Roxanne Kunz
Amgen
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Publication
Featured researches published by Roxanne Kunz.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012
Essa Hu; Roxanne Kunz; Shannon Rumfelt; Ning Chen; Roland W. Bürli; Chun Li; Kristin L. Andrews; Jiandong Zhang; Samer Chmait; Jeffrey H. Kogan; Michelle Lindstrom; Stephen A. Hitchcock; James J. S. Treanor
We report the discovery of 6,7-dimethoxy-4-(pyridin-3-yl)cinnolines as novel inhibitors of phosphodiesterase 10A (PDE10A). Systematic examination and analyses of structure-activity-relationships resulted in single digit nM potency against PDE10A. X-ray co-crystal structure revealed the mode of binding in the enzymes catalytic domain and the source of selectivity against other PDEs. High in vivo clearance in rats was addressed with the help of metabolite identification (ID) studies. These findings combined resulted in compound 39, a promising potent inhibitor of PDE10A with good in vivo metabolic stability in rats and efficacy in a rodent behavioral model.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008
Essa Hu; Andrew Tasker; Ryan White; Roxanne Kunz; Jason Brooks Human; Ning Chen; Roland W. Bürli; Randall W. Hungate; Perry M. Novak; Andrea Itano; Xuxia Zhang; Violeta Yu; Yen Nguyen; Yanyan Tudor; Matthew Plant; Shaun Flynn; Yang Xu; Kristin L. Meagher; Douglas A. Whittington; Gordon Ng
Inhibition of c-Kit has the potential to treat mast cell associated fibrotic diseases. We report the discovery of several aminoquinazoline pyridones that are potent inhibitors of c-Kit with greater than 200-fold selectivity against KDR, p38, Lck, and Src. In vivo efficacy of pyridone 16 by dose-dependent inhibition of histamine release was demonstrated in a rodent pharmacodynamic model of mast cell activation.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012
Essa Hu; Ji Ma; Christopher Biorn; Dianna Lester-Zeiner; Robert Cho; Shannon Rumfelt; Roxanne Kunz; Thomas Nixey; Klaus Michelsen; Silke Miller; Jianxia Shi; Jamie Wong; Geraldine Hill Della Puppa; Jessica Able; Santosh Talreja; Dah-Ren Hwang; Stephen A. Hitchcock; Amy Porter; David Immke; Jennifer R. Allen; James J. S. Treanor; Hang Chen
A radiolabeled tracer for imaging therapeutic targets in the brain is a valuable tool for lead optimization in CNS drug discovery and for dose selection in clinical development. We report the rapid identification of a novel phosphodiesterase 10A (PDE10A) tracer candidate using a LC-MS/MS technology. This structurally distinct PDE10A tracer, AMG-7980 (5), has been shown to have good uptake in the striatum (1.2% ID/g tissue), high specificity (striatum/thalamus ratio of 10), and saturable binding in vivo. The PDE10A affinity (K(D)) and PDE10A target density (B(max)) were determined to be 0.94 nM and 2.3 pmol/mg protein, respectively, using [(3)H]5 on rat striatum homogenate. Autoradiography on rat brain sections indicated that the tracer signal was consistent with known PDE10A expression pattern. The specific binding of [(3)H]5 to rat brain was blocked by another structurally distinct, published PDE10A inhibitor, MP-10. Lastly, our tracer was used to measure in vivo PDE10A target occupancy of a PDE10A inhibitor in rats using LC-MS/MS technology.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014
Essa Hu; Ning Chen; Matthew P. Bourbeau; Paul E. Harrington; Kaustav Biswas; Roxanne Kunz; Kristin L. Andrews; Samer Chmait; Xiaoning Zhao; Carl D. Davis; Ji Ma; Jianxia Shi; Dianna Lester-Zeiner; Jean Danao; Jessica Able; Madelyn Cueva; Santosh Talreja; Thomas Kornecook; Hang Chen; Amy Porter; Randall W. Hungate; James J. S. Treanor; Jennifer R. Allen
We report the identification of a PDE10A clinical candidate by optimizing potency and in vivo efficacy of promising keto-benzimidazole leads 1 and 2. Significant increase in biochemical potency was observed when the saturated rings on morpholine 1 and N-acetyl piperazine 2 were changed by a single atom to tetrahydropyran 3 and N-acetyl piperidine 5. A second single atom modification from pyrazines 3 and 5 to pyridines 4 and 6 improved the inhibitory activity of 4 but not 6. In the in vivo LC-MS/MS target occupancy (TO) study at 10 mg/kg, 3, 5, and 6 achieved 86-91% occupancy of PDE10A in the brain. Furthermore, both CNS TO and efficacy in PCP-LMA behavioral model were observed in a dose dependent manner. With superior in vivo TO, in vivo efficacy and in vivo PK profiles in multiple preclinical species, compound 5 (AMG 579) was advanced as our PDE10A clinical candidate.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013
Essa Hu; Roxanne Kunz; Ning Chen; Shannon Rumfelt; Aaron C. Siegmund; Kristin L. Andrews; Samer Chmait; Sharon Zhao; Carl D. Davis; Hang Chen; Dianna Lester-Zeiner; Ji Ma; Christopher Biorn; Jianxia Shi; Amy Porter; James J. S. Treanor; Jennifer R. Allen
Our development of PDE10A inhibitors began with an HTS screening hit (1) that exhibited both high p-glycoprotein (P-gp) efflux ratios in rat and human and poor metabolic stability. On the basis of cocrystal structure of 1 in human PDE10A enzyme, we designed a novel keto-benzimidazole 26 with comparable PDE10A potency devoid of efflux liabilities. On target in vivo coverage of PDE10A in rat brain was assessed using our previously reported LC-MS/MS receptor occupancy (RO) technology. Compound 26 achieved 55% RO of PDE10A at 30 mg/kg po and covered PDE10A receptors in rat brain in a dose-dependent manner. Cocrystal structure of 26 in PDE10A confirmed the binding mode of the novel scaffold. Further optimization resulted in the identification of keto-benzimidazole 34, which showed an increased in vivo efficacy of 57% RO in rats at 10 mg/kg po and an improved in vivo rat clearance and oral bioavailability.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014
Nobuko Nishimura; Mark H. Norman; Longbin Liu; Kevin C. Yang; Kate S. Ashton; Michael D. Bartberger; Samer Chmait; Jie Chen; Rod Cupples; Christopher Fotsch; Joan Helmering; Steven R. Jordan; Roxanne Kunz; Lewis D. Pennington; Steve F. Poon; Aaron C. Siegmund; Glenn Sivits; David J. Lloyd; Clarence Hale; David J. St. Jean
We have recently reported a novel approach to increase cytosolic glucokinase (GK) levels through the binding of a small molecule to its endogenous inhibitor, glucokinase regulatory protein (GKRP). These initial investigations culminated in the identification of 2-(4-((2S)-4-((6-amino-3-pyridinyl)sulfonyl)-2-(1-propyn-1-yl)-1-piperazinyl)phenyl)-1,1,1,3,3,3-hexafluoro-2-propanol (1, AMG-3969), a compound that effectively enhanced GK translocation and reduced blood glucose levels in diabetic animals. Herein we report the results of our expanded SAR investigations that focused on modifications to the aryl carbinol group of this series. Guided by the X-ray cocrystal structure of compound 1 bound to hGKRP, we identified several potent GK-GKRP disruptors bearing a diverse set of functionalities in the aryl carbinol region. Among them, sulfoximine and pyridinyl derivatives 24 and 29 possessed excellent potency as well as favorable PK properties. When dosed orally in db/db mice, both compounds significantly lowered fed blood glucose levels (up to 58%).
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014
David J. St. Jean; Kate S. Ashton; Michael D. Bartberger; Jie Chen; Samer Chmait; Rod Cupples; Elizabeth J. Galbreath; Joan Helmering; Fang-Tsao Hong; Steven R. Jordan; Longbin Liu; Roxanne Kunz; Klaus Michelsen; Nobuko Nishimura; Lewis D. Pennington; Steve F. Poon; Darren L. Reid; Glenn Sivits; Markian Stec; Seifu Tadesse; Nuria A. Tamayo; Gwyneth Van; Kevin C. Yang; Jiandong Zhang; Mark H. Norman; Christopher Fotsch; David J. Lloyd; Clarence Hale
In the previous report , we described the discovery and optimization of novel small molecule disruptors of the GK-GKRP interaction culminating in the identification of 1 (AMG-1694). Although this analogue possessed excellent in vitro potency and was a useful tool compound in initial proof-of-concept experiments, high metabolic turnover limited its advancement. Guided by a combination of metabolite identification and structure-based design, we have successfully discovered a potent and metabolically stable GK-GKRP disruptor (27, AMG-3969). When administered to db/db mice, this compound demonstrated a robust pharmacodynamic response (GK translocation) as well as statistically significant dose-dependent reductions in fed blood glucose levels.
Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2015
Hang Chen; Dianna Lester-Zeiner; Jianxia Shi; Silke Miller; Charles Glaus; Essa Hu; N. Chen; Jessica Able; Christopher Biorn; J. Wong; Ji Ma; Klaus Michelsen; G. Hill Della Puppa; Tim Kazules; H. H. Dou; S. Talreja; Xiaoning Zhao; A. Chen; Shannon Rumfelt; Roxanne Kunz; H. Ye; O. R. Thiel; Toni Williamson; C. Davis; Amy Porter; David Immke; J. R. Allen; James J. S. Treanor
Phosphodiesterase 10A (PDE10A) inhibitors have therapeutic potential for the treatment of psychiatric and neurologic disorders, such as schizophrenia and Huntington’s disease. One of the key requirements for successful central nervous system drug development is to demonstrate target coverage of therapeutic candidates in brain for lead optimization in the drug discovery phase and for assisting dose selection in clinical development. Therefore, we identified AMG 580 [1-(4-(3-(4-(1H-benzo[d]imidazole-2-carbonyl)phenoxy)pyrazin-2-yl)piperidin-1-yl)-2-fluoropropan-1-one], a novel, selective small-molecule antagonist with subnanomolar affinity for rat, primate, and human PDE10A. We showed that AMG 580 is suitable as a tracer for lead optimization to determine target coverage by novel PDE10A inhibitors using triple-stage quadrupole liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry technology. [3H]AMG 580 bound with high affinity in a specific and saturable manner to both striatal homogenates and brain slices from rats, baboons, and human in vitro. Moreover, [18F]AMG 580 demonstrated prominent uptake by positron emission tomography in rats, suggesting that radiolabeled AMG 580 may be suitable for further development as a noninvasive radiotracer for target coverage measurements in clinical studies. These results indicate that AMG 580 is a potential imaging biomarker for mapping PDE10A distribution and ensuring target coverage by therapeutic PDE10A inhibitors in clinical studies.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2014
Robert M. Rzasa; Michael J. Frohn; Kristin L. Andrews; Samer Chmait; Ning Chen; Jeffrey Clarine; Carl Davis; Heather Eastwood; Daniel B. Horne; Essa Hu; Adrie D. Jones; Matthew R. Kaller; Roxanne Kunz; Silke Miller; Holger Monenschein; Thomas Nguyen; Alexander J. Pickrell; Amy Porter; Andreas Reichelt; Xiaoning Zhao; James J. S. Treanor; Jennifer R. Allen
We report the discovery of a novel series of 2-(3-alkoxy-1-azetidinyl) quinolines as potent and selective PDE10A inhibitors. Structure-activity studies improved the solubility (pH 7.4) and maintained high PDE10A activity compared to initial lead compound 3, with select compounds demonstrating good oral bioavailability. X-ray crystallographic studies revealed two distinct binding modes to the catalytic site of the PDE10A enzyme. An ex vivo receptor occupancy assay in rats demonstrated that this series of compounds covered the target within the striatum.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008
Roxanne Kunz; Shannon Rumfelt; Ning Chen; Dawei Zhang; Andrew Tasker; Roland W. Bürli; Randall W. Hungate; Violeta Yu; Yen Nguyen; Douglas A. Whittington; Kristin L. Meagher; Matthew Plant; Yanyan Tudor; Michael Schrag; Yang Xu; Gordon Ng; Essa Hu
Deregulation of the receptor tyrosine kinase c-Kit is associated with an increasing number of human diseases, including certain cancers and mast cell diseases. Interference of c-Kit signaling with multi-kinase inhibitors has been shown clinically to successfully treat gastrointestinal stromal tumors and mastocytosis. Targeted therapy of c-Kit activity may provide therapeutic advantages against off-target effects for non-oncology applications. A new structural class of c-Kit inhibitors is described, including in vitro c-Kit potency, kinase selectivity, and the observed binding mode.