Steven M. Rubenstein
Amgen
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Publication
Featured researches published by Steven M. Rubenstein.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008
Hilary P. Beck; Todd J. Kohn; Steven M. Rubenstein; Christine Hedberg; Ralf Schwandner; Kerstin Hasslinger; Kang Dai; Cong Li; Lingming Liang; Holger Wesche; Brendon Frank; Songhzu An; Dineli Wickramasinghe; Juan C. Jaen; Julio C. Medina; Randall W. Hungate; Wang Shen
The LPA(2) protein is overexpressed in many tumor cells. We report the optimization of a series of LPA(2) antagonists using calcium mobilization assay (aequorin assay) that led to the discovery of the first reported inhibitors selective for LPA(2). Key compounds were evaluated in vitro for inhibition of LPA(2) mediated Erk activation and proliferation of HCT-116 cells. These compounds could be used to evaluate the benefits of LPA(2) inhibition both in vitro and in vivo.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2013
Joshua P. Taygerly; Lawrence R. McGee; Steven M. Rubenstein; Jonathan B. Houze; Timothy D. Cushing; Yang Li; Alykhan Motani; Jin-Long Chen; Walter Frankmoelle; Guosen Ye; Marc Learned; Juan C. Jaen; Shichang Miao; Pieter B. M. W. M. Timmermans; Martin J. Thoolen; Patrick C. Kearney; John A. Flygare; Holger Beckmann; Jennifer Weiszmann; Michelle Lindstrom; Nigel Walker; Jinsong Liu; Donna H.T. Biermann; Zhulun Wang; Atsushi Hagiwara; Tetsuya Iida; Hisateru Aramaki; Yuki Kitao; Hisashi Shinkai; Noboru Furukawa
PPARγ is a member of the nuclear hormone receptor family and plays a key role in the regulation of glucose homeostasis. This Letter describes the discovery of a novel chemical class of diarylsulfonamide partial agonists that act as selective PPARγ modulators (SPPARγMs) and display a unique pharmacological profile compared to the thiazolidinedione (TZD) class of PPARγ full agonists. Herein we report the initial discovery of partial agonist 4 and the structure-activity relationship studies that led to the selection of clinical compound INT131 (3), a potent PPARγ partial agonist that displays robust glucose-lowering activity in rodent models of diabetes while exhibiting a reduced side-effects profile compared to marketed TZDs.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013
Kexue Li; Lawrence R. McGee; Ben Fisher; Athena Sudom; Jinsong Liu; Steven M. Rubenstein; Mohmed K. Anwer; Timothy D. Cushing; Youngsook Shin; Merrill Ayres; Fei Lee; John Eksterowicz; Paul Faulder; Bohdan Waszkowycz; Olga Plotnikova; Ellyn Farrelly; Shou-Hua Xiao; Guoqing Chen; Zhulun Wang
The discovery, structure-based design, synthesis, and optimization of NIK inhibitors are described. Our work began with an HTS hit, imidazopyridinyl pyrimidinamine 1. We utilized homology modeling and conformational analysis to optimize the indole scaffold leading to the discovery of novel and potent conformationally constrained inhibitors such as compounds 25 and 28. Compounds 25 and 31 were co-crystallized with NIK kinase domain to provide structural insights.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014
Brian M. Fox; Kazuyuki Sugimoto; Kiyosei Iio; Atsuhito Yoshida; Jian Zhang; Kexue Li; Xiaolin Hao; Marc Labelle; Marie-Louise Smith; Steven M. Rubenstein; Guosen Ye; Dustin Mcminn; Simon Jackson; Rebekah Choi; Bei Shan; Ji Ma; Shichang Miao; Takuya Matsui; Nobuya Ogawa; Masahiro Suzuki; Akio Kobayashi; Hidekazu Ozeki; Chihiro Okuma; Yukihito Ishii; Daisuke Tomimoto; Noboru Furakawa; Masahiro Tanaka; Mutsuyoshi Matsushita; Mitsuru Takahashi; Takashi Inaba
The discovery and optimization of a series of acyl CoA:diacylglycerol acyltransferase 1 (DGAT1) inhibitors based on a pyrimido[4,5-b][1,4]oxazine scaffold is described. The SAR of a moderately potent HTS hit was investigated resulting in the discovery of phenylcyclohexylacetic acid 1, which displayed good DGAT1 inhibitory activity, selectivity, and PK properties. During preclinical toxicity studies a metabolite of 1 was observed that was responsible for elevating the levels of liver enzymes ALT and AST. Subsequently, analogues were synthesized to preclude the formation of the toxic metabolite. This effort resulted in the discovery of spiroindane 42, which displayed significantly improved DGAT1 inhibition compared to 1. Spiroindane 42 was well tolerated in rodents in vivo, demonstrated efficacy in an oral triglyceride uptake study in mice, and had an acceptable safety profile in preclinical toxicity studies.
Archive | 1999
La Brousse-Elwood Fabienne De; Juan C. Jaen; Lawrence R. McGee; Shichang Miao; Steven M. Rubenstein; Jin-Long Chen; Timothy D. Cushing; John A. Flygare; Jonathan B. Houze; Patrick C. Kearney
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2001
Steven M. Rubenstein; Vijay Baichwal; Holger Beckmann; David Clark; Walter Frankmoelle; Daniel Roche; Edit Santha; Susan Schwender; Martin J. Thoolen; Qiuping Ye; Juan C. Jaen
Archive | 2003
Richard G. Wilde; Ellen M. Welch; James J. Takasugi; Neil G. Almstead; Steven M. Rubenstein; Holger Beckmann
Archive | 1999
Fabienne De la Brouse-Elwood; Jin-Long Chen; Timothy D. Cushing; John A. Flygare; Jonathan B. Houze; Juan C. Jaen; Lawrence R. McGee; Shichang Miao; Steven M. Rubenstein; Patrick C. Kearney
Archive | 2009
Lawrence R. McGee; Jonathan B. Houze; Steven M. Rubenstein; Atsushi Hagiwara; Noboru Furukawa; Hisashi Shinkai
Archive | 2001
Lawrence R. McGee; Jonathan B. Houze; Steven M. Rubenstein; Atsushi Hagiwara; Noboru Furukawa; Hisashi Shinkai