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Dive into the research topics where Thomas Dineen is active.

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Featured researches published by Thomas Dineen.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Design and preparation of a potent series of hydroxyethylamine containing β-secretase inhibitors that demonstrate robust reduction of central β-amyloid.

Matthew Weiss; Toni Williamson; Safura Babu-Khan; Michael D. Bartberger; James Brown; Kui Chen; Yuan Cheng; Martin Citron; Michael Croghan; Thomas Dineen; Joel Esmay; Russell Graceffa; Scott Harried; Dean Hickman; Stephen A. Hitchcock; Daniel B. Horne; Hongbing Huang; Ronke Imbeah-Ampiah; Ted Judd; Matthew R. Kaller; Charles Kreiman; Daniel S. La; Vivian Li; Patricia Lopez; Steven W. Louie; Holger Monenschein; Thomas Nguyen; Lewis D. Pennington; Claire Rattan; Tisha San Miguel

A series of potent hydroxyethyl amine (HEA) derived inhibitors of β-site APP cleaving enzyme (BACE1) was optimized to address suboptimal pharmacokinetics and poor CNS partitioning. This work identified a series of benzodioxolane analogues that possessed improved metabolic stability and increased oral bioavailability. Subsequent efforts focused on improving CNS exposure by limiting susceptibility to Pgp-mediated efflux and identified an inhibitor which demonstrated robust and sustained reduction of CNS β-amyloid (Aβ) in Sprague-Dawley rats following oral administration.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Structure- and Property-Based Design of Aminooxazoline Xanthenes as Selective, Orally Efficacious, and CNS Penetrable BACE Inhibitors for the Treatment of Alzheimer's Disease.

Hongbing Huang; Daniel S. La; Alan C. Cheng; Douglas A. Whittington; Vinod F. Patel; Kui Chen; Thomas Dineen; Oleg Epstein; Russell Graceffa; Dean Hickman; Y.-H. Kiang; Steven W. Louie; Yi Luo; Robert C. Wahl; Paul H. Wen; Stephen A. Wood; Robert T. Fremeau

A structure- and property-based drug design approach was employed to identify aminooxazoline xanthenes as potent and selective human β-secretase inhibitors. These compounds exhibited good isolated enzyme, cell potency, and selectivity against the structurally related aspartyl protease cathepsin D. Our efforts resulted in the identification of a potent, orally bioavailable CNS penetrant compound that exhibited in vivo efficacy. A single oral dose of compound 11a resulted in a significant reduction of CNS Aβ40 in naive rats.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Design and synthesis of potent, orally efficacious hydroxyethylamine derived β-site amyloid precursor protein cleaving enzyme (BACE1) inhibitors.

Thomas Dineen; Matthew Weiss; Toni Williamson; Paul D. Acton; Safura Babu-Khan; Michael D. Bartberger; James Brown; Kui Chen; Yuan Cheng; Martin Citron; Michael Croghan; Robert Dunn; Joel Esmay; Russell Graceffa; Scott Harried; Dean Hickman; Stephen A. Hitchcock; Daniel B. Horne; Hongbing Huang; Ronke Imbeah-Ampiah; Ted Judd; Matthew R. Kaller; Charles Kreiman; Daniel S. La; Vivian Li; Patricia Lopez; Steven W. Louie; Holger Monenschein; Thomas Nguyen; Lewis D. Pennington

We have previously shown that hydroxyethylamines can be potent inhibitors of the BACE1 enzyme and that the generation of BACE1 inhibitors with CYP 3A4 inhibitory activities in this scaffold affords compounds (e.g., 1) with sufficient bioavailability and pharmacokinetic profiles to reduce central amyloid-β peptide (Aβ) levels in wild-type rats following oral dosing. In this article, we describe further modifications of the P1-phenyl ring of the hydroxyethylamine series to afford potent, dual BACE1/CYP 3A4 inhibitors which demonstrate improved penetration into the CNS. Several of these compounds caused robust reduction of Aβ levels in rat CSF and brain following oral dosing, and compound 37 exhibited an improved cardiovascular safety profile relative to 1.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015

Development of 2-aminooxazoline 3-azaxanthenes as orally efficacious β-secretase inhibitors for the potential treatment of Alzheimer's disease.

Jian Jeffrey Chen; Qingyian Liu; Chester Chenguang Yuan; Vijay Keshav Gore; Patricia Lopez; Vu Van Ma; Albert Amegadzie; Wenyuan Qian; Ted Judd; Ana Elena Minatti; James Brown; Yuan Cheng; May Xue; Wenge Zhong; Thomas Dineen; Oleg Epstein; Jason Brooks Human; Charles Kreiman; Isaac E. Marx; Matthew Weiss; Stephen A. Hitchcock; Timothy Powers; Kui Chen; Paul H. Wen; Douglas A. Whittington; Alan C. Cheng; Michael D. Bartberger; Dean Hickman; Jonathan A. Werner; Hugo M. Vargas

The β-site amyloid precursor protein (APP) cleaving enzyme 1 (BACE1) is one of the most hotly pursued targets for the treatment of Alzheimers disease. We used a structure- and property-based drug design approach to identify 2-aminooxazoline 3-azaxanthenes as potent BACE1 inhibitors which significantly reduced CSF and brain Aβ levels in a rat pharmacodynamic model. Compared to the initial lead 2, compound 28 exhibited reduced potential for QTc prolongation in a non-human primate cardiovascular safety model.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017

Sulfonamides as Selective NaV1.7 Inhibitors: Optimizing Potency and Pharmacokinetics While Mitigating Metabolic Liabilities

Matthew Weiss; Thomas Dineen; Isaac E. Marx; Steven Altmann; Alessandro Boezio; Howard Bregman; Margaret Y. Chu-Moyer; Erin F. DiMauro; Elma Feric Bojic; Robert S. Foti; Hua Gao; Russell Graceffa; Hakan Gunaydin; Angel Guzman-Perez; Hongbing Huang; Liyue Huang; Michael Jarosh; Thomas Kornecook; Charles Kreiman; Joseph Ligutti; Daniel S. La; Min-Hwa Jasmine Lin; Dong Liu; Bryan D. Moyer; Hanh Nho Nguyen; Emily A. Peterson; Paul Rose; Kristin Taborn; Beth D. Youngblood; Violeta Yu

Several reports have recently emerged regarding the identification of heteroarylsulfonamides as NaV1.7 inhibitors that demonstrate high levels of selectivity over other NaV isoforms. The optimization of a series of internal NaV1.7 leads that address a number of metabolic liabilities including bioactivation, PXR activation, as well as CYP3A4 induction and inhibition led to the identification of potent and selective inhibitors that demonstrated favorable pharmacokinetic profiles and were devoid of the aforementioned liabilities. The key to achieving this within a series prone to transporter-mediated clearance was the identification of a small range of optimal cLogD values and the discovery of subtle PXR SAR that was not lipophilicity dependent. This enabled the identification of compound 20, which was advanced into a target engagement pharmacodynamic model where it exhibited robust reversal of histamine-induced scratching bouts in mice.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017

Sulfonamides as Selective NaV1.7 Inhibitors: Optimizing Potency, Pharmacokinetics, and Metabolic Properties to Obtain Atropisomeric Quinolinone (AM-0466) that Affords Robust in Vivo Activity

Russell Graceffa; Alessandro Boezio; Jessica Able; Steven Altmann; Loren Berry; Christiane Boezio; John R. Butler; Margaret Y. Chu-Moyer; Melanie Cooke; Erin F. DiMauro; Thomas Dineen; Elma Feric Bojic; Robert S. Foti; Robert T. Fremeau; Angel Guzman-Perez; Hua Gao; Hakan Gunaydin; Hongbing Huang; Liyue Huang; Christopher P. Ilch; Michael Jarosh; Thomas Kornecook; Charles Kreiman; Daniel S. La; Joseph Ligutti; Benjamin C. Milgram; Min-Hwa Jasmine Lin; Isaac E. Marx; Hanh Nho Nguyen; Emily A. Peterson

Because of its strong genetic validation, NaV1.7 has attracted significant interest as a target for the treatment of pain. We have previously reported on a number of structurally distinct bicyclic heteroarylsulfonamides as NaV1.7 inhibitors that demonstrate high levels of selectivity over other NaV isoforms. Herein, we report the discovery and optimization of a series of atropisomeric quinolinone sulfonamide inhibitors [ Bicyclic sulfonamide compounds as sodium channel inhibitors and their preparation . WO 2014201206, 2014 ] of NaV1.7, which demonstrate nanomolar inhibition of NaV1.7 and exhibit high levels of selectivity over other sodium channel isoforms. After optimization of metabolic and pharmacokinetic properties, including PXR activation, CYP2C9 inhibition, and CYP3A4 TDI, several compounds were advanced into in vivo target engagement and efficacy models. When tested in mice, compound 39 (AM-0466) demonstrated robust pharmacodynamic activity in a NaV1.7-dependent model of histamine-induced pruritus (itch) and additionally in a capsaicin-induced nociception model of pain without any confounding effect in open-field activity.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2012

Establishing the relationship between in vitro potency, pharmacokinetic, and pharmacodynamic parameters in a series of orally available, hydroxyethylamine-derived β-secretase inhibitors.

Stephen Wood; Paul H. Wen; Jianhua Zhang; Li Zhu; Yi Luo; Safura Babu-Khan; Kui Chen; Roger Pham; Joel Esmay; Thomas Dineen; Matthew R. Kaller; Matthew Weiss; Stephen A. Hitchcock; Martin Citron; Wenge Zhong; Dean Hickman; Toni Williamson

Sequential proteolytic cleavage of the amyloid precursor protein (APP) by β-site APP-cleaving enzyme 1 (BACE1) and the γ-secretase complex produces the amyloid-β peptide (Aβ), which is believed to play a critical role in the pathology of Alzheimers disease (AD). The aspartyl protease BACE1 catalyzes the rate-limiting step in the production of Aβ, and as such it is considered to be an important target for drug development in AD. The development of a BACE1 inhibitor therapeutic has proven to be difficult. The active site of BACE1 is relatively large. Consequently, to achieve sufficient potency, many BACE1 inhibitors have required unfavorable physicochemical properties such as high molecular weight and polar surface area that are detrimental to efficient passage across the blood-brain barrier. Using a rational drug design approach we have designed and developed a new series of hydroxyethylamine-based inhibitors of BACE1 capable of lowering Aβ levels in the brains of rats after oral administration. Herein we describe the in vitro and in vivo characterization of two of these molecules and the overall relationship of compound properties [e.g., in vitro permeability, P-glycoprotein (P-gp) efflux, metabolic stability, and pharmacological potency] to the in vivo pharmacodynamic effect with more than 100 compounds across the chemical series. We demonstrate that high in vitro potency for BACE1 was not sufficient to provide central efficacy. A combination of potency, high permeability, low P-gp-mediated efflux, and low clearance was required for compounds to produce robust central Aβ reduction after oral dosing.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

HETEROARYL SODIUM CHANNEL INHIBITORS

Thomas Dineen; Isaac E. Marx; Hanh Nho Nguyen; Matthew Weiss

Title: Heteroaryl Sodium Channel Inhibitors Patent Application Number: WO2013025883A1 Publication date: February, 21st, 2013 Priority Application: US 61/524,691 Priority date: August 17th, 2011 Inventors: Dineen, T.; Marx, I. E.; Hguyen, H. N.; Weiss, M. Assignee Company: Amgen, Inc. Disease Area: Chronic Pain Biological Target: Nav1.7 Summary: Although there are some treatments currently available, chronic pain remains a major unmet medical need. It is well established that the sensation of pain requires electrical signaling through neuronal pathways that involve voltage gated sodium channels. Lidocaine, for example, is a nonselective blocker of voltage gated sodium channels that is effectively employed as an anesthetic. To date, nine voltage gated sodium channels, Nav1.1 through Nav1.9, have been identified, and they are distributed across a range of cell types including skeletal muscle, cardiac tissue, and neurons. TheNav1.7 channel, a tetrodotoxin-sensitive channel, has been specifically implicated in pain disorders. Primary Erythromelaglia and Paroxysmal Extreme Pain Disorder, for example, are the result of mutations that increase Nav1.7 activity. However, the genetic condition Congenital Indifference to Pain is the result of mutations that produce nonfunctional Nav1.7 channels. These findings suggest that Nav1.7 plays a key role in the perception of pain and that compounds capable of attenuating Nav1.7 channel activity would be therapeutically beneficial to patients suffering from chronic pain.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2017

The discovery of benzoxazine sulfonamide inhibitors of NaV1.7: Tools that bridge efficacy and target engagement

Daniel S. La; Emily A. Peterson; Christiane Bode; Alessandro Boezio; Howard Bregman; Margaret Yuhua Chu-Moyer; James R. Coats; Erin F. DiMauro; Thomas Dineen; Bingfan Du; Hua Gao; Russell Graceffa; Hakan Gunaydin; Angel Guzman-Perez; Robert T. Fremeau; Xin Huang; Christopher P. Ilch; Thomas Kornecook; Charles Kreiman; Joseph Ligutti; Min-Hwa Jasmine Lin; Jeff S. McDermott; Isaac E. Marx; David J. Matson; Bryan D. Moyer; Hanh Nho Nguyen; Kristin Taborn; Violeta Yu; Matthew Weiss

The voltage-gated sodium channel NaV1.7 has received much attention from the scientific community due to compelling human genetic data linking gain- and loss-of-function mutations to pain phenotypes. Despite this genetic validation of NaV1.7 as a target for pain, high quality pharmacological tools facilitate further understanding of target biology, establishment of target coverage requirements and subsequent progression into the clinic. Within the sulfonamide class of inhibitors, reduced potency on rat NaV1.7 versus human NaV1.7 was observed, rendering in vivo rat pharmacology studies challenging. Herein, we report the discovery and optimization of novel benzoxazine sulfonamide inhibitors of human, rat and mouse NaV1.7 which enabled pharmacological assessment in traditional behavioral rodent models of pain and in turn, established a connection between formalin-induced pain and histamine-induced pruritus in mice. The latter represents a simple and efficient means of measuring target engagement.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2017

Correction to “Sulfonamides as Selective NaV1.7 Inhibitors: Optimizing Potency and Pharmacokinetics to Enable in Vivo Target Engagement”

Isaac E. Marx; Thomas Dineen; Jessica Able; Christiane Bode; Howard Bregman; Margaret Y. Chu-Moyer; Erin F. DiMauro; Bingfan Du; Robert S. Foti; Robert T. Fremeau; Hua Gao; Hakan Gunaydin; Brian E. Hall; Liyue Huang; Thomas Kornecook; Charles Kreiman; Daniel S. La; Joseph Ligutti; Min-Hwa Jasmine Lin; Dong Liu; Jeff S. McDermott; Bryan D. Moyer; Hanh Nho Nguyen; Emily A. Peterson; Jonathan Roberts; Paul Rose; Jean Wang; Beth D. Youngblood; Violeta Yu; Matthew Weiss

[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1021/acsmedchemlett.6b00243.].

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