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Dive into the research topics where Samuel W. Gerritz is active.

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Featured researches published by Samuel W. Gerritz.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Inhibition of influenza virus replication via small molecules that induce the formation of higher-order nucleoprotein oligomers

Samuel W. Gerritz; Christopher Cianci; Sean Kim; Bradley C. Pearce; Carol Deminie; Linda F. Discotto; Brian McAuliffe; B Minassian; Shuhao Shi; Shirong Zhu; Weixu Zhai; Annapurna Pendri; Guo Li; Michael A. Poss; Suzanne Edavettal; Patricia A. McDonnell; Hal A. Lewis; Klaus Maskos; Mario Mörtl; Reiner Kiefersauer; Stefan Steinbacher; Eric T. Baldwin; William Metzler; James Bryson; Matthew D. Healy; Thomas Philip; Mary Zoeckler; Richard Schartman; Michael Sinz; Victor H. Leyva-Grado

Influenza nucleoprotein (NP) plays multiple roles in the virus life cycle, including an essential function in viral replication as an integral component of the ribonucleoprotein complex, associating with viral RNA and polymerase within the viral core. The multifunctional nature of NP makes it an attractive target for antiviral intervention, and inhibitors targeting this protein have recently been reported. In a parallel effort, we discovered a structurally similar series of influenza replication inhibitors and show that they interfere with NP-dependent processes via formation of higher-order NP oligomers. Support for this unique mechanism is provided by site-directed mutagenesis studies, biophysical characterization of the oligomeric ligand:NP complex, and an X-ray cocrystal structure of an NP dimer of trimers (or hexamer) comprising three NP_A:NP_B dimeric subunits. Each NP_A:NP_B dimeric subunit contains two ligands that bridge two composite, protein-spanning binding sites in an antiparallel orientation to form a stable quaternary complex. Optimization of the initial screening hit produced an analog that protects mice from influenza-induced weight loss and mortality by reducing viral titers to undetectable levels throughout the course of treatment.


PLOS Pathogens | 2010

A Novel Small Molecule Inhibitor of Hepatitis C Virus Entry

Carl J. Baldick; Michael J. Wichroski; Annapurna Pendri; Ann W. Walsh; Jie Fang; Charles E. Mazzucco; Kevin A. Pokornowski; Ronald E. Rose; Betsy J. Eggers; Mayla Hsu; Weixu Zhai; Guangzhi Zhai; Samuel W. Gerritz; Michael A. Poss; Nicholas A. Meanwell; Mark Cockett; Daniel J. Tenney

Small molecule inhibitors of hepatitis C virus (HCV) are being developed to complement or replace treatments with pegylated interferons and ribavirin, which have poor response rates and significant side effects. Resistance to these inhibitors emerges rapidly in the clinic, suggesting that successful therapy will involve combination therapy with multiple inhibitors of different targets. The entry process of HCV into hepatocytes represents another series of potential targets for therapeutic intervention, involving viral structural proteins that have not been extensively explored due to experimental limitations. To discover HCV entry inhibitors, we utilized HCV pseudoparticles (HCVpp) incorporating E1-E2 envelope proteins from a genotype 1b clinical isolate. Screening of a small molecule library identified a potent HCV-specific triazine inhibitor, EI-1. A series of HCVpp with E1-E2 sequences from various HCV isolates was used to show activity against all genotype 1a and 1b HCVpp tested, with median EC50 values of 0.134 and 0.027 µM, respectively. Time-of-addition experiments demonstrated a block in HCVpp entry, downstream of initial attachment to the cell surface, and prior to or concomitant with bafilomycin inhibition of endosomal acidification. EI-1 was equally active against cell-culture adapted HCV (HCVcc), blocking both cell-free entry and cell-to-cell transmission of virus. HCVcc with high-level resistance to EI-1 was selected by sequential passage in the presence of inhibitor, and resistance was shown to be conferred by changes to residue 719 in the carboxy-terminal transmembrane anchor region of E2, implicating this envelope protein in EI-1 susceptibility. Combinations of EI-1 with interferon, or inhibitors of NS3 or NS5A, resulted in additive to synergistic activity. These results suggest that inhibitors of HCV entry could be added to replication inhibitors and interferons already in development.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Discovery of positive allosteric modulators and silent allosteric modulators of the μ-opioid receptor

Neil T. Burford; Mary J. Clark; Tom Wehrman; Samuel W. Gerritz; Martyn Banks; Jonathan O’Connell; John R. Traynor; Andrew Alt

μ-Opioid receptors are among the most studied G protein-coupled receptors because of the therapeutic value of agonists, such as morphine, that are used to treat chronic pain. However, these drugs have significant side effects, such as respiratory suppression, constipation, allodynia, tolerance, and dependence, as well as abuse potential. Efforts to fine tune pain control while alleviating the side effects of drugs, both physiological and psychological, have led to the development of a wide variety of structurally diverse agonist ligands for the μ-opioid receptor, as well as compounds that target κ- and δ-opioid receptors. In recent years, the identification of allosteric ligands for some G protein-coupled receptors has provided breakthroughs in obtaining receptor subtype-selectivity that can reduce the overall side effect profiles of a potential drug. However, positive allosteric modulators (PAMs) can also have the specific advantage of only modulating the activity of the receptor when the orthosteric agonist occupies the receptor, thus maintaining spatial and temporal control of receptor signaling in vivo. This second advantage of allosteric modulators may yield breakthroughs in opioid receptor research and could lead to drugs with improved side-effect profiles or fewer tolerance and dependence issues compared with orthosteric opioid receptor agonists. Here, we describe the discovery and characterization of μ-opioid receptor PAMs and silent allosteric modulators, identified from high-throughput screening using a β-arrestin–recruitment assay.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

Small-molecule pyrimidine inhibitors of the cdc2-like (Clk) and dual specificity tyrosine phosphorylation-regulated (Dyrk) kinases: Development of chemical probe ML315

Thomas C. Coombs; Cordelle Tanega; Min Shen; Jenna L. Wang; Douglas S. Auld; Samuel W. Gerritz; Frank J. Schoenen; Craig J. Thomas; Jeffrey Aubé

Substituted pyrimidine inhibitors of the Clk and Dyrk kinases have been developed, exploring structure-activity relationships around four different chemotypes. The most potent compounds have low-nanomolar inhibitory activity against Clk1, Clk2, Clk4, Dyrk1A and Dyrk1B. Kinome scans with 442 kinases using agents representing three of the chemotypes show these inhibitors to be highly selective for the Clk and Dyrk families. Further off-target pharmacological evaluation with ML315, the most selective agent, supports this conclusion.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Acyl guanidine inhibitors of β-secretase (BACE-1): optimization of a micromolar hit to a nanomolar lead via iterative solid- and solution-phase library synthesis.

Samuel W. Gerritz; Weixu Zhai; Shuhao Shi; Shirong Zhu; Jeremy H. Toyn; Jere E. Meredith; Lawrence G. Iben; Catherine R. Burton; Charles F. Albright; Andrew C. Good; Andrew J. Tebben; Jodi K. Muckelbauer; Daniel M. Camac; William J. Metzler; Lynda S. Cook; Ramesh Padmanabha; Kimberley A. Lentz; Michael J. Sofia; Michael A. Poss; John E. Macor; Lorin A. Thompson

This report describes the discovery and optimization of a BACE-1 inhibitor series containing an unusual acyl guanidine chemotype that was originally synthesized as part of a 6041-membered solid-phase library. The synthesis of multiple follow-up solid- and solution-phase libraries facilitated the optimization of the original micromolar hit into a single-digit nanomolar BACE-1 inhibitor in both radioligand binding and cell-based functional assay formats. The X-ray structure of representative inhibitors bound to BACE-1 revealed a number of key ligand:protein interactions, including a hydrogen bond between the side chain amide of flap residue Gln73 and the acyl guanidine carbonyl group, and a cation-π interaction between Arg235 and the isothiazole 4-methoxyphenyl substituent. Following subcutaneous administration in rats, an acyl guanidine inhibitor with single-digit nanomolar activity in cells afforded good plasma exposures and a dose-dependent reduction in plasma Aβ levels, but poor brain exposure was observed (likely due to Pgp-mediated efflux), and significant reductions in brain Aβ levels were not obtained.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015

Discovery, synthesis, and molecular pharmacology of selective positive allosteric modulators of the δ-opioid receptor

Neil T. Burford; Kathryn E. Livingston; Meritxell Canals; Molly R. Ryan; Lauren Budenholzer; Ying Han; Yi Shang; John J. Herbst; Jonathan O'Connell; Martyn Banks; Litao Zhang; Marta Filizola; Daniel Bassoni; Tom Wehrman; Arthur Christopoulos; John R. Traynor; Samuel W. Gerritz; Andrew Alt

Allosteric modulators of G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) have a number of potential advantages compared to agonists or antagonists that bind to the orthosteric site of the receptor. These include the potential for receptor selectivity, maintenance of the temporal and spatial fidelity of signaling in vivo, the ceiling effect of the allosteric cooperativity which may prevent overdose issues, and engendering bias by differentially modulating distinct signaling pathways. Here we describe the discovery, synthesis, and molecular pharmacology of δ-opioid receptor-selective positive allosteric modulators (δ PAMs). These δ PAMs increase the affinity and/or efficacy of the orthosteric agonists leu-enkephalin, SNC80 and TAN67, as measured by receptor binding, G protein activation, β-arrestin recruitment, adenylyl cyclase inhibition, and extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERK) activation. As such, these compounds are useful pharmacological tools to probe the molecular pharmacology of the δ receptor and to explore the therapeutic potential of δ PAMs in diseases such as chronic pain and depression.


Antiviral Chemistry & Chemotherapy | 2012

Influenza nucleoprotein: promising target for antiviral chemotherapy.

Christopher Cianci; Samuel W. Gerritz; Carol Deminie; Mark Krystal

In the search for new anti-influenza agents, the viral polymerase has often been targeted due to the involvement of multiple conserved proteins and their distinct activities. Polymerase associates with each of the eight singled-stranded negative-sense viral RNA segments. These transcriptionally competent segments are coated with multiple copies of nucleoprotein (NP) to form the ribonucleoprotein. NP is an abundant essential protein, possessing operative and structural functions, and participating in genome organization, nuclear trafficking and RNA transcription and replication. This review examines the NP structure and function, and explores NP as an emerging target for anti-influenza drug development, focusing on recently discovered aryl piperazine amide inhibitor chemotypes.


ACS Combinatorial Science | 2010

Solid phase synthesis of novel pyrrolidinedione analogs as potent HIV-1 integrase inhibitors.

Annapurna Pendri; Timothy L. Troyer; Michael J. Sofia; Michael A. Walker; B. Narasimhulu Naidu; Jacques Banville; Nicholas A. Meanwell; Ira B. Dicker; Zeyu Lin; Mark Krystal; Samuel W. Gerritz

A novel series of HIV-1 integrase inhibitors were identified from a 100 member (4R(1) x 5R(2) x 5R(3)) library of pyrrolidinedione amides. A solid-phase route was developed which facilitates the simultaneous variation at R(1), R(2), and R(3) of the pyrrolidinedione scaffold. The resulting library samples were assayed for HIV-1 integrase activity and analyzed to determine the R(1), R(2), and R(3) reagent contributions towards the activity.


Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling | 2015

Ligand-Based Discovery of a New Scaffold for Allosteric Modulation of the μ-Opioid Receptor

Paola Bisignano; Neil T. Burford; Yi Shang; Brennica Marlow; Kathryn E. Livingston; Abigail M. Fenton; Kristin L. Rockwell; Lauren Budenholzer; John R. Traynor; Samuel W. Gerritz; Andrew Alt; Marta Filizola

With the hope of discovering effective analgesics with fewer side effects, attention has recently shifted to allosteric modulators of the opioid receptors. In the past two years, the first chemotypes of positive or silent allosteric modulators (PAMs or SAMs, respectively) of μ- and δ-opioid receptor types have been reported in the literature. During a structure-guided lead optimization campaign with μ-PAMs BMS-986121 and BMS-986122 as starting compounds, we discovered a new chemotype that was confirmed to display μ-PAM or μ-SAM activity depending on the specific substitutions as assessed by endomorphin-1-stimulated β-arrestin2 recruitment assays in Chinese Hamster Ovary (CHO)-μ PathHunter cells. The most active μ-PAM of this series was analyzed further in competition binding and G-protein activation assays to understand its effects on ligand binding and to investigate the nature of its probe dependence.


ACS Combinatorial Science | 2012

Solid phase synthesis of 1,5-diarylpyrazole-4-carboxamides: discovery of antagonists of the CB-1 receptor.

Annapurna Pendri; Dharmpal S. Dodd; Jing Chen; Mary Ellen Cvijic; Liya Kang; Rose A. Baska; Kenneth E. Carlson; Neil T. Burford; Chongqing Sun; William R. Ewing; Samuel W. Gerritz

We have developed a solid phase synthesis route to 1,5-substituted pyrazole-4-carboxamides with three diversity points aimed at the discovery of new compounds as potential G-Protein coupled receptor (GPCR) ligands. The new chemistry involves acylation of a resin bound secondary amine with a β-ketoester via transamidation, conversion of the resulting β-ketoamide to the corresponding vinylogous amide, pyrazole formation upon reaction with a aryl hydrzine, and cleavage of the product from the resin. Using the reported methodology, we describe the syntheses of multiple arrays of pyrazoles that were used collectively to construct a library of more than 1000 analogues. Several members of this library displayed submicromolar antagonist activities at the cannabinoid subtype 1 (CB-1) receptor.

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Guo Li

Bristol-Myers Squibb

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