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Dive into the research topics where Prabha N. Ibrahim is active.

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Featured researches published by Prabha N. Ibrahim.


Nature | 2010

Clinical efficacy of a RAF inhibitor needs broad target blockade in BRAF -mutant melanoma

Gideon Bollag; Peter Hirth; James H. Tsai; Jiazhong Zhang; Prabha N. Ibrahim; Hanna Cho; Wayne Spevak; Chao Zhang; Ying Zhang; Gaston Habets; Elizabeth A. Burton; Bernice Wong; Garson Tsang; Brian L. West; Ben Powell; Rafe Shellooe; Adhirai Marimuthu; Hoa Nguyen; Kam Y. J. Zhang; Dean R. Artis; Joseph Schlessinger; Fei Su; Brian Higgins; Raman Mahadevan Iyer; Kurt D'Andrea; Astrid Koehler; Michael Stumm; Paul S. Lin; Richard J. Lee; Joseph F. Grippo

B-RAF is the most frequently mutated protein kinase in human cancers. The finding that oncogenic mutations in BRAF are common in melanoma, followed by the demonstration that these tumours are dependent on the RAF/MEK/ERK pathway, offered hope that inhibition of B-RAF kinase activity could benefit melanoma patients. Herein, we describe the structure-guided discovery of PLX4032 (RG7204), a potent inhibitor of oncogenic B-RAF kinase activity. Preclinical experiments demonstrated that PLX4032 selectively blocked the RAF/MEK/ERK pathway in BRAF mutant cells and caused regression of BRAF mutant xenografts. Toxicology studies confirmed a wide safety margin consistent with the high degree of selectivity, enabling Phase 1 clinical trials using a crystalline formulation of PLX4032 (ref. 5). In a subset of melanoma patients, pathway inhibition was monitored in paired biopsy specimens collected before treatment initiation and following two weeks of treatment. This analysis revealed substantial inhibition of ERK phosphorylation, yet clinical evaluation did not show tumour regressions. At higher drug exposures afforded by a new amorphous drug formulation, greater than 80% inhibition of ERK phosphorylation in the tumours of patients correlated with clinical response. Indeed, the Phase 1 clinical data revealed a remarkably high 81% response rate in metastatic melanoma patients treated at an oral dose of 960 mg twice daily. These data demonstrate that BRAF-mutant melanomas are highly dependent on B-RAF kinase activity.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Discovery of a selective inhibitor of oncogenic B-Raf kinase with potent antimelanoma activity.

James H. Tsai; John T. Lee; Weiru Wang; Jiazhong Zhang; Hanna Cho; Shumeye Mamo; Ryan Bremer; Sam Gillette; Jun Kong; Nikolas K. Haass; Katrin Sproesser; Ling Li; Keiran S.M. Smalley; Daniel Fong; Yong-Liang Zhu; Adhirai Marimuthu; Hoa Nguyen; Billy Lam; Jennifer Liu; Ivana Cheung; Julie Rice; Yoshihisa Suzuki; Catherine Luu; Calvin Settachatgul; Rafe Shellooe; John Cantwell; Sung-Hou Kim; Joseph Schlessinger; Kam Y. J. Zhang; Brian L. West

BRAFV600E is the most frequent oncogenic protein kinase mutation known. Furthermore, inhibitors targeting “active” protein kinases have demonstrated significant utility in the therapeutic repertoire against cancer. Therefore, we pursued the development of specific kinase inhibitors targeting B-Raf, and the V600E allele in particular. By using a structure-guided discovery approach, a potent and selective inhibitor of active B-Raf has been discovered. PLX4720, a 7-azaindole derivative that inhibits B-RafV600E with an IC50 of 13 nM, defines a class of kinase inhibitor with marked selectivity in both biochemical and cellular assays. PLX4720 preferentially inhibits the active B-RafV600E kinase compared with a broad spectrum of other kinases, and potent cytotoxic effects are also exclusive to cells bearing the V600E allele. Consistent with the high degree of selectivity, ERK phosphorylation is potently inhibited by PLX4720 in B-RafV600E-bearing tumor cell lines but not in cells lacking oncogenic B-Raf. In melanoma models, PLX4720 induces cell cycle arrest and apoptosis exclusively in B-RafV600E-positive cells. In B-RafV600E-dependent tumor xenograft models, orally dosed PLX4720 causes significant tumor growth delays, including tumor regressions, without evidence of toxicity. The work described here represents the entire discovery process, from initial identification through structural and biological studies in animal models to a promising therapeutic for testing in cancer patients bearing B-RafV600E-driven tumors.


Nature Reviews Drug Discovery | 2012

Vemurafenib: the first drug approved for BRAF -mutant cancer

Gideon Bollag; James H. Tsai; Jiazhong Zhang; Chao Zhang; Prabha N. Ibrahim; Keith Nolop; Peter Hirth

The identification of driver oncogenes has provided important targets for drugs that can change the landscape of cancer therapies. One such example is the BRAF oncogene, which is found in about half of all melanomas as well as several other cancers. As a druggable kinase, oncogenic BRAF has become a crucial target of small-molecule drug discovery efforts. Following a rapid clinical development path, vemurafenib (Zelboraf; Plexxikon/Roche) was approved for the treatment of BRAF-mutated metastatic melanoma in the United States in August 2011 and the European Union in February 2012. This Review describes the underlying biology of BRAF, the technology used to identify vemurafenib and its clinical development milestones, along with future prospects based on lessons learned during its development.


Nature Biotechnology | 2005

A family of phosphodiesterase inhibitors discovered by cocrystallography and scaffold-based drug design

Graeme L. Card; Landy Blasdel; Bruce England; Chao Zhang; Yoshihisa Suzuki; Sam Gillette; Daniel Fong; Prabha N. Ibrahim; Dean R. Artis; Gideon Bollag; Michael V. Milburn; Sung-Hou Kim; Joseph Schlessinger; Kam Y. J. Zhang

Cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases (PDEs) comprise a large family of enzymes that regulate a variety of cellular processes. We describe a family of potent PDE4 inhibitors discovered using an efficient method for scaffold-based drug design. This method involves an iterative approach starting with low-affinity screening of compounds followed by high-throughput cocrystallography to reveal the molecular basis underlying the activity of the newly identified compounds. Through detailed structural analysis of the interaction of the initially discovered pyrazole carboxylic ester scaffold with PDE4D using X-ray crystallography, we identified three sites of chemical substitution and designed small selective libraries of scaffold derivatives with modifications at these sites. A 4,000-fold increase in the potency of this PDE4 inhibitor was achieved after only two rounds of chemical synthesis and the structural analysis of seven pyrazole derivatives bound to PDE4B or PDE4D, revealing the robustness of this approach for identifying new inhibitors that can be further developed into drug candidates.


Nature | 2015

RAF inhibitors that evade paradoxical MAPK pathway activation

Chao Zhang; Wayne Spevak; Ying Zhang; Elizabeth A. Burton; Yan Ma; Gaston Habets; Jiazhong Zhang; Jack Lin; Todd Ewing; Bernice Matusow; Garson Tsang; Adhirai Marimuthu; Hanna Cho; Guoxian Wu; Weiru Wang; Daniel Fong; Hoa Nguyen; Songyuan Shi; Patrick Womack; Marika Nespi; Rafe Shellooe; Heidi Carias; Ben Powell; Emily Light; Laura Sanftner; Jason Walters; James H. Tsai; Brian L. West; Gary Conard Visor; Hamid Rezaei

Oncogenic activation of BRAF fuels cancer growth by constitutively promoting RAS-independent mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway signalling. Accordingly, RAF inhibitors have brought substantially improved personalized treatment of metastatic melanoma. However, these targeted agents have also revealed an unexpected consequence: stimulated growth of certain cancers. Structurally diverse ATP-competitive RAF inhibitors can either inhibit or paradoxically activate the MAPK pathway, depending whether activation is by BRAF mutation or by an upstream event, such as RAS mutation or receptor tyrosine kinase activation. Here we have identified next-generation RAF inhibitors (dubbed ‘paradox breakers’) that suppress mutant BRAF cells without activating the MAPK pathway in cells bearing upstream activation. In cells that express the same HRAS mutation prevalent in squamous tumours from patients treated with RAF inhibitors, the first-generation RAF inhibitor vemurafenib stimulated in vitro and in vivo growth and induced expression of MAPK pathway response genes; by contrast the paradox breakers PLX7904 and PLX8394 had no effect. Paradox breakers also overcame several known mechanisms of resistance to first-generation RAF inhibitors. Dissociating MAPK pathway inhibition from paradoxical activation might yield both improved safety and more durable efficacy than first-generation RAF inhibitors, a concept currently undergoing human clinical evaluation with PLX8394.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2015

Structure-Guided Blockade of CSF1R Kinase in Tenosynovial Giant-Cell Tumor

William D. Tap; Zev A. Wainberg; Stephen P. Anthony; Prabha N. Ibrahim; Chao Zhang; John H. Healey; Bartosz Chmielowski; Arthur P. Staddon; Allen Lee Cohn; Geoffrey I. Shapiro; Vicki L. Keedy; Arun S. Singh; Igor Puzanov; Eunice L. Kwak; Andrew J. Wagner; Daniel D. Von Hoff; Glen J. Weiss; Ramesh K. Ramanathan; Jiazhong Zhang; Gaston Habets; Ying Zhang; Elizabeth A. Burton; Gary Conard Visor; Laura Sanftner; Paul Severson; Hoa Nguyen; Marie J. Kim; Adhirai Marimuthu; Garson Tsang; Rafe Shellooe

BACKGROUND Expression of the colony-stimulating factor 1 (CSF1) gene is elevated in most tenosynovial giant-cell tumors. This observation has led to the discovery and clinical development of therapy targeting the CSF1 receptor (CSF1R). METHODS Using x-ray co-crystallography to guide our drug-discovery research, we generated a potent, selective CSF1R inhibitor, PLX3397, that traps the kinase in the autoinhibited conformation. We then conducted a multicenter, phase 1 trial in two parts to analyze this compound. In the first part, we evaluated escalations in the dose of PLX3397 that was administered orally in patients with solid tumors (dose-escalation study). In the second part, we evaluated PLX3397 at the chosen phase 2 dose in an extension cohort of patients with tenosynovial giant-cell tumors (extension study). Pharmacokinetic and tumor responses in the enrolled patients were assessed, and CSF1 in situ hybridization was performed to confirm the mechanism of action of PLX3397 and that the pattern of CSF1 expression was consistent with the pathological features of tenosynovial giant-cell tumor. RESULTS A total of 41 patients were enrolled in the dose-escalation study, and an additional 23 patients were enrolled in the extension study. The chosen phase 2 dose of PLX3397 was 1000 mg per day. In the extension study, 12 patients with tenosynovial giant-cell tumors had a partial response and 7 patients had stable disease. Responses usually occurred within the first 4 months of treatment, and the median duration of response exceeded 8 months. The most common adverse events included fatigue, change in hair color, nausea, dysgeusia, and periorbital edema; adverse events rarely led to discontinuation of treatment. CONCLUSIONS Treatment of tenosynovial giant-cell tumors with PLX3397 resulted in a prolonged regression in tumor volume in most patients. (Funded by Plexxikon; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT01004861.).


Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences | 2013

Improved Human Bioavailability of Vemurafenib, a Practically Insoluble Drug, Using an Amorphous Polymer-Stabilized Solid Dispersion Prepared by a Solvent-Controlled Coprecipitation Process

Navnit Shah; Raman Mahadevan Iyer; Hans-Juergen Mair; Duk Soon Choi; Hung Tian; Ralph Diodone; Karsten Fähnrich; Anni Pabst-Ravot; Kin Tang; Emmanuel Scheubel; Joseph F. Grippo; Sebastian A. Moreira; Zenaida Go; James Mouskountakis; Theresa Louie; Prabha N. Ibrahim; Harpreet K. Sandhu; Linda Rubia; Hitesh Chokshi; Dharmendra Singhal; Waseem Malick

The present work deals with improving the solubility of vemurafenib, a practically insoluble drug, by converting it into an amorphous-solid dispersion using a solvent-controlled precipitation process. The dispersion containing vemurafenib and hypromellose acetate succinate (HPMCAS), an enteric polymer, is termed microprecipitated bulk powder (MBP), in which the drug is uniformly dispersed within the polymeric substrate. HPMCAS was found to be the most suitable polymer for vemurafenib MBP, among a series of enteric polymers based on superior physical stability and drug-release characteristics of the MBP. The MBP provided a greater rate and extent of dissolution than crystalline drug, reaching an apparent drug concentration of 28-35 µg/mL, almost 30-fold higher than solubility of crystalline drug at 1 µg/mL. The supersaturation was also maintained for more than 4 h. Upon exposure to high temperature and humidity, the MBP was destabilized, resulting in crystallization and lower dissolution rate. The control of moisture and temperature is essential to maintain the stability of the MBP. In a relative human bioavailability study, vemurafenib MBP provided a four- to fivefold increase in exposure compared with crystalline drug. Improving solubility with an amorphous-solid dispersion is a viable strategy for the development of practically insoluble compounds.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Scaffold-based discovery of indeglitazar, a PPAR pan-active anti-diabetic agent

Dean R. Artis; J. J. Lin; Chao Zhang; Weiru Wang; U. Mehra; M. Perreault; D. Erbe; H. I. Krupka; B. P. England; J. Arnold; A. N. Plotnikov; Adhirai Marimuthu; Hoa Nguyen; S. Will; M. Signaevsky; J. Kral; J. Cantwell; C. Settachatgull; D. S. Yan; Daniel Fong; A. Oh; S. Shi; P. Womack; Ben Powell; Gaston Habets; Brian L. West; Kam Y. J. Zhang; M. V. Milburn; G. P. Vlasuk; K. P. Hirth

In a search for more effective anti-diabetic treatment, we used a process coupling low-affinity biochemical screening with high-throughput co-crystallography in the design of a series of compounds that selectively modulate the activities of all three peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs), PPARα, PPARγ, and PPARδ. Transcriptional transactivation assays were used to select compounds from this chemical series with a bias toward partial agonism toward PPARγ, to circumvent the clinically observed side effects of full PPARγ agonists. Co-crystallographic characterization of the lead molecule, indeglitazar, in complex with each of the 3 PPARs revealed the structural basis for its PPAR pan-activity and its partial agonistic response toward PPARγ. Compared with full PPARγ-agonists, indeglitazar is less potent in promoting adipocyte differentiation and only partially effective in stimulating adiponectin gene expression. Evaluation of the compound in vivo confirmed the reduced adiponectin response in animal models of obesity and diabetes while revealing strong beneficial effects on glucose, triglycerides, cholesterol, body weight, and other metabolic parameters. Indeglitazar has now progressed to Phase II clinical evaluations for Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM).


Expert Opinion on Therapeutic Targets | 2005

Phosphodiesterase-4 as a potential drug target

Kam Y. J. Zhang; Prabha N. Ibrahim; Sam Gillette; Gideon Bollag

Phosphodiesterase-4 (PDE4) is the predominant enzyme in some specific cell types that is responsible for the degradation of the second messenger, cAMP. Consequently, PDE4 plays a crucial role in cell signalling and, as such, it has been the target of clinical drug development of various indications, ranging from anti-inflammation to memory enhancement. In this review, the fundamental biological role of PDE4 in intracellular signalling, its tissue distribution and regulation are described. The historical development of various chemical classes of PDE4 inhibitors and the challenges that face these inhibitors as therapeutics are also discussed. Finally, recent advances in the structural biology of PDE4 and their complexes with various inhibitors, as well as its potential impact on the rational design of potent and selective PDE4 inhibitors, are presented.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Design and pharmacology of a highly specific dual FMS and KIT kinase inhibitor

Chao Zhang; Prabha N. Ibrahim; Jiazhong Zhang; Elizabeth A. Burton; Gaston Habets; Ying Zhang; Ben Powell; Brian L. West; Bernice Matusow; Garson Tsang; Rafe Shellooe; Heidi Carias; Hoa Nguyen; Adhirai Marimuthu; Kam Y. J. Zhang; Angela Oh; Ryan Bremer; Clarence R. Hurt; Dean R. Artis; Guoxian Wu; Marika Nespi; Wayne Spevak; Paul S. Lin; Keith Nolop; Peter Hirth; Gregory H Tesch; Gideon Bollag

Inflammation and cancer, two therapeutic areas historically addressed by separate drug discovery efforts, are now coupled in treatment approaches by a growing understanding of the dynamic molecular dialogues between immune and cancer cells. Agents that target specific compartments of the immune system, therefore, not only bring new disease modifying modalities to inflammatory diseases, but also offer a new avenue to cancer therapy by disrupting immune components of the microenvironment that foster tumor growth, progression, immune evasion, and treatment resistance. McDonough feline sarcoma viral (v-fms) oncogene homolog (FMS) and v-kit Hardy-Zuckerman 4 feline sarcoma viral oncogene homolog (KIT) are two hematopoietic cell surface receptors that regulate the development and function of macrophages and mast cells, respectively. We disclose a highly specific dual FMS and KIT kinase inhibitor developed from a multifaceted chemical scaffold. As expected, this inhibitor blocks the activation of macrophages, osteoclasts, and mast cells controlled by these two receptors. More importantly, the dual FMS and KIT inhibition profile has translated into a combination of benefits in preclinical disease models of inflammation and cancer.

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