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Dive into the research topics where Victor J. Cee is active.

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Featured researches published by Victor J. Cee.


Cancer Research | 2010

Preclinical Evaluation of AMG 900, a Novel Potent and Highly Selective Pan-Aurora Kinase Inhibitor with Activity in Taxane-Resistant Tumor Cell Lines

Marc Payton; Tammy L. Bush; Grace Tin-Yun Chung; Beth Ziegler; Patrick Eden; Patricia McElroy; Sandra L. Ross; Victor J. Cee; Holly L. Deak; Brian L. Hodous; Hanh Nho Nguyen; Philip R. Olivieri; Karina Romero; Laurie B. Schenkel; Annette Bak; Mary K. Stanton; Isabelle Dussault; Vinod F. Patel; Stephanie Geuns-Meyer; Robert Radinsky; Richard Kendall

In mammalian cells, the aurora kinases (aurora-A, -B, and -C) play essential roles in regulating cell division. The expression of aurora-A and -B is elevated in a variety of human cancers and is associated with high proliferation rates and poor prognosis, making them attractive targets for anticancer therapy. AMG 900 is an orally bioavailable, potent, and highly selective pan-aurora kinase inhibitor that is active in taxane-resistant tumor cell lines. In tumor cells, AMG 900 inhibited autophosphorylation of aurora-A and -B as well as phosphorylation of histone H3 on Ser(10), a proximal substrate of aurora-B. The predominant cellular response of tumor cells to AMG 900 treatment was aborted cell division without a prolonged mitotic arrest, which ultimately resulted in cell death. AMG 900 inhibited the proliferation of 26 tumor cell lines, including cell lines resistant to the antimitotic drug paclitaxel and to other aurora kinase inhibitors (AZD1152, MK-0457, and PHA-739358), at low nanomolar concentrations. Furthermore, AMG 900 was active in an AZD1152-resistant HCT116 variant cell line that harbors an aurora-B mutation (W221L). Oral administration of AMG 900 blocked the phosphorylation of histone H3 in a dose-dependent manner and significantly inhibited the growth of HCT116 tumor xenografts. Importantly, AMG 900 was broadly active in multiple xenograft models, including 3 multidrug-resistant xenograft models, representing 5 tumor types. AMG 900 has entered clinical evaluation in adult patients with advanced cancers and has the potential to treat tumors refractory to anticancer drugs such as the taxanes.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Pyridyl-pyrimidine benzimidazole derivatives as potent, selective, and orally bioavailable inhibitors of Tie-2 kinase.

Victor J. Cee; Alan C. Cheng; Karina Romero; Steve Bellon; Christopher Mohr; Douglas A. Whittington; Annette Bak; James Bready; Sean Caenepeel; Angela Coxon; Holly L. Deak; Jenne Fretland; Yan Gu; Brian L. Hodous; Xin Huang; Joseph L. Kim; Jasmine Lin; Alexander M. Long; Hanh Nho Nguyen; Philip R. Olivieri; Vinod F. Patel; Ling Wang; Yihong Zhou; Paul E. Hughes; Stephanie Geuns-Meyer

Selective small molecule inhibitors of Tie-2 kinase are important tools for the validation of Tie-2 signaling in pathological angiogenesis. Reported herein is the optimization of a nonselective scaffold into a potent and highly selective inhibitor of Tie-2 kinase.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Discovery of AMG 369, a Thiazolo[5,4-b]pyridine Agonist of S1P1 and S1P5.

Victor J. Cee; Mike Frohn; Brian A. Lanman; Jennifer E. Golden; Kristine M. Muller; Susana C. Neira; Alex Pickrell; Heather A. Arnett; Janet Buys; Anu Gore; Mike Fiorino; Michelle Horner; Andrea Itano; Matt R. Lee; Michele McElvain; Scot Middleton; Michael Schrag; Dalia Rivenzon-Segal; Hugo M. Vargas; Han Xu; Yang Xu; Xuxia Zhang; Jerry Siu; Min Wong; Roland W. Bürli

The optimization of a series of thiazolopyridine S1P1 agonists with limited activity at the S1P3 receptor is reported. These efforts resulted in the discovery of 1-(3-fluoro-4-(5-(1-phenylcyclopropyl)thiazolo-[5,4-b]pyridin-2-yl)benzyl)azetidine-3-carboxylic acid (5d, AMG 369), a potent dual S1P1/S1P5 agonist with limited activity at S1P3 and no activity at S1P2/S1P4. Dosed orally at 0.1 mg/kg, 5d is shown to reduce blood lymphocyte counts 24 h postdose and delay the onset and reduce the severity of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis in rat.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Structure-based design of a novel series of potent, selective inhibitors of the class I phosphatidylinositol 3-kinases.

Adrian L. Smith; Noel D'angelo; Yunxin Y. Bo; Shon Booker; Victor J. Cee; Brad Herberich; Fang-Tsao Hong; Claire L.M. Jackson; Brian A. Lanman; Longbin Liu; Nobuko Nishimura; Liping H. Pettus; Anthony B. Reed; Seifu Tadesse; Nuria A. Tamayo; Ryan Wurz; Kevin Yang; Kristin L. Andrews; Douglas A. Whittington; John D. McCarter; Tisha San Miguel; Leeanne Zalameda; Jian Jiang; Raju Subramanian; Erin L. Mullady; Sean Caenepeel; Daniel J. Freeman; Ling Wang; Nancy R. Zhang; Tian Wu

A highly selective series of inhibitors of the class I phosphatidylinositol 3-kinases (PI3Ks) has been designed and synthesized. Starting from the dual PI3K/mTOR inhibitor 5, a structure-based approach was used to improve potency and selectivity, resulting in the identification of 54 as a potent inhibitor of the class I PI3Ks with excellent selectivity over mTOR, related phosphatidylinositol kinases, and a broad panel of protein kinases. Compound 54 demonstrated a robust PD-PK relationship inhibiting the PI3K/Akt pathway in vivo in a mouse model, and it potently inhibited tumor growth in a U-87 MG xenograft model with an activated PI3K/Akt pathway.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Selective Class I Phosphoinositide 3-Kinase Inhibitors: Optimization of a Series of Pyridyltriazines Leading to the Identification of a Clinical Candidate, AMG 511

Mark H. Norman; Kristin L. Andrews; Yunxin Y. Bo; Shon Booker; Sean Caenepeel; Victor J. Cee; Noel D. D’Angelo; Daniel J. Freeman; Bradley J. Herberich; Fang-Tsao Hong; Claire L.M. Jackson; Jian Jiang; Brian A. Lanman; Longbin Liu; John D. McCarter; Erin L. Mullady; Nobuko Nishimura; Liping H. Pettus; Anthony B. Reed; Tisha San Miguel; Adrian L. Smith; Markian Stec; Seifu Tadesse; Andrew Tasker; Divesh Aidasani; Xiaochun Zhu; Raju Subramanian; Nuria A. Tamayo; Ling Wang; Douglas A. Whittington

The phosphoinositide 3-kinase family catalyzes the phosphorylation of phosphatidylinositol-4,5-diphosphate to phosphatidylinositol-3,4,5-triphosphate, a secondary messenger which plays a critical role in important cellular functions such as metabolism, cell growth, and cell survival. Our efforts to identify potent, efficacious, and orally available phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) inhibitors as potential cancer therapeutics have resulted in the discovery of 4-(2-((6-methoxypyridin-3-yl)amino)-5-((4-(methylsulfonyl)piperazin-1-yl)methyl)pyridin-3-yl)-6-methyl-1,3,5-triazin-2-amine (1). In this paper, we describe the optimization of compound 1, which led to the design and synthesis of pyridyltriazine 31, a potent pan inhibitor of class I PI3Ks with a superior pharmacokinetic profile. Compound 31 was shown to potently block the targeted PI3K pathway in a mouse liver pharmacodynamic model and inhibit tumor growth in a U87 malignant glioma glioblastoma xenograft model. On the basis of its excellent in vivo efficacy and pharmacokinetic profile, compound 31 was selected for further evaluation as a clinical candidate and was designated AMG 511.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Discovery of a potent, selective, and orally bioavailable pyridinyl-pyrimidine phthalazine aurora kinase inhibitor.

Victor J. Cee; Laurie B. Schenkel; Brian L. Hodous; Holly L. Deak; Hanh Nho Nguyen; Philip R. Olivieri; Karina Romero; Annette Bak; Xuhai Be; Steve Bellon; Tammy L. Bush; Alan C. Cheng; Grace Chung; Steve Coats; Patrick Eden; Kelly Hanestad; Paul Gallant; Yan Gu; Xin Huang; Richard Kendall; Min-Hwa Jasmine Lin; Michael Morrison; Vinod F. Patel; Robert Radinsky; Paul Rose; Sandra Ross; Ji-Rong Sun; Jin Tang; Huilin Zhao; Marc Payton

The discovery of aurora kinases as essential regulators of cell division has led to intense interest in identifying small molecule aurora kinase inhibitors for the potential treatment of cancer. A high-throughput screening effort identified pyridinyl-pyrimidine 6a as a moderately potent dual inhibitor of aurora kinases -A and -B. Optimization of this hit resulted in an anthranilamide lead (6j) that possessed improved enzyme and cellular activity and exhibited a high level of kinase selectivity. However, this anthranilamide and subsequent analogues suffered from a lack of oral bioavailability. Converting the internally hydrogen-bonded six-membered pseudo-ring of the anthranilamide to a phthalazine (8a-b) led to a dramatic improvement in oral bioavailability (38-61%F) while maintaining the potency and selectivity characteristics of the anthranilamide series. In a COLO 205 tumor pharmacodynamic assay measuring phosphorylation of the aurora-B substrate histone H3 at serine 10 (p-histone H3), oral administration of 8b at 50 mg/kg demonstrated significant reduction in tumor p-histone H3 for at least 6 h.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2012

Synthesis of 4-substituted chlorophthalazines, dihydrobenzoazepinediones, 2-pyrazolylbenzoic acid, and 2-pyrazolylbenzohydrazide via 3-substituted 3-hydroxyisoindolin-1-ones.

Hanh Nho Nguyen; Victor J. Cee; Holly L. Deak; Bingfan Du; Kathleen Panter Faber; Hakan Gunaydin; Brian L. Hodous; Steven L. Hollis; Paul H. Krolikowski; Philip R. Olivieri; Vinod F. Patel; Karina Romero; Laurie B. Schenkel; Stephanie Geuns-Meyer

Herein we describe a general three-step synthesis of 4-substituted chlorophthalazines in good overall yields. In the key step, N,N-dimethylaminophthalimide (8a) directs the selective monoaddition of alkyl, aryl, and heteroaryl organometallic reagents to afford 3-substituted 3-hydroxyisoindolinones 9b, 9i-9am. Many of these hydroxyisoindolinones are converted to chlorophthalazines 1b-1v via reaction with hydrazine, followed by chlorination with POCl(3). We have also discovered two novel transformations of 3-vinyl- and 3-alkynyl-3-hydroxyisoindolinones. Addition of vinyl organometallic reagents to N,N-dimethylaminophthalimide (8a) provided dihydrobenzoazepinediones 15a-15c via the proposed ring expansion of 3-vinyl-3-hydroxyisoindolinone intermediates. 3-Alkynyl-3-hydroxyisoindolinones react with hydrazine and substituted hydrazines to afford 2-pyrazolyl benzoic acids 16a-16d and 2-pyrazolyl benzohydrazides 17a-17g rather than the expected alkynyl phthalazinones.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015

Discovery of 5-(1H-indol-5-yl)-1,3,4-thiadiazol-2-amines as potent PIM inhibitors.

Bin Wu; Hui-Ling Wang; Victor J. Cee; Brian A. Lanman; Thomas Nixey; Liping H. Pettus; Anthony B. Reed; Ryan Wurz; Nadia Guerrero; Christine Sastri; Jeff Winston; J. Russell Lipford; Matthew R. Lee; Christopher Mohr; Kristin L. Andrews; Andrew Tasker

PIM kinases are a family of Ser/Thr kinases that are implicated in tumorigenesis. The discovery of a new class of PIM inhibitors, 5-(1H-indol-5-yl)-1,3,4-thiadiazol-2-amines, is discussed with optimized compounds showing excellent potency against all three PIM isoforms.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015

Systematic Study of the Glutathione (GSH) Reactivity of N-Arylacrylamides: 1. Effects of Aryl Substitution

Victor J. Cee; Laurie P. Volak; Yuping Chen; Michael D. Bartberger; Chris Tegley; Tara Arvedson; John D. McCarter; Andrew Tasker; Christopher Fotsch

Success in the design of targeted covalent inhibitors depends in part on a knowledge of the factors influencing electrophile reactivity. In an effort to further develop an understanding of structure-reactivity relationships among N-arylacrylamides, we determined glutathione (GSH) reaction rates for a family of N-arylacrylamides independently substituted at ortho-, meta-, and para-positions with 11 different groups common to inhibitor design. We find that substituent effects on reaction rates show a linear Hammett correlation for ortho-, meta-, and para-substitution. In addition, we note a correlation between (1)H and (13)C NMR chemical shifts of the acrylamide with GSH reaction rates, suggesting that NMR chemical shifts may be a convenient surrogate measure of relative acrylamide reactivity. Density functional theory calculations reveal a correlation between computed activation parameters and experimentally determined reaction rates, validating the use of such methodology for the screening of synthetic candidates in a prospective fashion.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Discovery of a Potent, S1P3-Sparing Benzothiazole Agonist of Sphingosine-1-Phosphate Receptor 1 (S1P1).

Brian A. Lanman; Victor J. Cee; Srinivasa Rao Cheruku; Mike Frohn; Jennifer E. Golden; Jian Lin; Mercedes Lobera; Yael Marantz; Kristine M. Muller; Susana C. Neira; Alexander J. Pickrell; Dalia Rivenzon-Segal; Nili Schutz; Anurag Sharadendu; Xiang Yu; Zhaoda Zhang; Janet Buys; Mike Fiorino; Anu Gore; Michelle Horner; Andrea Itano; Michele McElvain; Scot Middleton; Michael Schrag; Hugo M. Vargas; Han Xu; Yang Xu; Xuxia Zhang; Jerry Siu; Roland W. Bürli

Optimization of a benzofuranyl S1P1 agonist lead compound (3) led to the discovery of 1-(3-fluoro-4-(5-(2-fluorobenzyl)benzo[d]thiazol-2-yl)benzyl)azetidine-3-carboxylic acid (14), a potent S1P1 agonist with minimal activity at S1P3. Dosed orally at 0.3 mg/kg, 14 significantly reduced blood lymphocyte counts 24 h postdose and attenuated a delayed type hypersensitivity (DTH) response to antigen challenge.

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