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Dive into the research topics where Tadimeti S. Rao is active.

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Featured researches published by Tadimeti S. Rao.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Synthesis and SAR of 2-aryl-3-aminomethylquinolines as agonists of the bile acid receptor TGR5

Mark R. Herbert; Dana L. Siegel; Lena M. Staszewski; Charmagne S. Cayanan; Urmi Banerjee; Sangeeta Dhamija; Jennifer Anderson; Amy Fan; Li Wang; Peter Rix; Andrew K. Shiau; Tadimeti S. Rao; Stewart A. Noble; Richard A. Heyman; Eric D. Bischoff; Mausumee Guha; Ayman Kabakibi; Anthony B. Pinkerton

Optimization of a screening hit from uHTS led to the discovery of TGR5 agonist 32, which was shown to have activity in a rodent model for diabetes.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009

Discovery of Inducible Nitric Oxide Synthase (iNOS) Inhibitor Development Candidate KD7332, Part 1: Identification of a Novel, Potent, and Selective Series of Quinolinone iNOS Dimerization Inhibitors that are Orally Active in Rodent Pain Models

Celine Bonnefous; Joseph E. Payne; Jeffrey Roger Roppe; Hui Zhuang; Xiaohong Chen; Kent T. Symons; Phan M. Nguyen; Marciano Sablad; Natasha Rozenkrants; Yan Zhang; Li Wang; Daniel L. Severance; John P. Walsh; Nahid Yazdani; Andrew K. Shiau; Stewart A. Noble; Peter Rix; Tadimeti S. Rao; Christian A. Hassig; Nicholas D. Smith

There are three isoforms of dimeric nitric oxide synthases (NOS) that convert arginine to citrulline and nitric oxide. Inducible NOS is implicated in numerous inflammatory diseases and, more recently, in neuropathic pain states. The majority of existing NOS inhibitors are either based on the structure of arginine or are substrate competitive. We describe the identification from an ultra high-throughput screen of a novel series of quinolinone small molecule, nonarginine iNOS dimerization inhibitors. SAR studies on the screening hit, coupled with an in vivo lipopolysaccharide (LPS) challenge assay measuring plasma nitrates and drug levels, rapidly led to the identification of compounds 12 and 42--potent inhibitors of the human and mouse iNOS enzyme that were highly selective over endothelial NOS (eNOS). Following oral dosing, compounds 12 and 42 gave a statistical reduction in pain behaviors in the mouse formalin model, while 12 also statistically reduced neuropathic pain behaviors in the chronic constriction injury (Bennett) model.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Discovery of dual inducible/neuronal nitric oxide synthase (iNOS/nNOS) inhibitor development candidate 4-((2-cyclobutyl-1H-imidazo[4,5-b]pyrazin-1-yl)methyl)-7,8-difluoroquinolin-2(1H)-one (KD7332) part 2: identification of a novel, potent, and selective series of benzimidazole-quinolinone iNOS/nNOS dimerization inhibitors that are orally active in pain models.

Joseph E. Payne; Celine Bonnefous; Kent T. Symons; Phan M. Nguyen; Marciano Sablad; Natasha Rozenkrants; Yan Zhang; Li Wang; Nahid Yazdani; Andrew K. Shiau; Stewart A. Noble; Peter Rix; Tadimeti S. Rao; Christian A. Hassig; Nicholas D. Smith

Three isoforms of nitric oxide synthase (NOS), dimeric enzymes that catalyze the formation of nitric oxide (NO) from arginine, have been identified. Inappropriate or excessive NO produced by iNOS and/or nNOS is associated with inflammatory and neuropathic pain. Previously, we described the identification of a series of amide-quinolinone iNOS dimerization inhibitors that although potent, suffered from high clearance and limited exposure in vivo. By conformationally restricting the amide of this progenitor series, we describe the identification of a novel series of benzimidazole-quinolinone dual iNOS/nNOS inhibitors with low clearance and sustained exposure in vivo. Compounds were triaged utilizing an LPS challenge assay coupled with mouse and rhesus pharmacokinetics and led to the identification of 4,7-imidazopyrazine 42 as the lead compound. 42 (KD7332) (J. Med. Chem. 2009, 52, 3047 - 3062) was confirmed as an iNOS dimerization inhibitor and was efficacious in the mouse formalin model of nociception and Chung model of neuropathic pain, without showing tolerance after repeat dosing. Further 42 did not affect motor coordination up to doses of 1000 mg/kg, demonstrating a wide therapeutic margin.


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2008

KD5170, a novel mercaptoketone-based histone deacetylase inhibitor that exhibits broad spectrum antitumor activity in vitro and in vivo.

Christian A. Hassig; Kent T. Symons; Xin Guo; Phan-Manh Nguyen; Tami Annable; Paul L. Wash; Joseph E. Payne; David Jenkins; Celine Bonnefous; Carol Trotter; Yan Wang; John V. Anzola; Elena L. Milkova; Timothy Z. Hoffman; Sara J. Dozier; Brandon M. Wiley; Alan Saven; James W. Malecha; Robert L. Davis; Jerry Muhammad; Andrew K. Shiau; Stewart A. Noble; Tadimeti S. Rao; Nicholas D. Smith; Jeffrey H. Hager

Histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors have garnered significant attention as cancer drugs. These therapeutic agents have recently been clinically validated with the market approval of vorinostat (SAHA, Zolinza) for treatment of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma. Like vorinostat, most of the small-molecule HDAC inhibitors in clinical development are hydroxamic acids, whose inhibitory activity stems from their ability to coordinate the catalytic Zn2+ in the active site of HDACs. We sought to identify novel, nonhydroxamate-based HDAC inhibitors with potentially distinct pharmaceutical properties via an ultra-high throughput small molecule biochemical screen against the HDAC activity in a HeLa cell nuclear extract. An α-mercaptoketone series was identified and chemically optimized. The lead compound, KD5170, exhibits HDAC inhibitory activity with an IC50 of 0.045 μmol/L in the screening biochemical assay and an EC50 of 0.025 μmol/L in HeLa cell–based assays that monitor histone H3 acetylation. KD5170 also exhibits broad spectrum classes I and II HDAC inhibition in assays using purified recombinant human isoforms. KD5170 shows significant antiproliferative activity against a variety of human tumor cell lines, including the NCI-60 panel. Significant tumor growth inhibition was observed after p.o. dosing in human HCT-116 (colorectal cancer), NCI-H460 (non–small cell lung carcinoma), and PC-3 (prostate cancer) s.c. xenografts in nude mice. In addition, a significant increase in antitumor activity and time to end-point occurred when KD5170 was combined with docetaxel in xenografts of the PC-3 prostate cancer cell line. The biological and pharmaceutical profile of KD5170 supports its continued preclinical and clinical development as a broad spectrum anticancer agent. [Mol Cancer Ther 2008;7(5):1054–65]


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008

Identification of KD5170: a novel mercaptoketone-based histone deacetylase inhibitor.

Joseph E. Payne; Celine Bonnefous; Christian A. Hassig; Kent T. Symons; Xin Guo; Phan-Manh Nguyen; Tami Annable; Paul L. Wash; Timothy Z. Hoffman; Tadimeti S. Rao; Andrew K. Shiau; James W. Malecha; Stewart A. Noble; Jeffrey H. Hager; Nicholas D. Smith

We report the identification of KD5170, a potent mercaptoketone-based Class I and II-histone deacetylase inhibitor that demonstrates broad spectrum cytotoxic activity against a range of human tumor-derived cell lines. KD5170 exhibits robust and sustained histone H3 hyperacetylation in HCT-116 xenograft tumors following single oral or i.v. dose and inhibition of tumor growth following chronic dosing.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2011

Pharmacological Characterization of KLYP961, a Dual Inhibitor of Inducible and Neuronal Nitric-Oxide Synthases

Kent T. Symons; Phan M. Nguyen; Mark E. Massari; John V. Anzola; Lena M. Staszewski; Li Wang; Nahid Yazdani; Steven Dorow; Jerry Muhammad; Marciano Sablad; Natasha Rozenkrants; Celine Bonefous; Joseph E. Payne; Peter Rix; Andrew K. Shiau; Stewart A. Noble; Nicholas D. Smith; Christian A. Hassig; Yan Zhang; Tadimeti S. Rao

Nitric oxide (NO) derived from neuronal nitric-oxide synthase (nNOS) and inducible nitric-oxide synthase (iNOS) plays a key role in various pain and inflammatory states. KLYP961 (4-((2-cyclobutyl-1H-imidazo[4,5-b]pyrazin-1-yl)methyl)-7,8-difluoroquinolin-2(1H)-one) inhibits the dimerization, and hence the enzymatic activity of human, primate, and murine iNOS and nNOS (IC50 values 50–400 nM), with marked selectivity against endothelial nitric-oxide synthase (IC50 >15,000 nM). It has ideal drug like-properties, including excellent rodent and primate pharmacokinetics coupled with a minimal off-target activity profile. In mice, KLYP961 attenuated endotoxin-evoked increases in plasma nitrates, a surrogate marker of iNOS activity in vivo, in a sustained manner (ED50 1 mg/kg p.o.). KLYP961 attenuated pain behaviors in a mouse formalin model (ED50 13 mg/kg p.o.), cold allodynia in the chronic constriction injury model (ED50 25 mg/kg p.o.), or tactile allodynia in the spinal nerve ligation model (ED50 30 mg/kg p.o.) with similar efficacy, but superior potency relative to gabapentin, pregabalin, or duloxetine. Unlike morphine, the antiallodynic activity of KLYP961 did not diminish upon repeated dosing. KLYP961 also attenuated carrageenin-induced edema and inflammatory hyperalgesia and writhing response elicited by phenylbenzoquinone with efficacy and potency similar to those of celecoxib. In contrast to gabapentin, KLYP961 did not impair motor coordination at doses as high as 1000 mg/kg p.o. KLYP961 also attenuated capsaicin-induced thermal allodynia in rhesus primates in a dose-related manner with a minimal effective dose (≤10 mg/kg p.o.) and a greater potency than gabapentin. In summary, KLYP961 represents an ideal tool with which to probe the physiological role of NO derived from iNOS and nNOS in human pain and inflammatory states.


Molecular Pharmacology | 2009

KLYP956 is a Non-imidazole-Based Orally Active Inhibitor of Nitric Oxide Synthase Dimerization

Kent T. Symons; Mark E. Massari; Phan M. Nguyen; Tom T. Lee; Jeffrey Roger Roppe; Celine Bonnefous; Joseph E. Payne; Nicholas D. Smith; Stewart A. Noble; Marciano Sablad; Natasha Rozenkrants; Yan Zhang; Tadimeti S. Rao; Andrew K. Shiau; Christian A. Hassig

Nitric-oxide synthases (NOS) generate nitric oxide (NO) through the oxidation of l-arginine. Inappropriate or excessive production of NO by NOS is associated with the pathophysiology of various disease states. Efforts to treat these disorders by developing arginine mimetic, substrate-competitive NOS inhibitors as drugs have met with little success. Small-molecule-mediated inhibition of NOS dimerization represents an intriguing alternative to substrate-competitive inhibition. An ultra-high-throughput cell-based screen of 880,000 small molecules identified a novel quinolinone with inducible NOS (iNOS) inhibitory activity. Exploratory chemistry based on this initial screening hit resulted in the synthesis of KLYP956, which inhibits iNOS at low nanomolar concentrations. The iNOS inhibitory potency of KLYP956 is insensitive to changes in concentrations of the substrate arginine, or the cofactor tetrahydrobiopterin. Mechanistic analysis suggests that KLYP956 binds the oxygenase domain in the vicinity of the active site heme and inhibits iNOS and neuronal NOS (nNOS) by preventing the formation of enzymatically active dimers. Oral administration of KLYP956 [N-(3-chlorophenyl)-N-((8-fluoro-2-oxo-1,2-dihydroquinolin-4-yl)methyl)-4-methylthiazole-5-carboxamide] inhibits iNOS activity in a murine model of endotoxemia and blocks pain behaviors in a formalin model of nociception. KLYP956 thus represents the first nonimidazole-based inhibitor of iNOS and nNOS dimerization and provides a novel pharmaceutical alternative to previously described substrate competitive inhibitors.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Identification and SAR of selective inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) dimerization inhibitors

Timothy C. Gahman; Mark R. Herbert; Henk Lang; Angie Thayer; Kent T. Symons; Phan M. Nguyen; Mark E. Massari; Sara J. Dozier; Yan Zhang; Marciano Sablad; Tadimeti S. Rao; Stewart A. Noble; Andrew K. Shiau; Christian A. Hassig

We have identified and synthesized a series of imidazole containing dimerization inhibitors of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS). The necessity of key imidazole and piperonyl functionality was demonstrated and SAR studies led to the identification of compound 35, which showed a dose dependant inhibition in multiple pain models, including tactile allodynia induced by spinal nerve ligation (Chung model).


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

Heteroaromatic-aminomethyl quinolones: Potent and selective iNOS inhibitors

Sergio G. Duron; Andrew Lindstrom; Celine Bonnefous; Hui Zhang; Xiaohong Chen; Kent T. Symons; Marciano Sablad; Natasha Rozenkrants; Yan Zhang; Li Wang; Nahid Yazdani; Andrew K. Shiau; Stewart A. Noble; Peter Rix; Tadimeti S. Rao; Christian A. Hassig; Nicholas D. Smith

The overproduction of nitric oxide during the biological response to inflammation by the nitric oxide synthase (NOS) enzymes have been implicated in the pathology of many diseases. By removal of the amide core from uHTS-derived quinolone 4, a new series highly potent heteroaromatic-aminomethyl quinolone iNOS inhibitors 8 were identified. SAR studies led to identification of piperazine 22 and pyrimidine 32, both of which reduced plasma nitrates following oral dosing in a mouse lipopolysaccharide challenge assay.


Current Chemical Genomics | 2008

Inhibition of Inducible Nitric Oxide Synthase Expression by a Novel Small Molecule Activator of the Unfolded Protein Response

Kent T. Symons; Mark E. Massari; Sara J. Dozier; Phan M. Nguyen; David Jenkins; Mark Herbert; Timothy C. Gahman; Stewart A. Noble; Natasha Rozenkrants; Yan Zhang; Tadimeti S. Rao; Andrew K. Shiau; Christian A. Hassig

The transcription of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) is activated by a network of proinflammatory signaling pathways. Here we describe the identification of a small molecule that downregulates the expression of iNOS mRNA and protein in cytokine-activated cells and suppresses nitric oxide production in vivo. Mechanistic analysis suggests that this small molecule, erstressin, also activates the unfolded protein response (UPR), a signaling pathway triggered by endoplasmic reticulum stress. Erstressin induces rapid phosphorylation of eIF2alpha and the alternative splicing of XBP-1, hallmark initiating events of the UPR. Further, erstressin activates the transcription of multiple genes involved in the UPR. These data suggest an inverse relationship between UPR activation and iNOS mRNA and protein expression under proinflammatory conditions.

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Andrew K. Shiau

Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research

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