Sharon Zhang
Bristol-Myers Squibb
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Featured researches published by Sharon Zhang.
Hepatology | 2006
Richard J. Colonno; Ronald E. Rose; Carl J. Baldick; Steven Levine; Kevin A. Pokornowski; Cheng F. Yu; Ann W. Walsh; Jie Fang; Mayla Hsu; Charles E. Mazzucco; Betsy J. Eggers; Sharon Zhang; Mary Jane Plym; Kenneth S. Klesczewski; Daniel J. Tenney
Comprehensive monitoring of genotypic and phenotypic antiviral resistance was performed on 673 entecavir (ETV)‐treated nucleoside naïve hepatitis B virus (HBV) patients. ETV reduced HBV DNA levels to undetectable by PCR (<300 copies/mL, <57 IU/mL) in 91% of hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg)‐positive and ‐negative patients by Week 96. Thirteen percent (n = 88) of the comparator lamivudine (LVD)‐treated patients experienced a virologic rebound (≥1 log increase from nadir by PCR) in the first year, with 74% of these having LVD resistance (LVDr) substitutions evident. In contrast, only 3% (n = 22) of ETV‐treated patients exhibited virologic rebound by Week 96. Three ETV rebounds were attributable to LVDr virus present at baseline, with one having a S202G ETV resistance (ETVr) substitution emerge at Week 48. None of the other rebounding patients had emerging genotypic resistance or loss of ETV susceptibility. Genotyping all additional ETV patients with PCR‐detectable HBV DNA at Weeks 48, 96, or end of dosing identified seven additional patients with LVDr substitutions, including one with simultaneous emergence of LVDr/ETVr. Generally, ETV patients with LVDr were detectable at baseline (8/10) and most subsequently achieved undetectable HBV DNA levels on ETV therapy (7/10). No other emerging substitutions identified decreased ETV susceptibility. In conclusion, ETVr emergence in ETV‐treated nucleoside naïve patients over a 2‐year period is rare, occurring in two patients with LVDr variants. These findings suggest that the rapid, sustained suppression of HBV replication, combined with a requirement for multiple substitutions, creates a high genetic barrier to ETVr in nucleoside naïve patients. (HEPATOLOGY 2006;44:1656–1665.)
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2007
Daniel J. Tenney; Ronald E. Rose; Carl J. Baldick; Steven Levine; Kevin A. Pokornowski; Ann W. Walsh; Jie Fang; Cheng-Fang Yu; Sharon Zhang; Charles E. Mazzucco; Betsy J. Eggers; Mayla Hsu; Mary Jane Plym; Patricia Poundstone; Joanna Yang; Richard J. Colonno
ABSTRACT Entecavir (ETV) is a deoxyguanosine analog approved for use for the treatment of chronic infection with wild-type and lamivudine-resistant (LVDr) hepatitis B virus (HBV). In LVD-refractory patients, 1.0 mg ETV suppressed HBV DNA levels to below the level of detection by PCR (<300 copies/ml) in 21% and 34% of patients by Weeks 48 and 96, respectively. Prior studies showed that virologic rebound due to ETV resistance (ETVr) required preexisting LVDr HBV reverse transcriptase substitutions M204V and L180M plus additional changes at T184, S202, or M250. To monitor for resistance, available isolates from 192 ETV-treated patients were sequenced, with phenotyping performed for all isolates with all emerging substitutions, in addition to isolates from all patients experiencing virologic rebounds. The T184, S202, or M250 substitution was found in LVDr HBV at baseline in 6% of patients and emerged in isolates from another 11/187 (6%) and 12/151 (8%) ETV-treated patients by Weeks 48 and 96, respectively. However, use of a more sensitive PCR assay detected many of the emerging changes at baseline, suggesting that they originated during LVD therapy. Only a subset of the changes in ETVr isolates altered their susceptibilities, and virtually all isolates were significantly replication impaired in vitro. Consequently, only 2/187 (1%) patients experienced ETVr rebounds in year 1, with an additional 14/151 (9%) patients experiencing ETVr rebounds in year 2. Isolates from all 16 patients with rebounds were LVDr and harbored the T184 and/or S202 change. Seventeen other novel substitutions emerged during ETV therapy, but none reduced the susceptibility to ETV or resulted in a rebound. In summary, ETV was effective in LVD-refractory patients, with resistant sequences arising from a subset of patients harboring preexisting LVDr/ETVr variants and with approximately half of the patients experiencing a virologic rebound.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2002
Steven Levine; Dennis Hernandez; G. Yamanaka; Sharon Zhang; Ronald E. Rose; S. Weinheimer; Richard J. Colonno
ABSTRACT Entecavir (ETV) is a potent and selective inhibitor of hepatitis B virus (HBV) replication in vitro and in vivo that is currently in clinical trials for the treatment of chronic HBV infections. A major limitation of the current HBV antiviral therapy, lamivudine (3TC), is the emergence of drug-resistant HBV in a majority of treated patients due to specific mutations in the nucleotide binding site of HBV DNA polymerase (HBV Pol). To determine the effects of 3TC resistance mutations on inhibition by ETV triphosphate (ETV-TP), a series of in vitro studies were performed. The inhibition of wild-type and 3TC-resistant HBV Pol by ETV-TP was measured using recombinant HBV nucleocapsids, and compared to that of 3TC-TP. These enzyme inhibition studies demonstrated that ETV-TP is a highly potent inhibitor of wild-type HBV Pol and is 100- to 300-fold more potent than 3TC-TP against 3TC-resistant HBV Pol. Cell culture assays were used to gauge the potential for antiviral cross-resistance of 3TC-resistant mutants to ETV. Results demonstrated that ETV inhibited the replication of 3TC-resistant HBV, but 20- to 30-fold higher concentrations were required. To gain further perspective regarding the potential therapeutic use of ETV, its phosphorylation was examined in hepatoma cells treated with extracellular concentrations representative of drug levels in plasma in ETV-treated patients. At these concentrations, intracellular ETV-TP accumulated to levels expected to inhibit the enzyme activity of both wild-type and 3TC-resistant HBV Pol. These findings are predictive of potent antiviral activity of ETV against both wild-type and 3TC-resistant HBV.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2001
Kap-Sun Yeung; Nicholas A. Meanwell; Zhilei Qiu; Dennis Hernandez; Sharon Zhang; Fiona McPhee; Steve Weinheimer; James M. Clark; James W. Janc
A survey of isosteric replacements of the phosphonoalanine side chain coupled with a process of conformational constraint of a bisbenzimidazole-based, Zn(2+)-dependent inhibitor of hepatitis C virus (HCV) NS3 serine protease resulted in the identification of novel series of active compounds with extended side chains. However, Zn(2+)-dependent HCV NS3 inhibition was relatively insensitive to the structural variations examined but dependent on the presence of negatively charged functionality. This result was interpreted in the context of an initial electrostatic interaction between protease and inhibitor that is subsequently consolidated by Zn(2+), with binding facilitated by the featureless active site and proximal regions of the HCV NS3 protein.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2008
Pin-Fang Lin; Beata Nowicka-Sans; Brian Terry; Sharon Zhang; Chunfu Wang; Li Fan; Ira B. Dicker; Volodymyr Gali; Helen Higley; Neil T. Parkin; Daniel J. Tenney; Mark Krystal; Richard J. Colonno
ABSTRACT Entecavir (ETV) was developed for the treatment of chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection and is globally approved for that indication. Initial preclinical studies indicated that ETV had no significant activity against human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) in cultured cell lines at physiologically relevant ETV concentrations, using traditional anti-HIV assays. In response to recent clinical observations of anti-HIV activity of ETV in HIV/HBV-coinfected patients not receiving highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), additional investigative studies were conducted to expand upon earlier results. An extended panel of HIV-1 laboratory and clinical strains and cell types was tested against ETV, along with a comparison of assay methodologies and resistance profiling. These latest studies confirmed that ETV has only weak activity against HIV, using established assay systems. However, a >100-fold enhancement of antiviral activity (equivalent to the antiviral activity of lamivudine) could be obtained when assay conditions were modified to reduce the initial viral challenge. Also, the selection of a M184I virus variant during the passage of HIV-1 at high concentrations of ETV confirmed that ETV can exert inhibitory pressure on the virus. These findings may have a significant impact on how future assays are performed with compounds to be used in patients infected with HIV. These results support the recommendation that ETV therapy should be administered in concert with HAART for HIV/HBV-coinfected patients.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2016
Beata Nowicka-Sans; Tricia Protack; Zeyu Lin; Zhufang Li; Sharon Zhang; Yongnian Sun; Himadri Samanta; Brian Terry; Zheng Liu; Yan Chen; Ny Sin; Sing-Yuen Sit; Jacob Swidorski; Jie Chen; Brian Lee Venables; Matthew D. Healy; Nicholas A. Meanwell; Mark Cockett; Umesh Hanumegowda; Alicia Regueiro-Ren; Mark Krystal; Ira B. Dicker
ABSTRACT BMS-955176 is a second-generation human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) maturation inhibitor (MI). A first-generation MI, bevirimat, showed clinical efficacy in early-phase studies, but ∼50% of subjects had viruses with reduced susceptibility associated with naturally occurring polymorphisms in Gag near the site of MI action. MI potency was optimized using a panel of engineered reporter viruses containing site-directed polymorphic changes in Gag that reduce susceptibility to bevirimat (including V362I, V370A/M/Δ, and T371A/Δ), leading incrementally to the identification of BMS-955176. BMS-955176 exhibits potent activity (50% effective concentration [EC50], 3.9 ± 3.4 nM [mean ± standard deviation]) toward a library (n = 87) of gag/pr recombinant viruses representing 96.5% of subtype B polymorphic Gag diversity near the CA/SP1 cleavage site. BMS-955176 exhibited a median EC50 of 21 nM toward a library of subtype B clinical isolates assayed in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs). Potent activity was maintained against a panel of reverse transcriptase, protease, and integrase inhibitor-resistant viruses, with EC50s similar to those for the wild-type virus. A 5.4-fold reduction in EC50 occurred in the presence of 40% human serum plus 27 mg/ml of human serum albumin (HSA), which corresponded well to an in vitro measurement of 86% human serum binding. Time-of-addition and pseudotype reporter virus studies confirm a mechanism of action for the compound that occurs late in the virus replication cycle. BMS-955176 inhibits HIV-1 protease cleavage at the CA/SP1 junction within Gag in virus-like particles (VLPs) and in HIV-1-infected cells, and it binds reversibly and with high affinity to assembled Gag in purified HIV-1 VLPs. Finally, in vitro combination studies showed no antagonistic interactions with representative antiretrovirals (ARVs) of other mechanistic classes. In conclusion, BMS-955176 is a second-generation MI with potent in vitro anti-HIV-1 activity and a greatly improved preclinical profile compared to that of bevirimat.
Intervirology | 1996
Robert K. Hamatake; Hwei-gene Heidi Wang; James Alan Butcher; Marc Bifano; Gwendelíne Clark; Dennis Hernandez; Sharon Zhang; Jason Racela; David Standring; Richard J. Colonno
An in vitro cleavage system was established to measure HCV NS3 protease trans-processing activity. This system utilizes purified NS3-4A protein from baculovirus, purified substrates expressed by in vitro transcription and translation and defined buffer components. The 41-residue substrates, 5A/5B and 4A/4B, were processed efficiently in trans by wild-type NS3 but not by a catalytically inactive mutant protease; radiolabel sequencing confirmed that NS3-mediated cleavage occurred at the correct cysteine/serine sites, thereby authenticating this system. Two striking features of this in vitro assay are: (1) analogous 4B/5A and 3/4A substrates cannot be processed in trans under the same conditions, and (2) in vitro cleavage of the 5A/5B and 4A/4B sites is highly dependent on the presence of NS4A, which we show is not the case in vivo.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2009
Louis Alexander; Sharon Zhang; Brian McAuliffe; David Connors; Nannon Zhou; Tao Wang; Michele Agler; John F. Kadow; Pin-Fang Lin
ABSTRACT Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) envelope (Env) binding induces proapoptotic signals in CD4+ T cells without a requirement of infection. Defective virus particles, which represent the majority of HIV-1, usually contain a functional Env and therefore represent a potentially significant cause of such CD4+-T-cell loss. We reasoned that an HIV-1 inhibitor that prohibits Env-host cell interactions could block the destructive effects of defective particles. HIV-1 attachment inhibitors (AIs), which potently inhibit Env-CD4 binding and subsequent downstream effects of Env, display low-nanomolar antiapoptotic potency and prevent CD4+-T-cell depletion from mixed lymphocyte cultures, also with low-nanomolar potency. Specific Env amino acid changes that confer resistance to AI antientry activity eliminate AI antiapoptotic effects. We observed that CD4+-T-cell destruction is specific for CXCR4-utilizing HIV-1 strains and that the fusion blocker enfuvirtide inhibits Env-mediated CD4+-T-cell killing but is substantially less potent than AIs. These observations, in conjunction with observed antiapoptotic activities of soluble CD4 and the CXCR4 blocker AMD3100, suggest that this AI activity functions through a mechanism common to AI antientry activity, e.g., prevention of Env conformation changes necessary for specific interactions with cellular factors that facilitate viral entry. Our study suggests that AIs, in addition to having potent antientry activity, could contribute to immune system homeostasis in individuals infected with HIV-1 that can engage CXCR4, thereby mitigating the increased risk of adverse clinical events observed in such individuals on current antiretroviral regimens.
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2016
Alicia Regueiro-Ren; Zheng Liu; Yan Chen; Ny Sin; Sing-Yuen Sit; Jacob Swidorski; Jie Chen; Brian Lee Venables; Juliang Zhu; Beata Nowicka-Sans; Tricia Protack; Zeyu Lin; Brian Terry; Himadri Samanta; Sharon Zhang; Zhufang Li; Brett R. Beno; Xiaohua S. Huang; Sandhya Rahematpura; Dawn D. Parker; Roy Haskell; Susan R. Jenkins; Kenneth S. Santone; Mark Cockett; Mark Krystal; Nicholas A. Meanwell; Umesh Hanumegowda; Ira B. Dicker
HIV-1 maturation inhibition (MI) has been clinically validated as an approach to the control of HIV-1 infection. However, identifying an MI with both broad polymorphic spectrum coverage and good oral exposure has been challenging. Herein, we describe the design, synthesis, and preclinical characterization of a potent, orally active, second generation HIV-1 MI, BMS-955176 (2), which is currently in Phase IIb clinical trials as part of a combination antiretroviral regimen.
Archives of Virology | 2010
Sharon Zhang; Louis Alexander; Tao Wang; Michele Agler; Nannon Zhou; Hua Fang; John F. Kadow; Paul R. Clapham; Pin-Fang Lin
We demonstrate that HIV attachment inhibitors (AIs) prevent HIV envelope-induced destruction of two neuronal cell lines (SH-SY5Y and BE(2)-M17) at low nanomolar concentrations. The fusion inhibitor enfuvirtide and the CCR5 inhibitors UK427,857 and TAK779 do not display protection activity, suggesting the involvement of Env/cell interaction site(s) distinct from the sites involved in the viral entry process. We surmise that by inducing conformation changes in the envelope, AIs likely obstruct novel interactions with a neuronal cell factor(s) required for induction of apoptosis. This antiretroviral class may therefore have the potential to inhibit HIV-induced neuron damage, thereby curtailing the increasing incidence of HIV-associated cognitive impairment.