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Dive into the research topics where Richard F. Hank is active.

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Featured researches published by Richard F. Hank.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

Identification of spirocyclic piperidine-azetidine inverse agonists of the ghrelin receptor.

Daniel W. Kung; Steven B. Coffey; Ryan Jones; Shawn Cabral; Wenhua Jiao; Michael Fichtner; Philip A. Carpino; Colin R. Rose; Richard F. Hank; Michael G. Lopaze; Roger Swartz; Hou Tommy Chen; Zachary S. Hendsch; Bruce A. Posner; Christopher F. Wielis; Brian Manning; Jeffrey S. Dubins; Ingrid A. Stock; Sam Varma; Mary Campbell; Demetria Debartola; Rachel Kosa-Maines; Stefanus J. Steyn; Kim F. McClure

The discovery of spirocyclic piperidine-azetidine inverse agonists of the ghrelin receptor is described. The characterization and redressing of the issues associated with these compounds is detailed. An efficient three-step synthesis and a binding assay were relied upon as the primary means of rapidly improving potency and ADMET properties for this class of inverse agonist compounds. Compound 10 n bearing distributed polarity in the form of an imidazo-thiazole acetamide and a phenyl triazole is a unit lower in logP and has significantly improved binding affinity compared to the hit molecule 10a, providing support for further optimization of this series of compounds.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2003

Structure-activity relationship studies on 2-heteroaryl-4-arylimidazoles NPY5 receptor antagonists.

Richard L. Elliott; Robert M. Oliver; Janet A. LaFlamme; Melissa L. Gillaspy; Marlys Hammond; Richard F. Hank; Tristan S. Maurer; Demetria L. Baker; Paul DaSilva-Jardine; Ralph W. Stevenson; Christine M. Mack; James V. Cassella

A series of 2-heteroaryl-4-arylimidazoles with potent in vitro activity at the NPY5 receptor was developed. Introduction of electron-withdrawing groups on the 4-aryl ring led to a significant improvement of in vitro potency. Several analogues from this series had anorectic activity in rodent feeding models, but were also found to have undesired behavioral effects in spontaneous locomotor activity.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2003

Structure-Activity Relationships in a Series of NPY Y5 Antagonists: 3-Amido-9-ethylcarbazoles, Core-Modified Analogues and Amide Isosteres

Marlys Hammond; Richard L. Elliott; Melissa L. Gillaspy; David C. Hager; Richard F. Hank; Janet A. LaFlamme; Robert M. Oliver; Paul DaSilva-Jardine; Ralph W. Stevenson; Christine M. Mack; James V. Cassella

Beginning with carbazole 1a, the amide and alkyl substituents were optimized to maintain potency while adding solubilizing groups. Efforts to replace the 3-amino-9-ethylcarbazole core, a known carcinogen, used the SAR generated in the carbazole series for guidance and led to the synthesis of a number of core-modified analogues. In addition, an isosteric series, in which the amide was replaced with an imidazole, was prepared. Two potent new series lacking the putative toxicophore were identified from these endeavors.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

From partial to full agonism: Identification of a novel 2,4,5,6-tetrahydropyrrolo[3,4-c]pyrazole as a full agonist of the human GPR119 receptor

Kentaro Futatsugi; Vincent Mascitti; Cristiano R. W. Guimarães; Nao Morishita; Cuiman Cai; Michael Paul Deninno; Hua Gao; Michael Hamilton; Richard F. Hank; Anthony R. Harris; Daniel W. Kung; Sophie Y. Lavergne; Bruce Allen Lefker; Michael G. Lopaze; Kim F. McClure; Michael John Munchhof; Cathy Préville; Ralph P. Robinson; Stephen W. Wright; Paul D. Bonin; Peter Cornelius; Yue Chen; Amit S. Kalgutkar

A novel GPR119 agonist based on the 2,4,5,6-tetrahydropyrrolo[3,4-c]pyrazole scaffold was designed through lead optimization starting from pyrazole-based GPR119 agonist 1. The design is centered on the conformational restriction of the core scaffold, while minimizing the change in spatial relationships of two key pharmacophoric elements (piperidine-carbamate and aryl sulfone).


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

The design and synthesis of indazole and pyrazolopyridine based glucokinase activators for the treatment of type 2 diabetes mellitus.

Jeffrey A. Pfefferkorn; Meihua Tu; Kevin J. Filipski; Angel Guzman-Perez; Jianwei Bian; Gary E. Aspnes; Matthew F. Sammons; Wei Song; Jian-Cheng Li; Christopher S. Jones; Leena Patel; Tim Rasmusson; Dongxiang Zeng; Kapil Karki; Michael Hamilton; Richard F. Hank; Karen Atkinson; John Litchfield; Robert J. Aiello; Levenia Baker; Nicole Barucci; Patricia Bourassa; Francis Bourbounais; Theresa D’Aquila; David R. Derksen; Margit MacDougall; Alan Robertson

Glucokinase activators represent a promising potential treatment for patients with Type 2 diabetes. Herein, we report the identification and optimization of a series of novel indazole and pyrazolopyridine based activators leading to the identification of 4-(6-(azetidine-1-carbonyl)-5-fluoropyridin-3-yloxy)-2-ethyl-N-(5-methylpyrazin-2-yl)-2H-indazole-6-carboxamide (42) as a potent activator with favorable preclinical pharmacokinetic properties and in vivo efficacy.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

Pyrimidone-based series of glucokinase activators with alternative donor-acceptor motif.

Kevin J. Filipski; Angel Guzman-Perez; Jianwei Bian; Christian Perreault; Gary E. Aspnes; Mary Theresa Didiuk; Robert L. Dow; Richard F. Hank; Christopher S. Jones; Robert John Maguire; Meihua Tu; Dongxiang Zeng; Shenping Liu; John D. Knafels; John Litchfield; Karen Atkinson; David R. Derksen; Francis Bourbonais; Ketan S. Gajiwala; Michael J. Hickey; Theodore Otto Johnson; Paul S. Humphries; Jeffrey A. Pfefferkorn

Glucokinase activators are a class of experimental agents under investigation as a therapy for Type 2 diabetes mellitus. An X-ray crystal structure of a modestly potent agent revealed the potential to substitute the common heterocyclic amide donor-acceptor motif for a pyridone moiety. We have successfully demonstrated that both pyridone and pyrimidone heterocycles can be used as a potent donor-acceptor substituent. Several sub-micromolar analogs that possess the desired partial activator profile were synthesized and characterized. Unfortunately, the most potent activators suffered from sub-optimal pharmacokinetic properties. Nonetheless, these donor-acceptor motifs may find utility in other glucokinase activator series or beyond.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2003

Discovery of a novel series of 6-azauracil-based thyroid hormone receptor ligands: potent, TRβ subtype-selective thyromimetics

Robert L. Dow; Steven R. Schneider; Ernest S. Paight; Richard F. Hank; Phoebe Chiang; Peter Cornelius; Eunsun Lee; William P. Newsome; Andrew G. Swick; Josephine Spitzer; Diane M. Hargrove; Terrell A. Patterson; Jayvardhan Pandit; Boris A. Chrunyk; Peter K. LeMotte; Dennis E. Danley; Michele H. Rosner; Mark Ammirati; Samuel P. Simons; Gayle K. Schulte; Bonnie Frances Tate; Paul DaSilva-Jardine


Archive | 2000

Compounds for the treatment of obesity

Richard L. Elliott; Richard F. Hank; Marlys Hammond


Organic Process Research & Development | 2002

An Optimized Process for Formation of 2,4-Disubstituted Imidazoles from Condensation of Amidines and α-Haloketones

Bryan Li; Charles K.-F. Chiu; Richard F. Hank; Jerry Anthony Murry; and Joshua Roth; Harry Tobiassen


Archive | 2000

Amide derivatives useful as Neuropeptide Y (NPY) antagonists

Philip A. Carpino; Marlys Hammond; Richard F. Hank

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