Rulin Zhao
Bristol-Myers Squibb
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Publication
Featured researches published by Rulin Zhao.
Tetrahedron Letters | 2000
Bang-Chi Chen; Mark S. Bednarz; Rulin Zhao; Joseph E. Sundeen; Ping Chen; Zhongqi Shen; Amanda P. Skoumbourdis; Joel C. Barrish
Abstract A new facile method for the preparation of 1-arylimidazole-5-carboxylates was developed. The new method involved reaction of anilines and ethyl glyoxylate in methanol to give α-anilino-α-methoxyacetates followed by cyclization with TosMIC, affording 1-arylimidazole-5-carboxylates in two steps in 40–94% overall yields.
Tetrahedron Letters | 2001
Bang-Chi Chen; Joseph E. Sundeen; Peng Guo; Mark S. Bednarz; Rulin Zhao
An improved synthesis of 1-(imidazolyl)methyl-4-sulfonylbenzodiazapines, new farnesyltransferase inhibitors, was achieved using a novel reductive N-alkylation method. The new method involves reaction of a secondary amine with an aldehyde using triethylsilane in the presence of trifluoroacetic acid, giving a tertiary amine in 90–95% isolated yields.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008
Saleem Ahmad; Cort S. Madsen; Philip D. Stein; Evan B. Janovitz; Christine Huang; Khehyong Ngu; Sharon N. Bisaha; Lawrence J. Kennedy; Bang-Chi Chen; Rulin Zhao; Doree Sitkoff; Hossain Monshizadegan; Xiaohong Yin; Carol S. Ryan; Rongan Zhang; Mary R. Giancarli; Eileen Bird; Ming Chang; Xing Chen; Robert Setters; Debra Search; Shaobin Zhuang; Van Nguyen-Tran; Carolyn A. Cuff; Thomas Harrity; Celia D'Arienzo; Tong Li; Richard A. Reeves; Michael A. Blanar; Joel C. Barrish
3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme-A reductase (HMGR) inhibitors, more commonly known as statins, represent the gold standard in treating hypercholesterolemia. Although statins are regarded as generally safe, they are known to cause myopathy and, in rare cases, rhabdomyolysis. Statin-dependent effects on plasma lipids are mediated through the inhibition of HMGR in the hepatocyte, whereas evidence suggests that myotoxicity is due to inhibition of HMGR within the myocyte. Thus, an inhibitor with increased selectivity for hepatocytes could potentially result in an improved therapeutic window. Implementation of a strategy that focused on in vitro potency, compound polarity, cell selectivity, and oral absorption, followed by extensive efficacy and safety modeling in guinea pig and rat, resulted in the identification of compound 1b (BMS-644950). Using this discovery pathway, we compared 1b to other marketed statins to demonstrate its outstanding efficacy and safety profile. With the potential to generate an excellent therapeutic window, 1b was advanced into clinical development.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2002
John Hynes; Katerina Leftheris; Hong Wu; Chennagiri R. Pandit; Ping Chen; Derek J. Norris; Bang-Chi Chen; Rulin Zhao; Peter A. Kiener; Xiaorong Chen; Lori A. Turk; Vina Patil-Koota; Kathleen M. Gillooly; David J. Shuster; Kim W. McIntyre
C-3 Amido-indoles were found to selectively bind to the CB2 receptor. SAR studies led to optimized compounds with excellent in vivo potency against LPS induced TNF-alpha release in murine models of cytokine production.
Tetrahedron Letters | 2001
Rulin Zhao; Stacey Gove; Joseph E. Sundeen; Bang-Chi Chen
Abstract A new facile method has been developed for the synthesis of 2-aminothiazole-5-carboxylates. The new method involves reaction of ethyl β-ethoxyacrylate with N -bromosuccinimide (NBS) to give a novel intermediate, α-bromo-α-formylacetate hemiacetal. Cyclization of the in situ formed hemiacetal with thioureas afforded 2-aminothiazole-5-carboxylates in 60–98% yields.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014
William N. Washburn; Mark Manfredi; Pratik Devasthale; Guohua Zhao; Saleem Ahmad; Andres Hernandez; Jeffrey A. Robl; Wei Wang; James Mignone; Zhenghua Wang; Khehyong Ngu; Mary Ann Pelleymounter; Daniel Longhi; Rulin Zhao; Bei Wang; Ning Huang; Neil Flynn; Anthony V. Azzara; Joel C. Barrish; Kenneth Rohrbach; James Devenny; Michael J. Thomas; Susan Glick; Helen E. Godonis; Susan J. Harvey; Mary Jane Cullen; Hongwei Zhang; Christian Caporuscio; Paul Stetsko; Mary F. Grubb
Identification of MCHR1 antagonists with a preclinical safety profile to support clinical evaluation as antiobesity agents has been a challenge. Our finding that a basic moiety is not required for MCHR1 antagonists to achieve high affinity allowed us to explore structures less prone to off-target activities such as hERG inhibition. We report the SAR evolution of hydroxylated thienopyrimidinone ethers culminating in the identification of 27 (BMS-819881), which entered obesity clinical trials as the phosphate ester prodrug 35 (BMS-830216).
Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2015
Scott A. Shaw; Balu Balasubramanian; Samuel J. Bonacorsi; Janet Caceres Cortes; Kevin Cao; Bang-Chi Chen; Jun Dai; Carl P. Decicco; Animesh Goswami; Zhiwei Guo; Ronald L. Hanson; W. Griffith Humphreys; Patrick Y. S. Lam; Wenying Li; Arvind Mathur; Brad D. Maxwell; Quentin Michaudel; Li Peng; Andrew T. Pudzianowski; Feng Qiu; Shun Su; Dawn Sun; Adrienne A. Tymiak; Benjamin P. Vokits; Bei Wang; Ruth R. Wexler; Dauh-Rurng Wu; Yingru Zhang; Rulin Zhao; Phil S. Baran
Clopidogrel is a prodrug anticoagulant with active metabolites that irreversibly inhibit the platelet surface GPCR P2Y12 and thus inhibit platelet activation. However, gaining an understanding of patient response has been limited due to imprecise understanding of metabolite activity and stereochemistry, and a lack of acceptable analytes for quantifying in vivo metabolite formation. Methods for the production of all bioactive metabolites of clopidogrel, their stereochemical assignment, and the development of stable analytes via three conceptually orthogonal routes are disclosed.
Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2017
Arvind Mathur; Bei Wang; Daniel Smith; Jianqing Li; Joseph Pawluczyk; Jung-Hui Sun; Michael Kwok Wong; Subramaniam Krishnananthan; Dauh-Rurng Wu; Dawn Sun; Peng Li; Shiuhang Yip; Bang-Chi Chen; Phil S. Baran; Qi Chen; Omar D. Lopez; Zhong Yong; John A. Bender; Van N. Nguyen; Jeffrey L. Romine; Denis R. St. Laurent; Gan Wang; John F. Kadow; Nicholas A. Meanwell; Makonen Belema; Rulin Zhao
An efficient large-scale synthesis of acid 1, a penultimate precursor to the HCV NS5A inhibitor BMS-986097, along with the final API step are described. Three routes were devised for the synthesis of 1 at the various stages of the program. The third generation route, the one that proved scalable and is the main subject of this paper, features a one-step Michael addition of t-butyl 2-((diphenylmethylene)amino)acetate (24) to (E)-benzyl 4-(1-hydroxycyclopropyl)but-2-enoate (28) followed by cyclization and chiral separation to form 27c, the core skeleton of cap piece 1. The epimerization and chiral resolution of 27c followed by further synthetic manipulations involving the carbamate formation, lactone reduction and cyclization, afforded cyclopropyl pyran 1. A detailed study of diphenylmethane deprotection via acid hydrolysis as well as a key lactone to tetrahydropyran conversion, in order to avoid a side reaction that afforded an alternative cyclization product, are discussed. This synthesis was applied to the preparation of more than 100 g of the final API BMS-986097 for toxicology studies.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015
Chunjian Liu; James Lin; John Hynes; Hong Wu; Stephen T. Wrobleski; Shuqun Lin; T. G. Murali Dhar; Jung-Hui Sun; Sam T. Chao; Rulin Zhao; Bei Wang; Bang-Chi Chen; Gerry Everlof; Christoph Gesenberg; Hongjian Zhang; Punit Marathe; Kim W. McIntyre; Tracy L. Taylor; Kathleen M. Gillooly; David J. Shuster; Murray McKinnon; John H. Dodd; Joel C. Barrish; Gary L. Schieven; Katerina Leftheris
In search for prodrugs to address the issue of pH-dependent solubility and exposure associated with 1 (BMS-582949), a previously disclosed phase II clinical p38α MAP kinase inhibitor, a structurally novel clinical prodrug, 2 (BMS-751324), featuring a carbamoylmethylene linked promoiety containing hydroxyphenyl acetic acid (HPA) derived ester and phosphate functionalities, was identified. Prodrug 2 was not only stable but also water-soluble under both acidic and neutral conditions. It was effectively bioconverted into parent drug 1 in vivo by alkaline phosphatase and esterase in a stepwise manner, providing higher exposure of 1 compared to its direct administration, especially within higher dose ranges. In a rat LPS-induced TNFα pharmacodynamic model and a rat adjuvant arthritis model, 2 demonstrated similar efficacy to 1. Most importantly, it was shown in clinical studies that prodrug 2 was indeed effective in addressing the pH-dependent absorption issue associated with 1.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2004
Raj N. Misra; Hai-Yun Xiao; Kyoung S. Kim; Songfeng Lu; Wen-Ching Han; Stephanie A. Barbosa; John T. Hunt; David B. Rawlins; Weifang Shan; Syed Z. Ahmed; Ligang Qian; Bang-Chi Chen; Rulin Zhao; Mark S. Bednarz; Kristen A. Kellar; Janet G. Mulheron; Roberta Batorsky; Urvashi V. Roongta; Amrita Kamath; Punit Marathe; Sunanda A. Ranadive; John S. Sack; John S. Tokarski; Nikola P. Pavletich; Francis Y. Lee; and Kevin R. Webster; S. David Kimball