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Dive into the research topics where Rayomand J. Unwalla is active.

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Featured researches published by Rayomand J. Unwalla.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

Indazole-based liver X receptor (LXR) modulators with maintained atherosclerotic lesion reduction activity but diminished stimulation of hepatic triglyceride synthesis.

Jay E. Wrobel; Robert J. Steffan; S. Marc Bowen; Ronald L. Magolda; Edward Martin Matelan; Rayomand J. Unwalla; Michael D Basso; Valerie Clerin; Stephen J. Gardell; Ponnal Nambi; Elaine Quinet; Jason I. Reminick; George P. Vlasuk; Shuguang Wang; Irene Feingold; Christine Huselton; Tomas Bonn; Mathias Färnegårdh; Tomas Hansson; Annika Goos Nilsson; Anna Wilhelmsson; Edouard Zamaratski; Mark J. Evans

A series of substituted 2-benzyl-3-aryl-7-trifluoromethylindazoles were prepared as LXR modulators. These compounds were partial agonists in transactivation assays when compared to 1 (T0901317) and were slightly weaker with respect to potency and efficacy on LXRalpha than on LXRbeta. Lead compounds in this series 12 (WAY-252623) and 13 (WAY-214950) showed less lipid accumulation in HepG2 cells than potent full agonists 1 and 3 (WAY-254011) but were comparable in efficacy to 1 and 3 with respect to cholesterol efflux in THP-1 foam cells, albeit weaker in potency. Compound 13 reduced aortic lesion area in LDLR knockout mice equivalently to 3 or positive control 2 (GW3965). In a 7-day hamster model, compound 13 showed a lesser propensity for plasma TG elevation than 3, when the compounds were compared at doses in which they elevated ABCA1 and ABCG1 gene expression in duodenum and liver at equal levels. In contrast to results previously published for 2, the lack of TG effect of 13 correlated with its inability to increase liver fatty acid synthase (FAS) gene expression, which was up-regulated 4-fold by 3. These results suggest indazoles such as 13 may have an improved profile for potential use as a therapeutic agent.


Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling | 2010

Insights for predicting blood-brain barrier penetration of CNS targeted molecules using QSPR approaches.

Yi Fan; Rayomand J. Unwalla; Rajiah A. Denny; Li Di; Edward H. Kerns; David J. Diller; Christine Humblet

Due to the high attrition rate of central nervous system drug candidates during clinical trials, the assessment of blood-brain barrier (BBB) penetration in early research is particularly important. A genetic approximation (GA)-based regression model was developed for predicting in vivo blood-brain partitioning data, expressed as logBB (log[brain]/[blood]). The model was built using an in-house data set of 193 compounds assembled from 22 different therapeutic projects. The final model (cross-validated r(2) = 0.72) with five molecular descriptors was selected based on validation using several large internal and external test sets. We demonstrate the potential utility of the model by applying it to a set of literature reported secretase inhibitors. In addition, we describe a rule-based approach for rapid assessment of brain penetration with several simple molecular descriptors.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 1999

Synthesis and biological activity of a novel series of indole-derived PPARγ agonists

Brad R. Henke; Kimberley K. Adkison; Steven G. Blanchard; Lisa M. Leesnitzer; Robert A. Mook; Kelli D. Plunket; John A. Ray; Claudia Roberson; Rayomand J. Unwalla; Timothy M. Willson

Abstract The synthesis and structure-activity relationships of a novel series of indole 5-carboxylic acids that bind and activate peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARγ) are reported. These new analogs are selective for PPARγ vs the other PPAR subtypes, and the most potent compounds in this series are comparable to in vitro potencies at PPARγ reported for the thiazolidinedione-based antidiabetic drugs currently in clinical use. The synthesis and structure-activity relationships of a novel series of indole 5-carboxylic acids that bind and activate peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARγ) are reported. These compounds are selective for PPARγ vs the other PPAR subtypes, and the most potent compounds have in vitro potencies at PPARγ comparable to those reported for the thiazolidinedione-based antidiabetic drugs currently in clinical use.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Improvement of Physiochemical Properties of the Tetrahydroazepinoindole Series of Farnesoid X Receptor (FXR) Agonists: Beneficial Modulation of Lipids in Primates.

Joseph T. Lundquist; Douglas C. Harnish; Callain Younghee Kim; John F. Mehlmann; Rayomand J. Unwalla; Kristin M. Phipps; Matthew L. Crawley; Thomas Joseph Commons; Daniel M. Green; Weixin Xu; Wah-Tung Hum; Julius E. Eta; Irene Feingold; Vikram S. Patel; Mark J. Evans; KehDih Lai; Lisa Borges-Marcucci; Paige Erin Mahaney; Jay E. Wrobel

In an effort to develop orally active farnesoid X receptor (FXR) agonists, a series of tetrahydroazepinoindoles with appended solubilizing amine functionalities were synthesized. The crystal structure of the previously disclosed FXR agonist, 1 (FXR-450), aided in the design of compounds with tethered solubilizing functionalities designed to reach the solvent cavity around the hFXR receptor. These compounds were soluble in 0.5% methylcellulose/2% Tween-80 in water (MC/T) for oral administration. In vitro and in vivo optimization led to the identification of 14dd and 14cc, which in a dose-dependent fashion regulated low density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDLc) in low density lipoprotein receptor knockout (LDLR(-/-)) mice. Compound 14cc was dosed in female rhesus monkeys for 4 weeks at 60 mg/kg daily in MC/T vehicle. After 7 days, triglyceride (TG) levels and very low density lipoprotein cholesterol (VLDLc) levels were significantly decreased and LDLc was decreased 63%. These data are the first to demonstrate the dramatic lowering of serum LDLc levels by a FXR agonist in primates and supports the potential utility of 14cc in treating dyslipidemia in humans beyond just TG lowering.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Identification of phenylsulfone-substituted quinoxaline (WYE-672) as a tissue selective liver X-receptor (LXR) agonist.

Baihua Hu; Rayomand J. Unwalla; Igor Goljer; James W. Jetter; Elaine Quinet; Thomas J. Berrodin; Michael D Basso; Irene Feingold; Annika Goos Nilsson; Anna Wilhelmsson; Mark J. Evans; Jay E. Wrobel

A series of phenyl sulfone substituted quinoxaline were prepared and the lead compound 13 (WYE-672) was shown to be a tissue selective LXR Agonist. Compound 13 demonstrated partial agonism for LXRbeta in kidney HEK-293 cells but did not activate Gal4 LXRbeta fusion proteins in huh-7 liver cells. Although 13 showed potent binding affinity to LXRbeta (IC(50) = 53 nM), it had little binding affinity for LXRalpha (IC(50) > 1.0 microM) and did not recruit any coactivator/corepressor peptides in the LXRalpha multiplex assay. However, compound 13 showed good agonism in THP-1 cells with respect to increasing ABCA1 gene expression and good potency on cholesterol efflux in THP-1 foam cells. In an eight-week lesion study in LDLR -/- mice, compound 13 showed reduction of aortic arch lesion progression and no plasma or hepatic triglyceride increase. These results suggest quinoxaline 13 may have an improved biological profile for potential use as a therapeutic agent.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009

Discovery of (2S,4R)-1-(2-Aminoacetyl)-4-benzamidopyrrolidine-2-carboxylic Acid Hydrochloride (GAP-134)13, an Orally Active Small Molecule Gap-Junction Modifier for the Treatment of Atrial Fibrillation

John A. Butera; Bjarne Due Larsen; James K. Hennan; Edward H. Kerns; Li Di; Asaf Alimardanov; Robert E. Swillo; Gwen A. Morgan; Kun Liu; Qiang Wang; Eric I. Rossman; Rayomand J. Unwalla; Leonard A. McDonald; Christine Huselton; Jørgen Søberg Petersen

Rotigaptide (3) is an antiarrhythmic peptide that improves cardiac conduction by modifying gap-junction communication. Small molecule gap-junction modifiers with improved physical properties were identified from a Zealand Pharma peptide library using pharmaceutical profiling, established SAR around 3, and a putative pharmacophore model for rotigaptide. Activity of the compounds was confirmed in a mouse cardiac conduction block model of arrhythmia. Dipeptide 9f (GAP-134) was identified as a potent, orally active gap-junction modifier for clinical development.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

4-(3-Aryloxyaryl)quinoline sulfones are potent liver X receptor agonists.

Ronald C. Bernotas; Robert R. Singhaus; David H. Kaufman; Jeremy M. Travins; John W. Ullrich; Rayomand J. Unwalla; Elaine Quinet; Mark J. Evans; Ponnal Nambi; Andrea Olland; Björn Kauppi; Anna Wilhelmsson; Annika Goos-Nilsson; Jay E. Wrobel

A series of 4-(3-aryloxyaryl)quinolines with sulfone substituents on the terminal aryl ring (7) was prepared as LXR agonists. High affinity LXR ligands with excellent agonist potency and efficacy in functional assays of LXR activity were identified. In general, these sulfone agonists were equal to or superior to previously described alcohol and amide analogs in terms of affinity, functional potency, and microsomal stability. Many of the sulfones had LXRbeta binding IC(50) values <10nM while the most potent compounds in an ABCA1 mRNA induction assay in J774 mouse cells had EC(50) values <10nM and were as efficacious as T0901317.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2009

Biarylether amide quinolines as liver X receptor agonists.

Ronald C. Bernotas; Robert R. Singhaus; David H. Kaufman; John W. Ullrich; Horace Fletcher; Elaine Quinet; Ponnal Nambi; Rayomand J. Unwalla; Anna Wilhelmsson; Annika Goos-Nilsson; Mathias Färnegårdh; Jay E. Wrobel

A series of 4-(amido-biarylether)-quinolines was prepared as potential LXR agonists. Appropriate substitution with amide groups provided high affinity LXR ligands, some with excellent potency and efficacy in functional assays of LXR activity. Novel amide 4g had a binding IC(50)=1.9 nM for LXRbeta and EC(50)=34 nM (96% efficacy relative to T0901317) in an ABCA1 gene expression assay in mouse J774 cells, demonstrating that 4-(biarylether)-quinolines with appropriate amide substitution are potent LXR agonists.


Proteins | 2006

Critical evaluation of methods to incorporate entropy loss upon binding in high‐throughput docking

Sumeet Salaniwal; Eric S. Manas; Juan Alvarez; Rayomand J. Unwalla

Proper accounting of the positional/orientational/conformational entropy loss associated with protein–ligand binding is important to obtain reliable predictions of binding affinity. Herein, we critically examine two simplified statistical mechanics‐based approaches, namely a constant penalty per rotor method, and a more rigorous method, referred to here as the partition function‐based scoring (PFS) method, to account for such entropy losses in high‐throughput docking calculations. Our results on the estrogen receptor β and dihydrofolate reductase proteins demonstrate that, while the constant penalty method over‐penalizes molecules for their conformational flexibility, the PFS method behaves in a more “ΔG‐like” manner by penalizing different rotors differently depending on their residual entropy in the bound state. Furthermore, in contrast to no entropic penalty or the constant penalty approximation, the PFS method does not exhibit any bias towards either rigid or flexible molecules in the hit list. Preliminary enrichment studies using a lead‐like random molecular database suggest that an accurate representation of the “true” energy landscape of the protein–ligand complex is critical for reliable predictions of relative binding affinities by the PFS method. Proteins 2007.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Quinoline-3-carboxamide containing sulfones as liver X receptor (LXR) agonists with binding selectivity for LXRβ and low blood–brain penetration

Baihua Hu; Ron Bernotas; Rayomand J. Unwalla; Michael D. Collini; Elaine Quinet; Irene Feingold; Annika Goos-Nilsson; Anna Wilhelmsson; Ponnal Nambi; Mark J. Evans; Jay E. Wrobel

A series of quinoline-3-carboxamide containing sulfones was prepared and found to have good binding affinity for LXRbeta and moderate binding selectivity over LXRalpha. The 8-Cl quinoline analog 33 with a high TPSA score, displayed 34-fold binding selectivity for LXRbeta over LXRalpha (LXRbeta IC(50)=16nM), good activity for inducing ABCA1 gene expression in a THP macrophage cell line, desired weak potency in the LXRalpha Gal4 functional assay, and low blood-brain barrier penetration in rat.

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Jay E. Wrobel

University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

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Ponnal Nambi

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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