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Featured researches published by Robert Chase.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2006

SCH 503034, a Mechanism-Based Inhibitor of Hepatitis C Virus NS3 Protease, Suppresses Polyprotein Maturation and Enhances the Antiviral Activity of Alpha Interferon in Replicon Cells

B. Malcolm; Rong Liu; F. Lahser; Sony Agrawal; B. Belanger; N. Butkiewicz; Robert Chase; F. Gheyas; A. Hart; D. Hesk; Paul Ingravallo; C. Jiang; R. Kong; J. Lu; J. Pichardo; A. Prongay; A. Skelton; Xiao Tong; S. Venkatraman; E. Xia; Viyyoor M. Girijavallabhan; F. G. Njoroge

ABSTRACT Cleavage of the hepatitis C virus (HCV) polyprotein by the viral NS3 protease releases functional viral proteins essential for viral replication. Recent studies by Foy and coworkers strongly suggest that NS3-mediated cleavage of host factors may abrogate cellular response to alpha interferon (IFN-α) (E. Foy, K. Li, R. Sumpter, Jr., Y.-M. Loo, C. L. Johnson, C. Wang, P. M. Fish, M. Yoneyama, T. Fujita, S. M. Lemon, and M. Gale, Jr., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 102:2986-2991, 2005, and E. Foy, K. Li, C. Wang, R. Sumpter, Jr., M. Ikeda, S. M. Lemon, and M. Gale, Jr., Science 300:1145-1148, 2003). Blockage of NS3 protease activity therefore is expected to inhibit HCV replication by both direct suppression of viral protein production as well as by restoring host responsiveness to IFN. Using structure-assisted design, a ketoamide inhibitor, SCH 503034, was generated which demonstrated potent (overall inhibition constant, 14 nM) time-dependent inhibition of the NS3 protease in cell-free enzyme assays as well as robust in vitro activity in the HCV replicon system, as monitored by immunofluorescence and real-time PCR analysis. Continuous exposure of replicon-bearing cell lines to six times the 90% effective concentration of SCH 503034 for 15 days resulted in a greater than 4-log reduction in replicon RNA. The combination of SCH 503034 with IFN was more effective in suppressing replicon synthesis than either compound alone, supporting the suggestion of Foy and coworkers that combinations of IFN with protease inhibitors would lead to enhanced therapeutic efficacy.


Antiviral Research | 2008

Characterization of resistance mutations against HCV ketoamide protease inhibitors

Xiao Tong; Stephane L. Bogen; Robert Chase; Viyyoor M. Girijavallabhan; Zhuyan Guo; F. George Njoroge; Andrew Prongay; Anil K. Saksena; Angela Skelton; Ellen Xia; Robert Ralston

An issue of clinical importance in the development of new antivirals for HCV is emergence of resistance. Several resistance loci to ketoamide inhibitors of the NS3/4A protease have been identified (residues V36, T54, R155, A156, and V170) by replicon and clinical studies. Using SCH 567312, a more potent protease inhibitor derived from SCH 503034 (boceprevir) series, we identified two new positions (Q41 and F43) that confer resistance to the ketoamide class. The catalytic efficiency of protease enzymes was not affected by most resistance mutations, whereas replicon fitness varied with specific mutations. SCH 503034 and another ketoamide inhibitor, VX-950 (telaprevir), showed moderate losses of activity against most resistance mutations (< or =10-fold); the highest resistance level was conferred by mutations at A156 locus. Although SCH 503034 and VX-950 bind similarly to the active site, differences in resistance level were observed with specific mutations. Changes at V36 and R155 had more severe impact on VX-950, whereas mutations at Q41, F43 and V170 conferred higher resistance to SCH 503034. Structural analysis of resistance mutations on inhibitor binding is discussed.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Mutations conferring resistance to SCH6, a novel hepatitis C virus NS3/4A protease inhibitor: Reduced RNA replication fitness and partial rescue by second-site mutations

MinKyung Yi; Xiao Tong; Angela Skelton; Robert Chase; Tong Chen; Andrew Prongay; Stephane L. Bogen; Anil K. Saksena; F. George Njoroge; Ronald L. Veselenak; Richard B. Pyles; Nigel Bourne; Bruce A. Malcolm; Stanley M. Lemon

Drug resistance is a major issue in the development and use of specific antiviral therapies. Here we report the isolation and characterization of hepatitis C virus RNA replicons resistant to a novel ketoamide inhibitor of the NS3/4A protease, SCH6 (originally SCH446211). Resistant replicon RNAs were generated by G418 selection in the presence of SCH6 in a dose-dependent fashion, with the emergence of resistance reduced at higher SCH6 concentrations. Sequencing demonstrated remarkable consistency in the mutations conferring SCH6 resistance in genotype 1b replicons derived from two different strains of hepatitis C virus, A156T/A156V and R109K. R109K, a novel mutation not reported previously to cause resistance to NS3/4A inhibitors, conferred moderate resistance only to SCH6. Structural analysis indicated that this reflects unique interactions of SCH6 with P′-side residues in the protease active site. In contrast, A156T conferred high level resistance to SCH6 and a related ketoamide, SCH503034, as well as BILN 2061 and VX-950. Unlike R109K, which had minimal impact on NS3/4A enzymatic function, A156T significantly reduced NS3/4A catalytic efficiency, polyprotein processing, and replicon fitness. However, three separate second-site mutations, P89L, Q86R, and G162R, were capable of partially reversing A156T-associated defects in polyprotein processing and/or replicon fitness, without significantly reducing resistance to the protease inhibitor.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2010

Preclinical Characterization of the Antiviral Activity of SCH 900518 (Narlaprevir), a Novel Mechanism-Based Inhibitor of Hepatitis C Virus NS3 Protease

Xiao Tong; A. Arasappan; F. Bennett; Robert Chase; B. Feld; Z. Guo; A. Hart; Vincent Madison; B. Malcolm; J. Pichardo; A. Prongay; R. Ralston; A. Skelton; E. Xia; R. Zhang; F. G. Njoroge

ABSTRACT Small-molecule hepatitis C virus (HCV) NS3 protease inhibitors such as boceprevir (SCH 503034) have been shown to have antiviral activity when they are used as monotherapy and in combination with pegylated alpha interferon and ribavirin in clinical trials. Improvements in inhibitor potency and pharmacokinetic properties offer opportunities to increase drug exposure and to further increase the sustained virological response. Exploration of the structure-activity relationships of ketoamide inhibitors related to boceprevir has led to the discovery of SCH 900518, a novel ketoamide protease inhibitor which forms a reversible covalent bond with the active-site serine. It has an overall inhibition constant (K*i) of 7 nM and a dissociation half-life of 1 to 2 h. SCH 900518 inhibited replicon RNA at a 90% effective concentration (EC90) of 40 nM. In biochemical assays, SCH 900518 was active against proteases of genotypes 1 to 3. A 2-week treatment with 5× EC90 of the inhibitor reduced the replicon RNA level by 3 log units. Selection of replicon cells with SCH 900518 resulted in the outgrowth of several resistant mutants (with the T54A/S and A156S/T/V mutations). Cross-resistance studies demonstrated that the majority of mutations for resistance to boceprevir and telaprevir caused similar fold losses of activity against all three inhibitors; however, SCH 900518 retained more activity against these mutants due to its higher intrinsic potency. Combination treatment with alpha interferon enhanced the inhibition of replicon RNA and suppressed the emergence of resistant replicon colonies, supporting the use of SCH 900518-pegylated alpha interferon combination therapy in the clinic. In summary, the results of the preclinical characterization of the antiviral activity of SCH 900518 support its evaluation in clinical studies.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009

Discovery and structure-activity relationship of P1-P3 ketoamide derived macrocyclic inhibitors of hepatitis C virus NS3 protease.

Srikanth Venkatraman; Francisco Velazquez; Wu W; Melissa Blackman; Kevin X. Chen; Stephane L. Bogen; Latha G. Nair; Xiao Tong; Robert Chase; Hart A; Sony Agrawal; John Pichardo; Andrew Prongay; Kuo-Chi Cheng; Girijavallabhan; John J. Piwinski; Neng-Yang Shih; Njoroge Fg

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is the major cause of chronic liver disease, leading to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma, and affects more than 200 million people worldwide. Although combination therapy of interferon-alpha and ribavirin is reasonably successful in treating majority of genotypes, its efficacy against the predominant genotype (genotype 1) is moderate at best, with only about 40% of the patients showing sustained virological response. Herein, the SAR leading to the discovery of a series of ketoamide derived P(1)-P(3) macrocyclic inhibitors that are more potent than the first generation clinical candidate, boceprevir (1, Sch 503034), is discussed. The optimization of these macrocyclic inhibitors identified a P(3) imide capped analogue 52 that was 20 times more potent than 1 and demonstrated good oral pharmacokinetics in rats. X-ray structure of 52 bound to NS3 protease and biological data are also discussed.


Antiviral Research | 1997

SCH 43478 and analogs: in vitro activity and in vivo efficacy of novel agents for herpesvirus type 2

Randi Albin; Robert Chase; Christine Risano; Melvin Lieberman; Eric Ferrari; Angela Skelton; Peter Buontempo; Stuart Cox; Jason DeMartino; Jacquelyn Wright-Minogue; Gilbert Jirau-Lucca; Joseph M. Kelly; Adrian Afonso; Ann D. Kwong; Edward J Rozthon; John O'Connell

SCH 43478 and analogs are a class of non-nucleoside antiviral agents that have potent and selective activity against herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2). The IC50 for these compounds in plaque reduction analysis using Vero cells ranges from 0.8 to 2.0 microg/ml. All compounds have a LC50 > 100 microg/ml in cytotoxicity analysis. Mechanism of action studies suggest that these molecules have an effect on the transactivation of viral immediate early (alpha) gene expression. Time of addition studies indicate that antiviral activity of these analogs is limited to the initial 2-3 h after infection and is not due to inhibition of viral adsorption or penetration. Analysis of HSV protein expression demonstrates that SCH 49286 inhibits the accumulation of viral immediate early (alpha) gene products. SCH 43478 demonstrates statistically significant efficacy (P < 0.05) in the guinea pig genital model of HSV infection. Following subcutaneous administration in a therapeutic treatment regimen, SCH 43478 (90 mg/kg/day) is efficacious in reducing the number and severity of lesions and the neurological complications of acute HSV infection. Thus, SCH 43478 and analogs are anti-herpesvirus agents with a unique mechanism of action.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2016

The Combination of Grazoprevir, a Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) NS3/4A Protease Inhibitor, and Elbasvir, an HCV NS5A Inhibitor, Demonstrates a High Genetic Barrier to Resistance in HCV Genotype 1a Replicons

Frederick C. Lahser; Karin Bystol; Stephanie Curry; Patricia McMonagle; Ellen Xia; Paul Ingravallo; Robert Chase; Rong Liu; Todd A. Black; Daria J. Hazuda; Anita Y. M. Howe; Ernest Asante-Appiah

ABSTRACT The selection of resistance-associated variants (RAVs) against single agents administered to patients chronically infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV) necessitates that direct-acting antiviral agents (DAAs) targeting multiple viral proteins be developed to overcome failure resulting from emergence of resistance. The combination of grazoprevir (formerly MK-5172), an NS3/4A protease inhibitor, and elbasvir (formerly MK-8742), an NS5A inhibitor, was therefore studied in genotype 1a (GT1a) replicon cells. Both compounds were independently highly potent in GT1a wild-type replicon cells, with 90% effective concentration (EC90) values of 0.9 nM and 0.006 nM for grazoprevir and elbasvir, respectively. No cross-resistance was observed when clinically relevant NS5A and NS3 RAVs were profiled against grazoprevir and elbasvir, respectively. Kinetic analyses of HCV RNA reduction over 14 days showed that grazoprevir and elbasvir inhibited prototypic NS5A Y93H and NS3 R155K RAVs, respectively, with kinetics comparable to those for the wild-type GT1a replicon. In combination, grazoprevir and elbasvir interacted additively in GT1a replicon cells. Colony formation assays with a 10-fold multiple of the EC90 values of the grazoprevir-elbasvir inhibitor combination suppressed emergence of resistant colonies, compared to a 100-fold multiple for the independent agents. The selected resistant colonies with the combination harbored RAVs that required two or more nucleotide changes in the codons. Mutations in the cognate gene caused greater potency losses for elbasvir than for grazoprevir. Replicons bearing RAVs identified from resistant colonies showed reduced fitness for several cell lines and may contribute to the activity of the combination. These studies demonstrate that the combination of grazoprevir and elbasvir exerts a potent effect on HCV RNA replication and presents a high genetic barrier to resistance. The combination of grazoprevir and elbasvir is currently approved for chronic HCV infection.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2016

Discovery of MK-8831, A Novel Spiro-Proline Macrocycle as a Pan-Genotypic HCV-NS3/4a Protease Inhibitor.

Santhosh Francis Neelamkavil; Sony Agrawal; Thomas Bara; Chad E. Bennett; Sathesh Bhat; Dipshikha Biswas; Linda Brockunier; Nicole Buist; Duane Burnette; Mark Cartwright; Samuel Chackalamannil; Robert Chase; Mariappan V. Chelliah; Austin Chen; Martin C. Clasby; Vincent J. Colandrea; Ian W. Davies; Keith Eagen; Zhuyan Guo; Yongxin Han; John A. Howe; Charles Lee Jayne; Hubert Josien; Stacia Kargman; Karen Marcantonio; Shouwu Miao; Randy R. Miller; Andrew Nolting; Patrick A. Pinto; Murali Rajagopalan

We have been focused on identifying a structurally different next generation inhibitor to MK-5172 (our Ns3/4a protease inhibitor currently under regulatory review), which would achieve superior pangenotypic activity with acceptable safety and pharmacokinetic profile. These efforts have led to the discovery of a novel class of HCV NS3/4a protease inhibitors containing a unique spirocyclic-proline structural motif. The design strategy involved a molecular-modeling based approach, and the optimization efforts on the series to obtain pan-genotypic coverage with good exposures on oral dosing. One of the key elements in this effort was the spirocyclization of the P2 quinoline group, which rigidified and constrained the binding conformation to provide a novel core. A second focus of the team was also to improve the activity against genotype 3a and the key mutant variants of genotype 1b. The rational application of structural chemistry with molecular modeling guided the design and optimization of the structure-activity relationships have resulted in the identification of the clinical candidate MK-8831 with excellent pan-genotypic activity and safety profile.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2014

Novel Quinoline-Based P2-P4 Macrocyclic Derivatives As Pan-Genotypic HCV NS3/4a Protease Inhibitors.

Unmesh G. Shah; Charles Lee Jayne; Samuel Chackalamannil; Francisco Velazquez; Zhuyan Guo; Alexei V. Buevich; John A. Howe; Robert Chase; Aileen Soriano; Sony Agrawal; Michael T. Rudd; John A. McCauley; Nigel J. Liverton; Joseph J. Romano; Kimberly J. Bush; Paul J. Coleman; Christiane Grisé-Bard; Marie-Christine Brochu; Sylvie Charron; Virender Aulakh; Benoit Bachand; Patrick Beaulieu; Helmi Zaghdane; Sathesh Bhat; Yongxin Han; Joseph P. Vacca; Ian W. Davies; Ann E. Weber; Srikanth Venkatraman

We have previously reported the discovery of our P2-P4 macrocyclic HCV NS3/4a protease inhibitor MK-5172, which in combination with the NS5a inhibitor MK-8742 recently received a breakthrough therapy designation from the US FDA for treatment of chronic HCV infection. Our goal for the next generation NS3/4a inhibitor was to achieve pan-genotypic activity while retaining the pharmacokinetic profile of MK-5172. One of the areas for follow-up investigation involved replacement of the quinoxaline moiety in MK-5172 with a quinoline and studying the effect of substitution at 4-position of the quinoline. The rationale for this effort was based on molecular modeling, which indicated that such modifications would improve interactions with the S2 subsite, in particular with D79. We wish to report herein the discovery of highly potent inhibitors with pan-genotypic activity and an improved profile over MK-5172, especially against gt-3a and A156 mutants.


Antiviral Research | 2006

Identification and analysis of fitness of resistance mutations against the HCV protease inhibitor SCH 503034.

Xiao Tong; Robert Chase; Angela Skelton; Tong Chen; Jackie Wright-Minogue; Bruce A. Malcolm

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