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Dive into the research topics where Reshma Kuvelkar is active.

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Featured researches published by Reshma Kuvelkar.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Discovery of Cyclic Acylguanidines as Highly Potent and Selective beta-Site Amyloid Cleaving Enzyme (BACE) Inhibitors: Part I-Inhibitor Design and Validation

Zhaoning Zhu; Zhong-Yue Sun; Yuanzan Ye; Johannes H. Voigt; Corey Strickland; Elizabeth M. Smith; Jared N. Cumming; Lingyan Wang; Jesse Wong; Yu-Sen Wang; Daniel F. Wyss; Xia Chen; Reshma Kuvelkar; Matthew E. Kennedy; Leonard Favreau; Eric M. Parker; Brian Mckittrick; Andrew Stamford; Michael Czarniecki; William J. Greenlee; John C. Hunter

A number of novel amidine containing heterocycles were designed to reproduce the unique interaction pattern, revealed by X-ray crystallography, between the BACE-1 catalytic diad and a weak NMR screening hit (3), with special attention paid to maintaining the appropriate basicity and limiting the number of H-bonding donors of these scaffolds. The iminohydantoin cores (10 and 23) were examined first and found to interact with the catalytic diad in one of two binding modes (A and B), each with the iminohydantoin core flipped 180 degrees in relation to the other. The amidine structural motif within each core forms a bidentate interaction with a different aspartic acid of the catalytic diad. Both modes reproduced a highly conserved interaction pattern between the inhibitors and the catalytic aspartates, as revealed by 3. Potent iminohydantoin BACE-1 inhibitors have been obtained, validating the molecular design as aspartyl protease catalytic site inhibitors. Brain penetrant small molecule BACE inhibitors with high ligand efficiencies have been discovered, enabling multiple strategies for further development of these inhibitors into highly potent, selective and in vivo efficacious BACE inhibitors.


Science Translational Medicine | 2016

The BACE1 inhibitor verubecestat (MK-8931) reduces CNS β-amyloid in animal models and in Alzheimer’s disease patients

Matthew E. Kennedy; Andrew W. Stamford; Xia Chen; Kathleen Cox; Jared N. Cumming; Marissa Dockendorf; Michael F. Egan; Larry Ereshefsky; Robert Hodgson; Lynn Hyde; Stanford Jhee; Huub Jan Kleijn; Reshma Kuvelkar; Wei Li; Britta A. Mattson; Hong Mei; John Palcza; Jack D. Scott; Michael Tanen; Matthew D. Troyer; Jack Tseng; Julie A. Stone; Eric M. Parker

The BACE1 inhibitor verubecestat safely reduces β-amyloid deposition in rats, monkeys, healthy human subjects, and patients with Alzheimer’s disease. Getting to first BACE The discovery of BACE1 inhibitors that reduce β-amyloid peptides in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) patients has been an encouraging development in the quest for a disease-modifying therapy. Kennedy and colleagues now report the discovery of verubecestat, a structurally unique, orally bioavailable small molecule that potently inhibits brain BACE1 activity resulting in a reduction in Aβ peptides in the cerebrospinal fluid of animals, healthy volunteers, and AD patients. No dose-limiting toxicities were observed in chronic animal toxicology studies or in phase 1 human studies, thus reducing safety concerns raised by previous reports of BACE inhibitors and BACE1 knockout mice. β-Amyloid (Aβ) peptides are thought to be critically involved in the etiology of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). The aspartyl protease β-site amyloid precursor protein cleaving enzyme 1 (BACE1) is required for the production of Aβ, and BACE1 inhibition is thus an attractive target for the treatment of AD. We show that verubecestat (MK-8931) is a potent, selective, structurally unique BACE1 inhibitor that reduced plasma, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), and brain concentrations of Aβ40, Aβ42, and sAPPβ (a direct product of BACE1 enzymatic activity) after acute and chronic administration to rats and monkeys. Chronic treatment of rats and monkeys with verubecestat achieved exposures >40-fold higher than those being tested in clinical trials in AD patients yet did not elicit many of the adverse effects previously attributed to BACE inhibition, such as reduced nerve myelination, neurodegeneration, altered glucose homeostasis, or hepatotoxicity. Fur hypopigmentation was observed in rabbits and mice but not in monkeys. Single and multiple doses were generally well tolerated and produced reductions in Aβ40, Aβ42, and sAPPβ in the CSF of both healthy human subjects and AD patients. The human data were fit to an amyloid pathway model that provided insight into the Aβ pools affected by BACE1 inhibition and guided the choice of doses for subsequent clinical trials.


Science Translational Medicine | 2016

TarO-specific inhibitors of wall teichoic acid biosynthesis restore β-lactam efficacy against methicillin-resistant staphylococci

Sang Ho Lee; Hao Wang; Labroli M; Sandra Koseoglu; Zuck P; Todd Mayhood; Charles Gill; Paul A. Mann; Xinwei Sher; Sookhee Ha; Shu-Wei Yang; Mihirbaran Mandal; Christine Yang; Lianzhu Liang; Zheng Tan; Paul Tawa; Hou Y; Reshma Kuvelkar; DeVito K; Wen X; Jianying Xiao; Batchlett M; Carl J. Balibar; Jenny Liu; Nicholas J. Murgolo; Charles G. Garlisi; Payal R. Sheth; Amy M. Flattery; Jing Su; Christopher M. Tan

New inhibitors of wall teichoic acid biosynthesis restore susceptibility of drug-resistant staphylococci to β-lactam antibiotics. Addressing antibiotic resistance with nonantibiotic adjuvants Coupled with the crisis in antibiotic drug resistance is a dearth of mechanistically new classes of antibacterial agents. One possible solution to this problem is to improve the efficacy of existing antibiotics against otherwise resistant bacteria using a combination agent approach. Lee et al. now describe just such a combination agent strategy to resuscitate the efficacy of β-lactam antibiotics. They identify nonantibiotic adjuvants termed tarocins that restore the killing activity of β-lactams against methicillin-resistant staphylococci, thereby enabling the application of β-lactams to treat Gram-positive bacterial infections. The widespread emergence of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) has dramatically eroded the efficacy of current β-lactam antibiotics and created an urgent need for new treatment options. We report an S. aureus phenotypic screening strategy involving chemical suppression of the growth inhibitory consequences of depleting late-stage wall teichoic acid biosynthesis. This enabled us to identify early-stage pathway-specific inhibitors of wall teichoic acid biosynthesis predicted to be chemically synergistic with β-lactams. We demonstrated by genetic and biochemical means that each of the new chemical series discovered, herein named tarocin A and tarocin B, inhibited the first step in wall teichoic acid biosynthesis (TarO). Tarocins do not have intrinsic bioactivity but rather demonstrated potent bactericidal synergy in combination with broad-spectrum β-lactam antibiotics against diverse clinical isolates of methicillin-resistant staphylococci as well as robust efficacy in a murine infection model of MRSA. Tarocins and other inhibitors of wall teichoic acid biosynthesis may provide a rational strategy to develop Gram-positive bactericidal β-lactam combination agents active against methicillin-resistant staphylococci.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017

Discovery of a 3-(4-Pyrimidinyl) Indazole (MLi-2), an Orally Available and Selective Leucine-Rich Repeat Kinase 2 (LRRK2) Inhibitor that Reduces Brain Kinase Activity

Jack D. Scott; Duane E. Demong; Thomas J. Greshock; Kallol Basu; Xing Dai; Joel M. Harris; Alan Hruza; Sarah W. Li; Sue-Ing Lin; Hong Liu; Megan Macala; Zhiyong Hu; Hong Mei; Honglu Zhang; Paul Walsh; Marc Poirier; Zhi-cai Shi; Li Xiao; Gautam Agnihotri; Marco A. S. Baptista; John Columbus; Matthew J. Fell; Lynn A. Hyde; Reshma Kuvelkar; Yinghui Lin; Christian Mirescu; John A. Morrow; Zhizhang Yin; Xiaoping Zhang; Xiaoping Zhou

Leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 (LRRK2) is a large, multidomain protein which contains a kinase domain and GTPase domain among other regions. Individuals possessing gain of function mutations in the kinase domain such as the most prevalent G2019S mutation have been associated with an increased risk for the development of Parkinsons disease (PD). Given this genetic validation for inhibition of LRRK2 kinase activity as a potential means of affecting disease progression, our team set out to develop LRRK2 inhibitors to test this hypothesis. A high throughput screen of our compound collection afforded a number of promising indazole leads which were truncated in order to identify a minimum pharmacophore. Further optimization of these indazoles led to the development of MLi-2 (1): a potent, highly selective, orally available, brain-penetrant inhibitor of LRRK2.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2014

Discovery of potent iminoheterocycle BACE1 inhibitors.

John P. Caldwell; Robert Mazzola; James Durkin; Joseph Chen; Xia Chen; Leonard Favreau; Matthew E. Kennedy; Reshma Kuvelkar; Julie Lee; Nansie McHugh; Brian A. McKittrick; Peter Orth; Andrew W. Stamford; Corey Strickland; Johannes Voigt; Liyang Wang; Lili Zhang; Qi Zhang; Zhaoning Zhu

The synthesis of a series of iminoheterocycles and their structure-activity relationships (SAR) as inhibitors of the aspartyl protease BACE1 will be detailed. An effort to access the S3 subsite directly from the S1 subsite initially yielded compounds with sub-micromolar potency. A subset of compounds from this effort unexpectedly occupied a different binding site and displayed excellent BACE1 affinities. Select compounds from this subset acutely lowered Aβ40 levels upon subcutaneous and oral administration to rats.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

Structure based design of iminohydantoin BACE1 inhibitors: Identification of an orally available, centrally active BACE1 inhibitor

Jared N. Cumming; Elizabeth M. Smith; Lingyan Wang; Jeffrey Misiaszek; James Durkin; Jianping Pan; Ulrich Iserloh; Yusheng Wu; Zhaoning Zhu; Corey Strickland; Johannes Voigt; Xia Chen; Matthew E. Kennedy; Reshma Kuvelkar; Lynn Hyde; Kathleen Cox; Leonard Favreau; Michael Czarniecki; William J. Greenlee; Brian A. McKittrick; Eric M. Parker; Andrew W. Stamford


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

Discovery of an Orally Available, Brain Penetrant BACE1 Inhibitor That Affords Robust CNS Aβ Reduction

Andrew Stamford; Jack D. Scott; Sarah W. Li; Suresh Babu; Dawit Tadesse; Rachael C. Hunter; Yusheng Wu; Jeffrey Misiaszek; Jared N. Cumming; Eric J. Gilbert; Chunli Huang; Brian Mckittrick; Liwu Hong; Tao Guo; Zhaoning Zhu; Corey Strickland; Peter Orth; Johannes H. Voigt; Matthew E. Kennedy; Xia Chen; Reshma Kuvelkar; Robert A. Hodgson; Lynn A. Hyde; Kathleen Cox; Leonard Favreau; Eric M. Parker; William J. Greenlee


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Design and validation of bicyclic iminopyrimidinones as beta amyloid cleaving enzyme-1 (BACE1) inhibitors: conformational constraint to favor a bioactive conformation.

Mihirbaran Mandal; Zhaoning Zhu; Jared N. Cumming; Xiaoxiang Liu; Corey Strickland; Robert D. Mazzola; John P. Caldwell; Prescott T. Leach; Michael Grzelak; Lynn A. Hyde; Qi Zhang; Giuseppe Terracina; Lili Zhang; Xia Chen; Reshma Kuvelkar; Matthew E. Kennedy; Leonard Favreau; Kathleen Cox; Peter Orth; Alexei V. Buevich; Johannes H. Voigt; Hongwu Wang; Irina Kazakevich; Brian Mckittrick; William J. Greenlee; Eric M. Parker; Andrew Stamford


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Piperazine sulfonamide BACE1 inhibitors: design, synthesis, and in vivo characterization.

Jared N. Cumming; Suresh Babu; Ying Huang; Carolyn Carrol; Xia Chen; Leonard Favreau; William J. Greenlee; Tao Guo; Matthew E. Kennedy; Reshma Kuvelkar; Thuy X. H. Le; Guoqing Li; Nansie McHugh; Peter Orth; Lynne Ozgur; Eric M. Parker; Kurt W. Saionz; Andrew W. Stamford; Corey Strickland; Dawit Tadesse; Johannes Voigt; Lili Zhang; Qi Zhang


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016

Discovery of the 3-Imino-1,2,4-thiadiazinane 1,1-Dioxide Derivative Verubecestat (MK-8931)–A β-Site Amyloid Precursor Protein Cleaving Enzyme 1 Inhibitor for the Treatment of Alzheimer’s Disease

Jack D. Scott; Sarah W. Li; Andrew Brunskill; Xia Chen; Kathleen Cox; Jared N. Cumming; Eric J. Gilbert; Robert A. Hodgson; Lynn A. Hyde; Qin Jiang; Ulrich Iserloh; Irina Kazakevich; Reshma Kuvelkar; Hong Mei; John Meredith; Jeffrey Misiaszek; Peter Orth; Lana M. Rossiter; Meagan Slater; Julie A. Stone; Corey O. Strickland; Johannes H. Voigt; Ganfeng Wang; Hongwu Wang; Yusheng Wu; William J. Greenlee; Eric M. Parker; Matthew E. Kennedy; Andrew Stamford

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