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Dive into the research topics where Timothy Pontz is active.

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Featured researches published by Timothy Pontz.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2011

Discovery of (+)-N-(3-aminopropyl)-N-[1-(5-benzyl-3-methyl-4-oxo-[1,2]thiazolo[5,4-d]pyrimidin-6-yl)-2-methylpropyl]-4-methylbenzamide (AZD4877), a kinesin spindle protein inhibitor and potential anticancer agent.

Maria-Elena Theoclitou; Brian Aquila; Michael Howard Block; Patrick Brassil; Lillian Castriotta; Erin Code; Mike Collins; Audrey Davies; Tracy L. Deegan; Jayachandran Ezhuthachan; Sandra Ann Filla; Ellen Freed; Haiqing Hu; Dennis Huszar; Muthusamy Jayaraman; Deborah Lawson; Paula Lewis; Murali Vp Nadella; Vibha Oza; Maniyan Padmanilayam; Timothy Pontz; Lucienne Ronco; Daniel John Russell; David Whitston; Xiaolan Zheng

Structure-activity relationship analysis identified (+)-N-(3-aminopropyl)-N-[1-(5-benzyl-3-methyl-4-oxo-[1,2]thiazolo[5,4-d]pyrimidin-6-yl)-2-methylpropyl]-4-methylbenzamide (AZD4877), from a series of novel kinesin spindle protein (KSP) inhibitors, as exhibiting both excellent biochemical potency and pharmaceutical properties suitable for clinical development. The selected compound arrested cells in mitosis leading to the formation of the monopolar spindle phenotype characteristic of KSP inhibition and induction of cellular death. A favorable pharmacokinetic profile and notable in vivo efficacy supported the selection of this compound as a clinical candidate for the treatment of cancer.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Discovery and Optimization of a Novel Series of Potent Mutant B-Raf V600E Selective Kinase Inhibitors.

Melissa Vasbinder; Brian Aquila; Martin Augustin; Huawei Chen; Tony Cheung; Donald J. Cook; Lisa Drew; Benjamin P. Fauber; Steve Glossop; Michael Grondine; Edward J. Hennessy; Jeffrey W. Johannes; Stephen Lee; Paul Lyne; Mario Mörtl; Charles Omer; Sangeetha Palakurthi; Timothy Pontz; Jon Read; Li Sha; Minhui Shen; Stefan Steinbacher; Haixia Wang; Allan Wu; Minwei Ye

B-Raf represents an attractive target for anticancer therapy and the development of small molecule B-Raf inhibitors has delivered new therapies for metastatic melanoma patients. We have discovered a novel class of small molecules that inhibit mutant B-Raf(V600E) kinase activity both in vitro and in vivo. Investigations into the structure-activity relationships of the series are presented along with efforts to improve upon the cellular potency, solubility, and pharmacokinetic profile. Compounds selectively inhibited B-Raf(V600E) in vitro and showed preferential antiproliferative activity in mutant B-Raf(V600E) cell lines and exhibited selectivity in a kinase panel against other kinases. Examples from this series inhibit growth of a B-Raf(V600E) A375 xenograft in vivo at a well-tolerated dose. In addition, aminoquinazolines described herein were shown to display pERK elevation in nonmutant B-Raf cell lines in vitro.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015

Pyrimidinone Nicotinamide Mimetics as Selective Tankyrase and Wnt Pathway Inhibitors Suitable for in Vivo Pharmacology

Jeffrey W. Johannes; Lynsie Almeida; Bernard Barlaam; P. Ann Boriack-Sjodin; Robert Casella; Rosemary A. Croft; Allan Dishington; Lakshmaiah Gingipalli; Chungang Gu; Janet Hawkins; Jane L. Holmes; Tina Howard; Jian Huang; Stephanos Ioannidis; Steven Kazmirski; Michelle L. Lamb; Thomas M. McGuire; Jane E. Moore; Derek Ogg; Anil Patel; Kurt Gordon Pike; Timothy Pontz; Graeme R. Robb; Nancy Su; Haiyun Wang; Xiaoyun Wu; Hai-Jun Zhang; Yue Zhang; Xiaolan Zheng; Tao Wang

The canonical Wnt pathway plays an important role in embryonic development, adult tissue homeostasis, and cancer. Germline mutations of several Wnt pathway components, such as Axin, APC, and ß-catenin, can lead to oncogenesis. Inhibition of the poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) catalytic domain of the tankyrases (TNKS1 and TNKS2) is known to inhibit the Wnt pathway via increased stabilization of Axin. In order to explore the consequences of tankyrase and Wnt pathway inhibition in preclinical models of cancer and its impact on normal tissue, we sought a small molecule inhibitor of TNKS1/2 with suitable physicochemical properties and pharmacokinetics for hypothesis testing in vivo. Starting from a 2-phenyl quinazolinone hit (compound 1), we discovered the pyrrolopyrimidinone compound 25 (AZ6102), which is a potent TNKS1/2 inhibitor that has 100-fold selectivity against other PARP family enzymes and shows 5 nM Wnt pathway inhibition in DLD-1 cells. Moreover, compound 25 can be formulated well in a clinically relevant intravenous solution at 20 mg/mL, has demonstrated good pharmacokinetics in preclinical species, and shows low Caco2 efflux to avoid possible tumor resistance mechanisms.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

Structure and Property Based Design of Pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidine Inhibitors of CK2 Kinase with Activity in Vivo.

James E. Dowling; Marat Alimzhanov; Larry Bao; Michael Howard Block; Claudio Chuaqui; Emma L. Cooke; Christopher R. Denz; Alex Hird; Shan Huang; Nicholas A. Larsen; Bo Peng; Timothy Pontz; Caroline Rivard-Costa; Jamal C. Saeh; Kumar Thakur; Qing Ye; Tao Zhang; Paul Lyne

In this letter, we describe the design, synthesis, and structure-activity relationship of 5-anilinopyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidine inhibitors of CK2 kinase. Property-based optimization of early leads using the 7-oxetan-3-yl amino group led to a series of matched molecular pairs with lower lipophilicity, decreased affinity for human plasma proteins, and reduced binding to the hERG ion channel. Agents in this study were shown to modulate pAKT(S129), a direct substrate of CK2, in vitro and in vivo, and exhibited tumor growth inhibition when administered orally in a murine DLD-1 xenograft.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

Potent and Selective Inhibitors of CK2 Kinase Identified through Structure-Guided Hybridization

James E. Dowling; Claudio Chuaqui; Timothy Pontz; Paul Lyne; Nicholas A. Larsen; Michael Howard Block; Huawei Chen; Nancy Su; Allan Wu; Daniel John Russell; Hannah Pollard; John W. Lee; Bo Peng; Kumar Thakur; Qing Ye; Tao Zhang; Patrick Brassil; Vicki Racicot; Larry Bao; Christopher R. Denz; Emma L. Cooke

In this paper we describe a series of 3-cyano-5-aryl-7-aminopyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidine hits identified by kinase-focused subset screening as starting points for the structure-based design of conformationally constrained 6-acetamido-indole inhibitors of CK2. The synthesis, SAR, and effects of this novel series on Akt signaling and cell proliferation in vitro are described.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Identification of amidoheteroaryls as potent inhibitors of mutant (V600E) B-Raf kinase with in vivo activity.

Paul Lyne; Brian Aquila; Donald J. Cook; Les A. Dakin; Jay Ezhuthachan; Stephanos Ioannidis; Timothy Pontz; Mei Su; Qing Ye; Xiaolan Zheng; Michael Howard Block; Scott Cowen; Tracy L. Deegan; John W. Lee; David Scott; Dominique Custeau; Lisa Drew; Srinivasu Poondru; Minhui Shen; Allan Wu

A series of amidoheteroaryl compounds were designed and synthesized as inhibitors of B-Raf kinase. Several compounds from the series show excellent potency in biochemical, phenotypic and mode of action cellular assays. Potent examples from the series have also demonstrated good plasma exposure following an oral dose in rodents and activity against the Ras-Raf pathway in tumor bearing mice.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2016

Potent and Selective CK2 Kinase Inhibitors with Effects on Wnt Pathway Signaling in Vivo

James E. Dowling; Marat Alimzhanov; Larry Bao; Claudio Chuaqui; Christopher R. Denz; E Jenkins; Nicholas A. Larsen; Paul Lyne; Timothy Pontz; Qing Ye; G.A Holdgate; L Snow; N O'Connell; Andrew D. Ferguson

The Wnt pathway is an evolutionarily conserved and tightly regulated signaling network with important roles in embryonic development and adult tissue regeneration. Impaired Wnt pathway regulation, arising from mutations in Wnt signaling components, such as Axin, APC, and β-catenin, results in uncontrolled cell growth and triggers oncogenesis. To explore the reported link between CK2 kinase activity and Wnt pathway signaling, we sought to identify a potent, selective inhibitor of CK2 suitable for proof of concept studies in vivo. Starting from a pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidine lead (2), we identified compound 7h, a potent CK2 inhibitor with picomolar affinity that is highly selectivity against other kinase family enzymes and inhibits Wnt pathway signaling (IC50 = 50 nM) in DLD-1 cells. In addition, compound 7h has physicochemical properties that are suitable for formulation as an intravenous solution, has demonstrated good pharmacokinetics in preclinical species, and exhibits a high level of activity as a monotherapy in HCT-116 and SW-620 xenografts.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2018

Discovery of 2,6-disubstituted pyrazine derivatives as inhibitors of CK2 and PIM kinases

Lakshmaiah Gingipalli; Michael Howard Block; Larry Bao; Emma L. Cooke; Les A. Dakin; Christopher R. Denz; Andrew D. Ferguson; Jeffrey W. Johannes; Nicholas A. Larsen; Paul Lyne; Timothy Pontz; Tao Wang; Xiaoyun Wu; Allan Wu; Hai-Jun Zhang; Xiaolan Zheng; James E. Dowling; Michelle Lamb

The design and synthesis of a novel series of 2,6-disubstituted pyrazine derivatives as CK2 kinase inhibitors is described. Structure-guided optimization of a 5-substituted-3-thiophene carboxylic acid screening hit (3a) led to the development of a lead compound (12b), which shows inhibition in both enzymatic and cellular assays. Subsequent design and hybridization efforts also led to the unexpected identification of analogs with potent PIM kinase activity (14f).


ChemMedChem | 2017

Target deconvolution efforts on Wnt pathway screen reveal dual modulation of oxidative phosphorylation and SERCA2

Matias Casás‐Selves; Andrew X. Zhang; James E. Dowling; Stefan Hallén; Aarti Kawatkar; Nicholas J. Pace; Christopher R. Denz; Timothy Pontz; Farzin Garahdaghi; Qing Cao; Alan Sabirsh; Kumar Thakur; Nichole O'Connell; Jun Hu; Ivan Cornella-Taracido; Eranthie Weerapana; Michael Zinda; Robert A. Goodnow; M. Paola Castaldi

Wnt signaling is critical for development, cell proliferation and differentiation, and mutations in this pathway resulting in constitutive signaling have been implicated in various cancers. A pathway screen using a Wnt‐dependent reporter identified a chemical series based on a 1,2,3‐thiadiazole‐5‐carboxamide (TDZ) core with sub‐micromolar potency. Herein we report a comprehensive mechanism‐of‐action deconvolution study toward identifying the efficacy target(s) and biological implication of this chemical series involving bottom‐up quantitative chemoproteomics, cell biology, and biochemical methods. Through observing the effects of our probes on metabolism and performing confirmatory cellular and biochemical assays, we found that this chemical series inhibits ATP synthesis by uncoupling the mitochondrial potential. Affinity chemoproteomics experiments identified sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum Ca2+‐dependent ATPase (SERCA2) as a binding partner of the TDZ series, and subsequent validation studies suggest that the TDZ series can act as ionophores through SERCA2 toward Wnt pathway inhibition.


Archive | 2005

Quinoxalines as B Baf Inhhibitors

Brian Aquila; Les A. Dakin; Tracey Deegan; Stephanos Ioannidis; Stephen Lee; Paul Lyne; Timothy Pontz; Mei Su

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