Todd Andrew Brugel
AstraZeneca
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Publication
Featured researches published by Todd Andrew Brugel.
European Journal of Pharmacology | 2011
Matthew F. Peters; Anna Zacco; John C. Gordon; Carla Maciag; Linda C. Litwin; Carolann Thompson; Patricia Schroeder; Linda A. Sygowski; Timothy Martin Piser; Todd Andrew Brugel
The κ-opioid receptor plays a central role in mediating the response to stressful life events. Inhibiting κ-opioid receptor signaling is proposed as a mechanism for treating stress-related conditions such as depression and anxiety. Preclinical testing consistently confirms that disruption of κ-opioid signaling is efficacious in animal models of mood disorders. However, concerns about the feasibility of developing antagonists into drugs stem from an unusual pharmacodynamic property of prototypic κ-opioid receptor-selective antagonists; they inhibit receptor signaling for weeks to months after a single dose. Several fundamental questions include - is it possible to identify short-acting antagonists; is long-lasting inhibition necessary for efficacy; and is it safe to develop long-acting antagonists in the clinic. Here, we test representative compounds (AZ-ECPC, AZ-MTAB, and LY-DMPF) from three new chemical series of κ-opioid receptor ligands for long-lasting inhibition. Each compound dose-dependently reversed κ-opioid agonist-induced diuresis. However, unlike the prototypic antagonist, nBNI, which fully inhibited evoked diuresis for at least four weeks, the new compounds showed no inhibition after one week. The two compounds with greater potency and selectivity were tested in prenatally-stressed rats on the elevated plus maze, an exploration-based model of anxiety. Spontaneous exploration of open arms in the elevated plus maze was suppressed by prenatal stress and restored with both compounds. These findings indicate that persistent inhibition is not an inherent property of κ-opioid-selective antagonists and that post-stress dosing with transient inhibitors can be effective in a mood disorder model. This further supports κ-opioid receptor as a promising target for developing novel psychiatric medications.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010
Hui Xiong; Todd Andrew Brugel; Michael Balestra; Dean G. Brown; Kelly Brush; Caprice Hightower; Lindsay Hinkley; Valerie Hoesch; James Kang; Gerard M. Koether; John P. McCauley; Francis M. McLaren; Laura M. Panko; Thomas R. Simpson; Reed W. Smith; James Woods; Becky Brockel; Vijay Chhajlani; Reto Gadient; Nathan Spear; Linda A. Sygowski; Minli Zhang; Jalaj Arora; Nathalie Breysse; Julie Wilson; Methvin Isaac; Abdelmalik Slassi; Megan M. King
Positive allosteric modulation of metabotropic glutamate receptor 5 (mGluR5) is regarded as a potential novel treatment for schizophrenic patients. Herein we report the synthesis and SAR of 4-aryl piperazine and piperidine amides as potent mGluR5 positive allosteric modulators (PAMs). Several analogs have excellent activity and desired drug-like properties. Compound 2b was further characterized as a PAM using several in vitro experiments, and produced robust activity in several preclinical animal models.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010
Todd Andrew Brugel; Reed W. Smith; Michael Balestra; Christopher Becker; Thalia Daniels; Tiffany N. Hoerter; Gerard M. Koether; Scott Throner; Laura M. Panko; James Folmer; Joseph Cacciola; Angela M. Hunter; Ruifeng Liu; Philip D. Edwards; Dean G. Brown; John C. Gordon; Norman C. Ledonne; Mark R. Pietras; Patricia Schroeder; Linda A. Sygowski; Lee T. Hirata; Anna Zacco; Matthew F. Peters
Initial high throughput screening efforts identified highly potent and selective kappa opioid receptor antagonist 3 (κ IC(50)=77 nM; μ:κ and δ:κ IC(50) ratios>400) which lacked CNS exposure in vivo. Modification of this scaffold resulted in development of a series of 8-azabicyclo[3.2.1]octan-3-yloxy-benzamides showing potent and selectivity κ antagonism as well as good brain exposure. Analog 6c (κ IC(50)=20 nM; μ:κ=36, δ:κ=415) was also shown to reverse κ-agonist induced rat diuresis in vivo.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010
Todd Andrew Brugel; Reed W. Smith; Michael Balestra; Christopher Becker; Thalia Daniels; Gerard M. Koether; Scott Throner; Laura M. Panko; Dean G. Brown; Ruifeng Liu; John C. Gordon; Matthew F. Peters
Further structure activity relationship studies on a previously reported 8-azabicyclo[3.2.1]octan-3-yloxy-benzamide series of potent and selective kappa opioid receptor antagonists is discussed. Modification of the pendant N-substitution to include a cyclohexylurea moiety produced analogs with greater in vitro opioid and hERG selectivity such as 12 (kappa IC50=172 nM, mu:kappa ratio=93, delta:kappa ratio=>174, hERG IC50=>33 microM). Changes to the linker conformation and identity as well as to the benzamide ring moiety were also investigated.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010
Jeffrey G. Varnes; Janet Marie Forst; Tiffany N. Hoerter; Christopher R. Holmquist; Deidre E. Wilkins; Gaochao Tian; Gerald Jonak; Xia Wang; William Potts; Michael W. Wood; Cristobal Alhambra; Todd Andrew Brugel; Jeffrey S. Albert
A novel series of glycine transporter 1 (GlyT1) inhibitors is described. Scoping of the heterocycle moiety of hit 4-chlorobenzenesulfonamide 1 led to replacement of the piperidine with an azepane for a modest increase in potency. Phenyl sulfonamides proved superior to alkyl and non-phenyl aromatic sulfonamides, while subsequent ortho substitution of the 2-(azepan-1-yl)-2-phenylethanamine aromatic ring yielded 39 (IC(50) 37 nM, solubility 14 microM), the most potent GlyT1 inhibitor in this series. Favorable brain-plasma ratios were observed for select compounds in pharmacokinetic studies to evaluate CNS penetration.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2018
Jeffrey G. Varnes; Hui Xiong; Janet Marie Forst; Christopher R. Holmquist; Glen Ernst; William Frietze; Bruce T. Dembofsky; Don Andisik; William E. Palmer; Lindsay Hinkley; Gary Steelman; Deidre E. Wilkins; Gaochao Tian; Gerald Jonak; William Potts; Xia Wang; Todd Andrew Brugel; Cristobal Alhambra; Michael W. Wood; Chris Allan Veale; Jeffrey S. Albert
A series of isoquinuclidine benzamides as glycine uptake inhibitors for the treatment of schizophrenia are described. Potency, lipophilicity, and intrinsic human microsomal clearance were parameters for optimization. Potency correlated with the nature of the ortho substituents of the benzamide ring, and reductions in lipophilicity could be achieved through heteroatom incorporation in the benzamide and pendant phenyl moieties. Improvements in human CLint were achieved through changes in ring size and the N-alkyl group of the isoquinuclidine itself, with des-alkyl derivatives (40-41, 44) demonstrating the most robust microsomal stability. Dimethylbenzamide 9 was tested in a mouse MK801 LMA assay and had a statistically significant attenuation of locomotor activity at 3 and 10 μmol/kg compared to control.
Archive | 2008
James Arnold; Todd Andrew Brugel; Scott Throner; Steven Wesolowski; Phil Edwards; Andrew Griffin; Thierry Groblewski; Denis Labrecque
Archive | 2008
James Arnold; Todd Andrew Brugel; Scott Throner; Steven Wesolowski; Phil Edwards; Andrew Griffin; Thierry Groblewski; Denis Labrecque
Archive | 2008
James Arnold; Todd Andrew Brugel; Phil Edwards; Andrew Griffin; Thierry Groblewski; Denis Labrecque; Scott Throner; Steven Wesolowski
Archive | 2008
Jeffrey S. Albert; Cristobal Alhambra; Todd Andrew Brugel; Jeffrey G. Varnes