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Dive into the research topics where Robert B. Lobell is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert B. Lobell.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

Kinesin spindle protein (KSP) inhibitors. 9. Discovery of (2S)-4-(2,5-difluorophenyl)-n-[(3R,4S)-3-fluoro-1-methylpiperidin-4-yl]-2-(hydroxymethyl)-N-methyl-2-phenyl-2,5-dihydro-1H-pyrrole-1-carboxamide (MK-0731) for the treatment of taxane-refractory cancer.

Christopher D. Cox; Paul J. Coleman; Michael J. Breslin; David B. Whitman; Robert M. Garbaccio; Mark E. Fraley; Carolyn A. Buser; Eileen S. Walsh; Kelly Hamilton; Michael D. Schaber; Robert B. Lobell; Weikang Tao; Joseph P. Davide; Ronald E. Diehl; Marc Abrams; Vicki J. South; Hans E. Huber; Maricel Torrent; Thomayant Prueksaritanont; Chunze Li; Donald E. Slaughter; Elizabeth Mahan; Carmen Fernandez-Metzler; Youwei Yan; Lawrence C. Kuo; Nancy E. Kohl; George D. Hartman

Inhibition of kinesin spindle protein (KSP) is a novel mechanism for treatment of cancer with the potential to overcome limitations associated with currently employed cytotoxic agents. Herein, we describe a C2-hydroxymethyl dihydropyrrole KSP inhibitor ( 11) that circumvents hERG channel binding and poor in vivo potency, issues that limited earlier compounds from our program. However, introduction of the C2-hydroxymethyl group caused 11 to be a substrate for cellular efflux by P-glycoprotein (Pgp). Utilizing knowledge garnered from previous KSP inhibitors, we found that beta-fluorination modulated the p K a of the piperidine nitrogen and reduced Pgp efflux, but the resulting compound ( 14) generated a toxic metabolite in vivo. Incorporation of fluorine in a strategic, metabolically benign position by synthesis of an N-methyl-3-fluoro-4-(aminomethyl)piperidine urea led to compound 30 that has an optimal in vitro and metabolic profile. Compound 30 (MK-0731) was recently studied in a phase I clinical trial in patients with taxane-refractory solid tumors.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2007

An Inhibitor of the Kinesin Spindle Protein Activates the Intrinsic Apoptotic Pathway Independently of p53 and De Novo Protein Synthesis

Weikang Tao; Victoria J. South; Ronald E. Diehl; Joseph P. Davide; Laura Sepp-Lorenzino; Mark E. Fraley; Kenneth L. Arrington; Robert B. Lobell

ABSTRACT The kinesin spindle protein (KSP), a microtubule motor protein, is essential for the formation of bipolar spindles during mitosis. Inhibition of KSP activates the spindle checkpoint and causes apoptosis. It was shown that prolonged inhibition of KSP activates Bax and caspase-3, which requires a competent spindle checkpoint and couples with mitotic slippage. Here we investigated how Bax is activated by KSP inhibition and the roles of Bax and p53 in KSP inhibitor-induced apoptosis. We demonstrate that small interfering RNA-mediated knockdown of Bax greatly attenuates KSP inhibitor-induced apoptosis and that Bax activation is upstream of caspase activation. This indicates that Bax mediates the lethality of KSP inhibitors and that KSP inhibition provokes apoptosis via the intrinsic apoptotic pathway where Bax activation is prior to caspase activation. Although the BH3-only protein Puma is induced after mitotic slippage, suppression of de novo protein synthesis that abrogates Puma induction does not block activation of Bax or caspase-3, indicating that Bax activation is triggered by a posttranslational event. Comparison of KSP inhibitor-induced apoptosis between matched cell lines containing either functional or deficient p53 reveals that inhibition of KSP induces apoptosis independently of p53 and that p53 is dispensable for spindle checkpoint function. Thus, KSP inhibitors should be active in p53-deficient tumors.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 1999

Imidazole-containing diarylether and diarylsulfone inhibitors of farnesyl-protein transferase

Christopher J. Dinsmore; Theresa M. Williams; Timothy J. O'Neill; Dongming Liu; Elaine Rands; J.Christopher Culberson; Robert B. Lobell; Kenneth S. Koblan; Nancy E. Kohl; Jackson B. Gibbs; Allen Oliff; Samuel L. Graham; George D. Hartman

The design and syntheses of non-thiol inhibitors of farnesyl-protein transferase are described. Optimization of cysteine-substituted diarylethers led to highly potent imidazole-containing diarylethers and diarylsulfones. Polar diaryl linkers dramatically improved potency and gave highly cell active compounds.


Cancer and Metastasis Reviews | 1998

Pre-clinical development of farnesyltransferase inhibitors

Robert B. Lobell; Nancy E. Kohl

Abstractras is the oncogene most frequently found in human cancers, being detected in 30% of most human cancers and at significantly higher rates in certain cancers including pancreatic (90%) and colon (50%) [1]. Almost 10 years ago it was shown that a C-terminal lipid modification of Ras, catalyzed by a specific farnesyl-protein transferase (FPTase), was required for the function of both normal and oncogenic Ras proteins. This finding spurred the development of FPTase inhibitors (FTIs) as a potential cancer therapy directed at the ras oncogene. FTIs have exhibited potent antiproliferative activity in cell culture and animal tumor models with a surprising lack of toxicity to normal tissues. However, while FTIs were originally conceptualized as Ras-specific agents, their mechanism of action is significantly more complicated than originally envisioned.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001

Anions Modulate the Potency of Geranylgeranyl-Protein Transferase I Inhibitors

Hans E. Huber; Ronald G. Robinson; Aubrey Watkins; Deborah D. Nahas; Marc T. Abrams; Carolyn A. Buser; Robert B. Lobell; Denis R. Patrick; Neville J. Anthony; Christopher J. Dinsmore; Samuel L. Graham; George D. Hartman; William C. Lumma; Theresa M. Williams; D C Heimbrook

We have identified and characterized potent and specific inhibitors of geranylgeranyl-protein transferase type I (GGPTase I), as well as dual inhibitors of GGPTase I and farnesyl-protein transferase. Many of these inhibitors require the presence of phosphate anions for maximum activity against GGPTase Iin vitro. Inhibitors with a strong anion dependence were competitive with geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate (GGPP), rather than with the peptide substrate, which had served as the original template for inhibitor design. One of the most effective anions was ATP, which at low millimolar concentrations increased the potency of GGPTase I inhibitors up to several hundred-fold. In the case of clinical candidate l-778,123, this increase in potency was shown to result from two major interactions: competitive binding of inhibitor and GGPP, and competitive binding of ATP and GGPP. At 5 mm, ATP caused an increase in the apparent K d for the GGPP-GGPTase I interaction from 20 pm to 4 nm, resulting in correspondingly tighter inhibitor binding. A subset of very potent GGPP-competitive inhibitors displayed slow tight binding to GGPTase I with apparent on and off rates on the order of 106 m − 1s− 1 and 10− 3s− 1, respectively. Slow binding and the anion requirement suggest that these inhibitors may act as transition state analogs. After accounting for anion requirement, slow binding, and mechanism of competition, the structure-activity relationship determined in vitro correlated well with the inhibition of processing of GGPTase I substrate Rap1a in vivo.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2001

Aryloxy Substituted N-Arylpiperazinones as Dual Inhibitors of Farnesyltransferase and Geranylgeranyltransferase-I

Jeffrey M. Bergman; Marc T. Abrams; Joseph P. Davide; Ian Greenberg; Ronald G. Robinson; Carolyn A. Buser; Hans E. Huber; Kenneth S. Koblan; Nancy E. Kohl; Robert B. Lobell; Samuel L. Graham; George D. Hartman; Theresa M. Williams; Christopher J. Dinsmore

A series of aryloxy substituted piperazinones with dual farnesyltransferase/geranylgeranyltransferase-I inhibitory activity was prepared. These compounds were found to have potent inhibitory activity in vitro and are promising agents for the inhibition of Ki-Ras signaling.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2001

Oxo-piperazine Derivatives of N-Arylpiperazinones as Inhibitors of Farnesyltransferase

Christopher J. Dinsmore; Jeffrey M. Bergman; Donna Wei; C. Blair Zartman; Joseph P. Davide; Ian Greenberg; Dongming Liu; Timothy J. O'Neill; Jackson B. Gibbs; Kenneth S. Koblan; Nancy E. Kohl; Robert B. Lobell; I-Wu Chen; Debra McLoughlin; Timothy V. Olah; Samuel L. Graham; George D. Hartman; Theresa M. Williams

The evaluation of SAR associated with the insertion of carbonyl groups at various positions of N-arylpiperazinone farnesyltransferase inhibitors is described herein. 1-Aryl-2,3-diketopiperazine derivatives exhibited the best balance of potency and pharmacokinetic profile relative to the parent 1-aryl-2-piperazinones.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

Pyridyl aminothiazoles as potent inhibitors of Chk1 with slow dissociation rates.

Vadim Y. Dudkin; Keith Rickert; Constantine Kreatsoulas; Cheng Wang; Kenneth L. Arrington; Mark E. Fraley; George D. Hartman; Yowei Yan; Mari Ikuta; Steven M. Stirdivant; Robert A. Drakas; Eileen S. Walsh; Kelly Hamilton; Carolyn A. Buser; Robert B. Lobell; Laura Sepp-Lorenzino

Pyridyl aminothiazoles comprise a novel class of ATP-competitive Chk1 inhibitors with excellent inhibitory potential. Modification of the core with ethylenediamine amides provides compounds with low picomolar potency and very high residence times. Investigation of binding parameters of such compounds using X-ray crystallography and molecular dynamics simulations revealed multiple hydrogen bonds to the enzyme backbone as well as stabilization of the conserved water molecules network in the hydrophobic binding region.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2001

Diaryl ether inhibitors of farnesyl-protein transferase.

Suzanne C. MacTough; S.Jane deSolms; Anthony W. Shaw; Marc T. Abrams; Terrence M. Ciccarone; Joseph P. Davide; Kelly Hamilton; John H. Hutchinson; Kenneth S. Koblan; Nancy E. Kohl; Robert B. Lobell; Ronald G. Robinson; Samuel L. Graham

Imidazolemethyl diaryl ethers are potent inhibitors of farnesyl-protein transferase. The SNAr displacement reaction used to prepare these diaryl ethers was amenable to rapid parallel synthesis of FPTase inhibitors. The use of a broad range of commercially available phenols quickly identified compounds which proved active in cells.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2002

The synthesis and biological evaluation of a series of potent dual inhibitors of farnesyl and geranyl-Geranyl protein transferases.

Thomas J. Tucker; Marc T. Abrams; Carolyn A. Buser; Joseph P. Davide; Michelle Ellis-Hutchings; Christine Fernandes; Jackson B. Gibbs; Samuel L. Graham; George D. Hartman; Hans E. Huber; Dongming Liu; Robert B. Lobell; William C. Lumma; Ronald G. Robinson; John T. Sisko; Smith Am

We have prepared a series of potent, dual inhibitors of the prenyl transferases farnesyl protein transferase (FPTase) and geranyl-geranyl protein transferase I (GGPTase). The compounds were shown to possess potent activity against both enzymes in cell culture. Mechanistic analysis has shown that the compounds are CAAX competitive for FPTase inhibition but geranyl-geranyl pyrophosphate (GGPP) competitive for GGPTase inhibiton.

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Nancy E. Kohl

United States Military Academy

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Carolyn A. Buser

United States Military Academy

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George D. Hartman

United States Military Academy

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Eileen S. Walsh

United States Military Academy

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Theresa M. Williams

United States Military Academy

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Weikang Tao

United States Military Academy

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Kenneth S. Koblan

United States Military Academy

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