Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Ramesh Padmanabha is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Ramesh Padmanabha.


Analytical Biochemistry | 2003

Targeting the MraY and MurG bacterial enzymes for antimicrobial therapeutic intervention.

Laura Zawadzke; Ping Wu; Lynda S. Cook; Li Fan; Margaret Casperson; Mona Kishnani; Deepa Calambur; Sandra J. Hofstead; Ramesh Padmanabha

Assays for two enzymes from Escherichia coli were developed and validated as antibacterial inhibitor screens. The MraY and MurG enzymes were overexpressed and purified as the membrane fraction or to homogeneity, respectively. The MurG enzyme was expressed with a six-histidine tag using an optimized minimal-medium protocol for subsequent purification. Although traditional assays were established, the enzymes were also assayed via a 96-well membrane plate assay and a 384-well scintillation proximity-based assay developed herein. These assays afford a more economical and high-throughput evaluation of inhibitors. A mureidomycin inhibitor mix was used as a control for the assay development and screen validation. Several inhibitors resulting from a high-throughput screen were found and evaluated for potential therapeutic use.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Acyl guanidine inhibitors of β-secretase (BACE-1): optimization of a micromolar hit to a nanomolar lead via iterative solid- and solution-phase library synthesis.

Samuel W. Gerritz; Weixu Zhai; Shuhao Shi; Shirong Zhu; Jeremy H. Toyn; Jere E. Meredith; Lawrence G. Iben; Catherine R. Burton; Charles F. Albright; Andrew C. Good; Andrew J. Tebben; Jodi K. Muckelbauer; Daniel M. Camac; William J. Metzler; Lynda S. Cook; Ramesh Padmanabha; Kimberley A. Lentz; Michael J. Sofia; Michael A. Poss; John E. Macor; Lorin A. Thompson

This report describes the discovery and optimization of a BACE-1 inhibitor series containing an unusual acyl guanidine chemotype that was originally synthesized as part of a 6041-membered solid-phase library. The synthesis of multiple follow-up solid- and solution-phase libraries facilitated the optimization of the original micromolar hit into a single-digit nanomolar BACE-1 inhibitor in both radioligand binding and cell-based functional assay formats. The X-ray structure of representative inhibitors bound to BACE-1 revealed a number of key ligand:protein interactions, including a hydrogen bond between the side chain amide of flap residue Gln73 and the acyl guanidine carbonyl group, and a cation-π interaction between Arg235 and the isothiazole 4-methoxyphenyl substituent. Following subcutaneous administration in rats, an acyl guanidine inhibitor with single-digit nanomolar activity in cells afforded good plasma exposures and a dose-dependent reduction in plasma Aβ levels, but poor brain exposure was observed (likely due to Pgp-mediated efflux), and significant reductions in brain Aβ levels were not obtained.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 1998

1-Methoxy-agroclavine from Penicillium sp. WC75209, a novel inhibitor of the Lck tyrosine kinase

Ramesh Padmanabha; Yue-Zhong Shu; Lynda S. Cook; Judy A. Veitch; Marcella Donovan; Susan E. Lowe; Stella Huang; Dolores M. Pirnik; Susan P. Manly

A high-throughput screen was developed and implemented to identify inhibitors of the Lck tyrosine kinase. This report describes the identification of a specific inhibitor of this enzyme from the solid fermentation culture of the Penicillium sp., WC75209. The active compound was isolated and structurally characterized as 1-methoxy-5R, 10S-agroclavine, a new member of the ergot alkaloid family.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2016

Robust Translation of γ-Secretase Modulator Pharmacology across Preclinical Species and Human Subjects

Jeremy H. Toyn; Kenneth M. Boy; Joseph Raybon; Jere E. Meredith; Alan S. Robertson; Valerie Guss; Nina Hoque; Francis Sweeney; Xiaoliang Zhuo; Wendy Clarke; Kimberly Snow; Rex Denton; Dmitry Zuev; Lorin A. Thompson; John Morrison; James E. Grace; Flora Berisha; Michael T. Furlong; Jun-Sheng Wang; Kimberly A. Lentz; Ramesh Padmanabha; Lynda S. Cook; Cong Wei; Dieter M. Drexler; John E. Macor; Charlie F. Albright; Maciej Gasior; Richard E. Olson; Quan Hong; Holly Soares

The amyloid-β peptide (Aβ)—in particular, the 42–amino acid form, Aβ1-42—is thought to play a key role in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Thus, several therapeutic modalities aiming to inhibit Aβ synthesis or increase the clearance of Aβ have entered clinical trials, including γ-secretase inhibitors, anti-Aβ antibodies, and amyloid-β precursor protein cleaving enzyme inhibitors. A unique class of small molecules, γ-secretase modulators (GSMs), selectively reduce Aβ1-42 production, and may also decrease Aβ1-40 while simultaneously increasing one or more shorter Aβ peptides, such as Aβ1-38 and Aβ1-37. GSMs are particularly attractive because they do not alter the total amount of Aβ peptides produced by γ-secretase activity; they spare the processing of other γ-secretase substrates, such as Notch; and they do not cause accumulation of the potentially toxic processing intermediate, β-C-terminal fragment. This report describes the translation of pharmacological activity across species for two novel GSMs, (S)-7-(4-fluorophenyl)-N2-(3-methoxy-4-(3-methyl-1H-1,2,4-triazol-1-yl)phenyl)-N4-methyl-6,7-dihydro-5H-cyclopenta[d]pyrimidine-2,4-diamine (BMS-932481) and (S,Z)-17-(4-chloro-2-fluorophenyl)-34-(3-methyl-1H-1,2,4-triazol-1-yl)-16,17-dihydro-15H-4-oxa-2,9-diaza-1(2,4)-cyclopenta[d]pyrimidina-3(1,3)-benzenacyclononaphan-6-ene (BMS-986133). These GSMs are highly potent in vitro, exhibit dose- and time-dependent activity in vivo, and have consistent levels of pharmacological effect across rats, dogs, monkeys, and human subjects. In rats, the two GSMs exhibit similar pharmacokinetics/pharmacodynamics between the brain and cerebrospinal fluid. In all species, GSM treatment decreased Aβ1-42 and Aβ1-40 levels while increasing Aβ1-38 and Aβ1-37 by a corresponding amount. Thus, the GSM mechanism and central activity translate across preclinical species and humans, thereby validating this therapeutic modality for potential utility in AD.


International Journal of Alzheimer's Disease | 2014

Identification and Preclinical Pharmacology of the γ-Secretase Modulator BMS-869780.

Jeremy H. Toyn; Lorin A. Thompson; Kimberley A. Lentz; Jere E. Meredith; Catherine R. Burton; Sethu Sankaranararyanan; Valerie Guss; Tracey Hall; Lawrence G. Iben; Carol M. Krause; Rudy Krause; Xu-Alan Lin; Maria Pierdomenico; Craig Polson; Alan S. Robertson; Rex Denton; James E. Grace; John Morrison; Joseph Raybon; Xiaoliang Zhuo; Kimberly Snow; Ramesh Padmanabha; Michele Agler; Kim Esposito; David G. Harden; Margaret M Prack; Sam Varma; Victoria Wong; Yingjie Zhu; Tatyana Zvyaga

Alzheimers disease is the most prevalent cause of dementia and is associated with accumulation of amyloid-β peptide (Aβ), particularly the 42-amino acid Aβ1-42, in the brain. Aβ1-42 levels can be decreased by γ-secretase modulators (GSM), which are small molecules that modulate γ-secretase, an enzyme essential for Aβ production. BMS-869780 is a potent GSM that decreased Aβ1-42 and Aβ1-40 and increased Aβ1-37 and Aβ1-38, without inhibiting overall levels of Aβ peptides or other APP processing intermediates. BMS-869780 also did not inhibit Notch processing by γ-secretase and lowered brain Aβ1-42 without evidence of Notch-related side effects in rats. Human pharmacokinetic (PK) parameters were predicted through allometric scaling of PK in rat, dog, and monkey and were combined with the rat pharmacodynamic (PD) parameters to predict the relationship between BMS-869780 dose, exposure and Aβ1-42 levels in human. Off-target and safety margins were then based on comparisons to the predicted exposure required for robust Aβ1-42 lowering. Because of insufficient safety predictions and the relatively high predicted human daily dose of 700 mg, further evaluation of BMS-869780 as a potential clinical candidate was discontinued. Nevertheless, BMS-869780 demonstrates the potential of the GSM approach for robust lowering of brain Aβ1-42 without Notch-related side effects.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999

Competitive, Reversible Inhibition of Cytosolic Phospholipase A2 at the Lipid-Water Interface by Choline Derivatives That Partially Partition into the Phospholipid Bilayer

James R. Burke; Mark R. Witmer; F. Christopher Zusi; Kurt R. Gregor; Lynda B. Davern; Ramesh Padmanabha; R. Thomas Swann; Daniel Smith; Jeffrey Tredup; Radmila Micanovic; Susan P. Manly; Joseph J. Villafranca; Kenneth M. Tramposch

Cytosolic phospholipase A2 (cPLA2) catalyzes the selective release of arachidonic acid from the sn-2 position of phospholipids and is believed to play a key cellular role in the generation of arachidonic acid. When assaying the human recombinant cPLA2 using membranes isolated from [3H]arachidonate-labeled U937 cells as substrate, 2-(2′-benzyl-4-chlorophenoxy)ethyl-dimethyl-n-octadecyl-ammonium chloride (compound 1) was found to inhibit the enzyme in a dose-dependent manner (IC50 = 5 μm). It was over 70 times more selective for the cPLA2 as compared with the human nonpancreatic secreted phospholipase A2, and it did not inhibit other phospholipases. Additionally, it inhibited arachidonate production inN-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine-stimulated U937 cells. To further characterize the mechanism of inhibition, an assay in which the enzyme is bound to vesicles of 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphomethanol containing 6–10 mol % of 1-palmitoyl-2-[1-14C]arachidonoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine was employed. With this substrate system, the dose-dependent inhibition could be defined by kinetic equations describing competitive inhibition at the lipid-water interface. The apparent equilibrium dissociation constant for the inhibitor bound to the enzyme at the interface (K I *app) was determined to be 0.097 ± 0.032 mol % versus an apparent dissociation constant for the arachidonate-containing phospholipid of 0.3 ± 0.1 mol %. Thus, compound 1 represents a novel structural class of inhibitor of cPLA2 that partitions into the phospholipid bilayer and competes with the phospholipid substrate for the active site. Shorter n-alkyl-chained (C-4, C-6, C-8) derivatives of compound 1 were shown to have even smallerK I *app values. However, these short-chained analogs were less potent in terms of bulk inhibitor concentration needed for inhibition when using the [3H]arachidonate-labeled U937 membranes as substrate. This discrepancy was reconciled by showing that these shorter-chained analogs did not partition into the [3H]arachidonate-labeled U937 membranes as effectively as compound 1. The implications for in vivo efficacy that result from these findings are discussed.


Journal of Enzyme Inhibition | 1998

A beta-lactam inhibitor of cytosolic phospholipase A2 which acts in a competitive, reversible manner at the lipid/water interface.

James R. Burke; Kurt R. Gregor; Ramesh Padmanabha; Jacques Banville; Mark R. Witmer; Lynda B. Davern; Susan P. Manly; Kenneth M. Tramposch

Cytosolic phospholipase A2 (cPLA2) catalyzes the selective release of arachidonic acid from the sn-2 position of phospholipids and is believed to play a key cellular role in the generation of arachidonic acid. When assaying the human recombinant cPLA2 using membranes isolated from [3H]arachidonate-labeled U937 cells as substrate, 3,3-Dimethyl-6-(3-lauroylureido)-7-oxo-4-thia-1-azabicyclo[3,2,0] heptane-2-carboxylic acid (1) was found to inhibit the enzyme in a dose-dependent manner (IC50 = 72 microM). This beta-lactam did not inhibit other phospholipases, including the human nonpancreatic secreted phospholipase A2. The inhibition of cPLA2 was found not to be time-dependent. This, along with the observation that the degradation of the inhibitor was not catalyzed by the enzyme, demonstrates that the inhibition does not result from the formation of an acyl-enzyme intermediate with the active site serine residue. Moreover, the ring-opened form of 1 is also able to inhibit cPLA2 with near-equal potency. To further characterize the mechanism of inhibition, an assay in which the enzyme is bound to vesicles of 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphomethanol containing 6-10 mole percent of 1-palmitoyl-2-[1-14C]-arachidonoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine was employed. With this substrate system, the dose-dependent inhibition was defined by kinetic equations describing competitive inhibition at the lipid/water interface. The apparent dissociation constant for the inhibitor bound to the enzyme at the interface (KI*app) was determined to be 0.5 +/- 0.1 mole% versus an apparent dissociation constant for the arachidonate-containing phospholipid of 0.4 +/- 0.1 mole%. Thus, 1 represents a novel structural class of inhibitors of cPLA2 which partitions into the phospholipid bilayer and competes with the phospholipid substrate for the active site.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2007

A Simple Strategy for Mitigating the Effect of Data Variability on the Identification of Active Chemotypes from High-Throughput Screening Data

Stephen R. Johnson; Ramesh Padmanabha; Wayne Vaccaro; Mark A. Hermsmeier; Angela Cacace; Michael R Lawrence; Joyce Dickey; Kim Esposito; Kristen Pike; Victoria Wong; Michael A. Poss; Deborah A. Loughney; Andrew J. Tebben

Among the several goals of a high-throughput screening campaign is the identification of as many active chemotypes as possible for further evaluation. Often, however, the number of concentration response curves (e.g., IC50s or Kis) that can be collected following a primary screen is limited by practical constraints such as protein supply, screening workload, and so forth. One possible approach to this dilemma is to cluster the hits from the primary screen and sample only a few compounds from each cluster. This introduces the question as to how many compounds must be selected from a cluster to ensure that an active compound is identified, if it exists at all. This article seeks to address this question using a Monte Carlo simulation in which the dependence of the success of sampling is directly linked to screening data variability. Furthermore, the authors demonstrate that the use of replicated compounds in the screening collection can easily assess this variability and provide a priori guidance to the screener and chemist as to the extent of sampling required to maximize chemotype identification during the triage process. The individual steps of the Monte Carlo simulation provide insight into the correspondence between the percentage inhibition and eventual IC50 curves.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 1996

Use of Equilibrium Dialysis to Estimate the Size of Active Materials in Natural Product Extracts

Ramesh Padmanabha; Lynda S. Cook; Susan P. Manly

Many different criteria are used to prioritize natural product leads. Among them is molecular weight, since high-molecular-weight species are frequently not suitable for chemistry programs. The commonly used techniques for sizing are time consuming and tedious. Large volumes are needed and the samples have to be dried down and normalized prior to assay. The method described here is rapid, allows up to 24 samples to be sized simultaneously, and the samples can be assayed without any further work-up. The analysis can be done with small volumes, usually less than 1 ml, and as low as 10 Ml. Also described are results that were obtained from the analysis of 20 lead natural product extracts identified in tyrosine kinase screens.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2006

2-Aminothiazole as a Novel Kinase Inhibitor Template. Structure−Activity Relationship Studies toward the Discovery of N-(2-Chloro-6-methylphenyl)-2-[[6-[4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1- piperazinyl)]-2-methyl-4-pyrimidinyl]amino)]-1,3-thiazole-5-carboxamide (Dasatinib, BMS-354825) as a Potent pan-Src Kinase Inhibitor

Jagabandhu Das; Ping Chen; Derek J. Norris; Ramesh Padmanabha; James Lin; Robert V. Moquin; Zhongqi Shen; Lynda S. Cook; Arthur M. Doweyko; Sidney Pitt; Suhong Pang; Ding Ren Shen; Qiong Fang; Henry de Fex; Kim W. McIntyre; David J. Shuster; Kathleen M. Gillooly; Kamelia Behnia; Gary L. Schieven; and John Wityak; Joel C. Barrish

Collaboration


Dive into the Ramesh Padmanabha's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John Wityak

Genomics Institute of the Novartis Research Foundation

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge