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Dive into the research topics where Ramzi F. Sweis is active.

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Featured researches published by Ramzi F. Sweis.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2014

Discovery and development of potent and selective inhibitors of histone methyltransferase g9a.

Ramzi F. Sweis; Marina A. Pliushchev; Peter J. Brown; Jun Guo; Fengling Li; David Maag; Andrew M. Petros; Nirupama B. Soni; Chris Tse; Masoud Vedadi; Michael R. Michaelides; Gary G. Chiang; William N. Pappano

G9a is a histone lysine methyltransferase responsible for the methylation of histone H3 lysine 9. The discovery of A-366 arose from a unique diversity screening hit, which was optimized by incorporation of a propyl-pyrrolidine subunit to occupy the enzyme lysine channel. A-366 is a potent inhibitor of G9a (IC50: 3.3 nM) with greater than 1000-fold selectivity over 21 other methyltransferases.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2017

The EED protein–protein interaction inhibitor A-395 inactivates the PRC2 complex

Yupeng He; Sujatha Selvaraju; Michael L. Curtin; Clarissa G. Jakob; Haizhong Zhu; Kenneth M. Comess; Bailin Shaw; Evelyne Lima-Fernandes; Magdalena M. Szewczyk; Dong Cheng; Kelly L Klinge; Huanqiu Li; Marina A. Pliushchev; Mikkel A. Algire; David Maag; Jun Guo; Justin Dietrich; Sanjay C. Panchal; Andrew M. Petros; Ramzi F. Sweis; Maricel Torrent; Lance J Bigelow; Guillermo Senisterra; Fengling Li; Steven Kennedy; Qin Wu; Donald J Osterling; David J Lindley; Wenqing Gao; Scott Galasinski

Polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2) is a regulator of epigenetic states required for development and homeostasis. PRC2 trimethylates histone H3 at lysine 27 (H3K27me3), which leads to gene silencing, and is dysregulated in many cancers. The embryonic ectoderm development (EED) protein is an essential subunit of PRC2 that has both a scaffolding function and an H3K27me3-binding function. Here we report the identification of A-395, a potent antagonist of the H3K27me3 binding functions of EED. Structural studies demonstrate that A-395 binds to EED in the H3K27me3-binding pocket, thereby preventing allosteric activation of the catalytic activity of PRC2. Phenotypic effects observed in vitro and in vivo are similar to those of known PRC2 enzymatic inhibitors; however, A-395 retains potent activity against cell lines resistant to the catalytic inhibitors. A-395 represents a first-in-class antagonist of PRC2 protein-protein interactions (PPI) for use as a chemical probe to investigate the roles of EED-containing protein complexes.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015

Discovery of A-893, A New Cell-Active Benzoxazinone Inhibitor of Lysine Methyltransferase SMYD2.

Ramzi F. Sweis; Zhi Wang; Mikkel A. Algire; C.H. Arrowsmith; Peter J. Brown; Gary G. Chiang; Jun Guo; Clarissa G. Jakob; Steven Kennedy; Fengling Li; David Maag; Bailin Shaw; Nirupama B. Soni; Masoud Vedadi; William N. Pappano

A lack of useful small molecule tools has precluded thorough interrogation of the biological function of SMYD2, a lysine methyltransferase with known tumor-suppressor substrates. Systematic exploration of the structure-activity relationships of a previously known benzoxazinone compound led to the synthesis of A-893, a potent and selective SMYD2 inhibitor (IC50: 2.8 nM). A cocrystal structure reveals the origin of enhanced potency, and effective suppression of p53K370 methylation is observed in a lung carcinoma (A549) cell line.


PLOS ONE | 2015

The Histone Methyltransferase Inhibitor A-366 Uncovers a Role for G9a/GLP in the Epigenetics of Leukemia.

William N. Pappano; Jun Guo; Yupeng He; Debra Ferguson; Sujatha Jagadeeswaran; Donald J. Osterling; Wenqing Gao; Julie K. Spence; Marina A. Pliushchev; Ramzi F. Sweis; Fritz G. Buchanan; Michael R. Michaelides; Alexander R. Shoemaker; Chris Tse; Gary G. Chiang

Histone methyltransferases are epigenetic regulators that modify key lysine and arginine residues on histones and are believed to play an important role in cancer development and maintenance. These epigenetic modifications are potentially reversible and as a result this class of enzymes has drawn great interest as potential therapeutic targets of small molecule inhibitors. Previous studies have suggested that the histone lysine methyltransferase G9a (EHMT2) is required to perpetuate malignant phenotypes through multiple mechanisms in a variety of cancer types. To further elucidate the enzymatic role of G9a in cancer, we describe herein the biological activities of a novel peptide-competitive histone methyltransferase inhibitor, A-366, that selectively inhibits G9a and the closely related GLP (EHMT1), but not other histone methyltransferases. A-366 has significantly less cytotoxic effects on the growth of tumor cell lines compared to other known G9a/GLP small molecule inhibitors despite equivalent cellular activity on methylation of H3K9me2. Additionally, the selectivity profile of A-366 has aided in the discovery of a potentially important role for G9a/GLP in maintenance of leukemia. Treatment of various leukemia cell lines in vitro resulted in marked differentiation and morphological changes of these tumor cell lines. Furthermore, treatment of a flank xenograft leukemia model with A-366 resulted in growth inhibition in vivo consistent with the profile of H3K9me2 reduction observed. In summary, A-366 is a novel and highly selective inhibitor of G9a/GLP that has enabled the discovery of a role for G9a/GLP enzymatic activity in the growth and differentiation status of leukemia cells.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2017

The SUV4-20 inhibitor A-196 verifies a role for epigenetics in genomic integrity

Kenneth D. Bromberg; Taylor R H Mitchell; Anup K. Upadhyay; Clarissa G. Jakob; Manisha A Jhala; Kenneth M. Comess; Loren M. Lasko; Conglei Li; Creighton T. Tuzon; Yujia Dai; Fengling Li; Mohammad S. Eram; Alexander Nuber; Niru B. Soni; Vlasios Manaves; Mikkel A. Algire; Ramzi F. Sweis; Maricel Torrent; Gunnar Schotta; Chaohong Sun; Michael R. Michaelides; Alex R Shoemaker; C.H. Arrowsmith; Peter J. Brown; V. Santhakumar; Alberto Martin; Judd C. Rice; Gary G. Chiang; Masoud Vedadi; Dalia Barsyte-Lovejoy

Protein lysine methyltransferases (PKMTs) regulate diverse physiological processes including transcription and the maintenance of genomic integrity. Genetic studies suggest that the PKMTs SUV420H1 and SUV420H2 facilitate proficient nonhomologous end-joining (NHEJ)-directed DNA repair by catalyzing the di- and trimethylation (me2 and me3, respectively) of lysine 20 on histone 4 (H4K20). Here we report the identification of A-196, a potent and selective inhibitor of SUV420H1 and SUV420H2. Biochemical and co-crystallization analyses demonstrate that A-196 is a substrate-competitive inhibitor of both SUV4-20 enzymes. In cells, A-196 induced a global decrease in H4K20me2 and H4K20me3 and a concomitant increase in H4K20me1. A-196 inhibited 53BP1 foci formation upon ionizing radiation and reduced NHEJ-mediated DNA-break repair but did not affect homology-directed repair. These results demonstrate the role of SUV4-20 enzymatic activity in H4K20 methylation and DNA repair. A-196 represents a first-in-class chemical probe of SUV4-20 to investigate the role of histone methyltransferases in genomic integrity.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015

Target (In)Validation: A Critical, Sometimes Unheralded, Role of Modern Medicinal Chemistry.

Ramzi F. Sweis

Small molecule drug discovery commonly ventures into previously unknown and unexplored target space. For such programs, an important role of medicinal chemistry is to generate molecules that enable the most reliable conclusions from a preclinical target validation/invalidation study. Multiple facets of chemistry that provide the most rigorous results for such an experiment are highlighted.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

2-(4-carbonylphenyl)benzoxazole inhibitors of CETP: scaffold design and advancement in HDLc-raising efficacy.

Ramzi F. Sweis; Julianne A. Hunt; Florida Kallashi; Milton L. Hammond; Ying Chen; Suzanne S. Eveland; Qiu Guo; Sheryl A. Hyland; Denise P. Milot; Anne-Marie Cumiskey; Melanie Latham; Ray Rosa; Larry Peterson; Carl P. Sparrow; Samuel D. Wright; Matt S. Anderson; Peter J. Sinclair

The development of 2-phenylbenzoxazoles as inhibitors of cholesteryl ester transfer protein (CETP) is described. Initial efforts aimed at engineering replacements for the aniline substructures in the benchmark molecule. Reversing the connectivity of the central aniline lead to a new class of 2-(4-carbonylphenyl)benzoxazoles. Structure-activity studies at the C-7 and terminal pyridine ring allowed for the optimization of potency and HDLc-raising efficacy in this new class of inhibitors. These efforts lead to the discovery of benzoxazole 11v, which raised HDLc by 24 mg/dl in our transgenic mouse PD model.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2017

SAR of amino pyrrolidines as potent and novel protein-protein interaction inhibitors of the PRC2 complex through EED binding.

Michael L. Curtin; Marina A. Pliushchev; Huanqiu Li; Maricel Torrent; Justin Dietrich; Clarissa G. Jakob; Haizhong Zhu; Hongyu Zhao; Ying Wang; Zhiqin Ji; Richard F. Clark; Kathy Sarris; Sujatha Selvaraju; Bailin Shaw; Mikkel A. Algire; Yupeng He; Paul L. Richardson; Ramzi F. Sweis; Chaohong Sun; Gary G. Chiang; Michael R. Michaelides

Herein we disclose SAR studies of a series of dimethylamino pyrrolidines which we recently reported as novel inhibitors of the PRC2 complex through disruption of EED/H3K27me3 binding. Modification of the indole and benzyl moieties of screening hit 1 provided analogs with substantially improved binding and cellular activities. This work culminated in the identification of compound 2, our nanomolar proof-of-concept (PoC) inhibitor which provided on-target tumor growth inhibition in a mouse xenograft model. X-ray crystal structures of several inhibitors bound in the EED active-site are also discussed.


Annual Reports in Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Chapter Thirteen - Recent Advances in Small-Molecule Modulation of Epigenetic Targets: Discovery and Development of Histone Methyltransferase and Bromodomain Inhibitors

Ramzi F. Sweis; Michael R. Michaelides

Abstract The last few years have seen significant progress in the development of small-molecule inhibitors of epigenetic targets for cancer. In particular, the most advanced programs have been focused on two target classes: histone methyltransferases (HMTs) and bromodomains. They represent a subset of the many enzymes and proteins that modify histone lysines and that recognize those modifications. In this account are highlighted the discovery and development of G9a, EZH2, DOT1L, and BET inhibitors. Examples of both HMT and bromodomain inhibitors are currently being evaluated in human clinical trials for various therapeutic applications in oncology and cardiovascular disease.Abstract The last few years have seen significant progress in the development of small-molecule inhibitors of epigenetic targets for cancer. In particular, the most advanced programs have been focused on two target classes: histone methyltransferases (HMTs) and bromodomains. They represent a subset of the many enzymes and proteins that modify histone lysines and that recognize those modifications. In this account are highlighted the discovery and development of G9a, EZH2, DOT1L, and BET inhibitors. Examples of both HMT and bromodomain inhibitors are currently being evaluated in human clinical trials for various therapeutic applications in oncology and cardiovascular disease.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

2-(4-Carbonylphenyl)benzoxazole inhibitors of CETP: attenuation of hERG binding and improved HDLc-raising efficacy.

Ramzi F. Sweis; Julianne A. Hunt; Peter J. Sinclair; Ying Chen; Suzanne S. Eveland; Qiu Guo; Sheryl A. Hyland; Denise P. Milot; Anne-Marie Cumiskey; Melanie Latham; Ray Rosa; Larry Peterson; Carl P. Sparrow; Matt S. Anderson

The development of 2-phenylbenzoxazoles as inhibitors of cholesteryl ester transfer protein (CETP) is described. Efforts focused on finding suitable replacements for the central piperidine with the aim of reducing hERG binding: a main liability of our benchmark benzoxazole (1a). Replacement of the piperidine with a cyclohexyl group successfully attenuated hERG binding, but was accompanied by reduced in vivo efficacy. The approach of substituting a piperidine moiety with an oxazolidinone also attenuated hERG binding. Further refinement of this latter scaffold via SAR at the pyridine terminus and methyl branching on the oxazolidinone led to compounds 7e and 7f, which raised HDLc by 33 and 27mg/dl, respectively, in our transgenic mouse PD model and without the hERG liability of previous series.

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David Maag

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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Mikkel A. Algire

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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