightforward, metal-free, and environmentally friendly access to novel 2-(azol-1-yl)indoles. Furthermore, previously unknown 2,3-bis(azolyl-1-yl)indoles can be prepared from 2,3-dihaloindoles by sequential reaction with two distinct azoles. This operationally simple acid-catalyzed process delivers novel indole derivatives in fair to excellent yields and expands the chemical diversity of substitutions that can be introduced on this medicinally important scaffold.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Monitoring Drug Self-Aggregation and Potential for Promiscuity in Off-Target In Vitro Pharmacology Screens by a Practical NMR Strategy

Steven R. LaPlante; Gordon Bolger; Pierre R. Bonneau; Rebekah Carson; René Coulombe; Claudio Sturino; Pierre L. Beaulieu

A simple NMR assay was applied to monitor the tendency of compounds to self-aggregate in aqueous media. The observation of unusual spectral trends as a function of compound concentration appears to be signatory of the formation of self-assemblies. (1)H NMR resonances of aggregating compounds were sensitive to the presence of a range of molecular assemblies in solution including large molecular-size entities, smaller multimers, and mixtures of assembled species. The direct observation of aggregates via unusual NMR spectra also correlated with promiscuous behavior of molecules in off-target in vitro pharmacology assays. This empirical assay can have utility for predicting compound promiscuity and should complement predictive methods that principally rely on the computing of descriptors such as lipophilicity (cLogP) and topological surface area (TPSA). This assay should serve as a practical tool for medicinal chemists to monitor compound attributes in aqueous solution and various pharmacologically relevant media, as demonstrated herein.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Enantiomeric Atropisomers Inhibit HCV Polymerase and/or HIV Matrix: Characterizing Hindered Bond Rotations and Target Selectivity.

Steven R. LaPlante; Pat Forgione; Colette Boucher; René Coulombe; James Gillard; Oliver Hucke; Araz Jakalian; Marc-André Joly; George Kukolj; Christopher T. Lemke; Robert S. McCollum; Steve Titolo; Pierre L. Beaulieu; Timothy Stammers

An anthranilic acid series of allosteric thumb pocket 2 HCV NS5B polymerase inhibitors exhibited hindered rotation along a covalent bond axis, and the existence of atropisomer chirality was confirmed by NMR, HPLC analysis on chiral supports, and computational studies. A thorough understanding of the concerted rotational properties and the influence exerted by substituents involved in this steric phenomenon was attained through biophysical studies on a series of truncated analogues. The racemization half-life of a compound within this series was determined to be 69 min, which was consistent with a class 2 atropisomer (intermediate conformational exchange). It was further found by X-ray crystallography that one enantiomer of a compound bound to the intended HCV NS5B polymerase target whereas the mirror image atropisomer was able to bind to an unrelated HIV matrix target. Analogues were then identified that selectively inhibited the former. These studies highlight that atropisomer chirality can lead to distinct entities with specific properties, and the phenomenon of atropisomerism in drug discovery should be evaluated and appropriately managed.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

N-Acetamideindolecarboxylic acid allosteric ‘finger-loop’ inhibitors of the hepatitis C virus NS5B polymerase: discovery and initial optimization studies

Pierre L. Beaulieu; Eric Jolicoeur; James Gillard; Christian Brochu; René Coulombe; Nathalie Dansereau; Jianmin Duan; Michel Garneau; Araz Jakalian; Peter Kühn; Lisette Lagacé; Steven R. LaPlante; Ginette McKercher; Stéphane Perrault; Martin Poirier; Marc-André Poupart; Timothy Stammers; Louise Thauvette; Bounkham Thavonekham; George Kukolj

SAR studies at the N(1)-position of allosteric indole-based HCV NS5B inhibitors has led to the discovery of acetamide derivatives with good cellular potency in subgenomic replicons (EC(50) <200 nM). This class of inhibitors displayed improved physicochemical properties and favorable ADME-PK profiles over previously described analogs in this class.

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