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Dive into the research topics where Shawn J. Stachel is active.

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Featured researches published by Shawn J. Stachel.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Discovery of aminoheterocycles as a novel beta-secretase inhibitor class: pH dependence on binding activity part 1.

Shawn J. Stachel; Craig A. Coburn; Diane Rush; Kristen L.G. Jones; Hong Zhu; Hemaka A. Rajapakse; Samuel L. Graham; Adam J. Simon; M. Katharine Holloway; Tim J. Allison; Sanjeev Munshi; Amy S. Espeseth; Paul Zuck; Dennis Colussi; Abigail Wolfe; Beth Pietrak; Ming-Tain Lai; Joseph P. Vacca

We have developed a novel series of heteroaromatic BACE-1 inhibitors. These inhibitors interact with the enzyme in a unique fashion that allows for potent binding in a non-traditional paradigm. In addition to the elucidation of their binding profile, we have discovered a pH dependent effect on the binding affinity as a result of the intrinsic pK(a) of these inhibitors and the pH of the BACE-1 enzyme binding assay.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

Discovery of pyrrolidine-based β-secretase inhibitors: Lead advancement through conformational design for maintenance of ligand binding efficiency

Shawn J. Stachel; Thomas G. Steele; Alessia Petrocchi; Sharie J. Haugabook; Georgia B. McGaughey; M. Katharine Holloway; Timothy J. Allison; Sanjeev Munshi; Paul Zuck; Dennis Colussi; Katherine Tugasheva; Abigail Wolfe; Samuel L. Graham; Joseph P. Vacca

We have developed a novel series of pyrrolidine derived BACE-1 inhibitors. The potency of the weak initial lead structure was enhanced using library-based SAR methods. The series was then further advanced by rational design while maintaining a minimal ligand binding efficiency threshold. Ultimately, the co-crystal structure was obtained revealing that these inhibitors interacted with the enzyme in a unique fashion. In all, the potency of the series was enhanced by 4 orders of magnitude from the HTS lead with concomitant increases in physical properties needed for series advancement. The progression of these developments in a systematic fashion is described.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Identification of a small molecule beta-secretase inhibitor that binds without catalytic aspartate engagement.

Thomas G. Steele; Ivory D. Hills; Ashley Nomland; Pablo De Leon; Timothy J. Allison; Georgia B. McGaughey; Dennis Colussi; Katherine Tugusheva; Sharie J. Haugabook; Amy S. Espeseth; Paul Zuck; Samuel L. Graham; Shawn J. Stachel

A small molecule inhibitor of beta-secretase with a unique binding mode has been developed. Crystallographic determination of the enzyme-inhibitor complex shows the catalytic aspartate residues in the active site are not engaged in inhibitor binding. This unprecedented binding mode in the field of aspartyl protease inhibition is described.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015

Methyl-substitution of an iminohydantoin spiropiperidine β-secretase (BACE-1) inhibitor has a profound effect on its potency

Melissa S. Egbertson; Georgia B. McGaughey; Steven M. Pitzenberger; Shaun R. Stauffer; Craig A. Coburn; Shawn J. Stachel; Wenjin Yang; James C. Barrow; Lou Anne Neilson; Melody Mcwherter; Debra S. Perlow; Bruce Fahr; Sanjeev Munshi; Timothy J. Allison; Katharine M Holloway; Harold G. Selnick; Zhi-Qiang Yang; John Swestock; Adam J. Simon; Sethu Sankaranarayanan; Dennis Colussi; Katherine Tugusheva; Ming Tain Lai; Beth Pietrak; Shari Haugabook; Lixia Jin; I. W. Chen; Marie Holahan; Maria Stranieri-Michener; Jacquelynn J. Cook

The IC50 of a beta-secretase (BACE-1) lead compound was improved ∼200-fold from 11 μM to 55 nM through the addition of a single methyl group. Computational chemistry, small molecule NMR, and protein crystallography capabilities were used to compare the solution conformation of the ligand under varying pH conditions to its conformation when bound in the active site. Chemical modification then explored available binding pockets adjacent to the ligand. A strategically placed methyl group not only maintained the required pKa of the piperidine nitrogen and filled a small hydrophobic pocket, but more importantly, stabilized the conformation best suited for optimized binding to the receptor.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

A conformational constraint improves a β-secretase inhibitor but for an unexpected reason

Ivory D. Hills; M. Katharine Holloway; Pablo De Leon; Ashley Nomland; Hong Zhu; Hemaka A. Rajapakse; Tim J. Allison; Sanjeev Munshi; Dennis Colussi; Beth Pietrak; Dawn M. Toolan; Sharie J. Haugabook; Samuel L. Graham; Shawn J. Stachel

During our ongoing efforts to develop a small molecule inhibitor targeting the beta-amyloid cleaving enzyme (BACE-1), we discovered a class of compounds bearing an aminoimidazole motif. Initial optimization led to potent compounds that have high Pgp efflux ratios. Crystal structure-aided design furnished conformationally constrained compounds that are both potent and have relatively low Pgp efflux ratios. Computational studies performed after these optimizations suggest that the introduction of the constraint enhances potency via additional hydrophobic interactions rather than conformational restriction.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2014

(E)-Alkenes as replacements of amide bonds: development of novel and potent acyclic CGRP receptor antagonists.

June J. Kim; Michael R. Wood; Shawn J. Stachel; Pablo De Leon; Ashley Nomland; Craig A. Stump; Melody Mcwherter; Kathy M. Schirripa; Eric L. Moore; Christopher A. Salvatore; Harold G. Selnick

A new class of CGRP receptor antagonists was identified by replacing the central amide of a previously identified anilide lead structure with ethylene, ethane, or ethyne linkers. (E)-Alkenes as well as alkynes were found to preserve the proper bioactive conformation of the amides, necessary for efficient receptor binding. Further exploration resulted in several potent compounds against CGRP-R with low susceptibility to P-gp mediated efflux.


Journal of Neuroscience Methods | 2017

Development of a pharmacodynamic biomarker to measure target engagement from inhibition of the NGF–TrkA pathway

Eric A. Price; Alicja Krasowska-Zoladek; Kausik K. Nanda; Shawn J. Stachel; Darrell A. Henze

BACKGROUNDnNGF signaling through TrkA triggers pathways involved in a wide range of biological effects. Clinical trials targeting either NGF or TrkA are ongoing to treat various diseases in the areas of oncology, neuroscience, and for pain, but there is no described measure of target engagement of TrkA in these studies.nnnNEW METHODnWe have developed custom ELISA assays to measure NGF-induced phosphorylation of TrkA specific for rodent and human receptors. Optimized tissue processing methods allow for detection in both the brain and in skin. In addition, TrkB and TrkC assays have been in established to evaluate selectivity against other neurotrophin receptors.nnnRESULTSnIn a preclinical NGF-induced pain model, we show that pre-dosing with a TrkA inhibitor prevents phosphorylation of TrkA in the skin at a dose that is efficacious in reversal of thermal hypersensitivity. In addition, we show data in non-human primate and human skin supporting the potential use of this approach to enable translational target engagement. Comparison with existing methods: Existing methods involve animal models expressing TrkA tumors or injection of over-expressing TrkA recombinant cells into animals. Our method can measure target engagement in both normal and disease tissues in preclinical animal models and human skin.nnnCONCLUSIONSnWe have developed methods to assess target engagement for drug programs aimed at disrupting NGF-induced TrkA signaling. This includes preclinical determination of selectivity against other neurotrophin receptors and estimation of functional peripheral restriction. Preliminary data supports this method can be translated into a clinical pharmacodynamic readout using human skin biopsies.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2018

Indole acids as a novel PDE2 inhibitor chemotype that demonstrate pro-cognitive activity in multiple species

Shawn J. Stachel; Melissa S. Egbertson; Jenny Miu-Chun Wai; Michelle R. Machacek; Dawn M. Toolan; John Swestock; Donnie M. Eddins; Vanita Puri; Georgia B. McGaughey; Hua-Poo Su; Debbie Perlow; Deping Wang; Lei Ma; Gopal Parthasarathy; John Reid; Pravien Abeywickrema; Sean M. Smith; Jason M. Uslaner

An internal HTS effort identified a novel PDE2 inhibitor series that was subsequently optimized for improved PDE2 activity and off-target selectivity. The optimized lead, compound 4, improved cognitive performance in a rodent novel object recognition task as well as a non-human primate object retrieval task. In addition, co-crystallization studies of close analog of 4 in the PDE2 active site revealed unique binding interactions influencing the high PDE isoform selectivity.


Archive | 2003

Phenylcarboxamide beta-secretase inhibitors for the treatment of alzheimer's disease

Craig A. Coburn; Shawn J. Stachel; Joseph P. Vacca


Archive | 2005

2-Aminothiazole Compounds Useful As Aspartyl Protease Inhibitors

Craig A. Coburn; Amy S. Espeseth; Shawn J. Stachel; David B. Olsen; Daria J. Hazuda; M. Katharine Holloway

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