William F. Hoffman
United States Military Academy
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Featured researches published by William F. Hoffman.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2002
Mark E. Fraley; William F. Hoffman; Robert S. Rubino; Randall W. Hungate; Andrew J. Tebben; Ruth Z. Rutledge; Rosemary C. McFall; William R. Huckle; Richard L. Kendall; Kathleen E. Coll; Kenneth A. Thomas
We have synthesized and evaluated the activity of 3,6-disubstituted pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidines as a new class of KDR kinase inhibitors. Starting with screening lead 1, potency against isolated KDR was fully optimized with 3-thienyl and 4-methoxyphenyl substituents at the 6- and 3-positions (3g, KDR IC(50)=19 nM), respectively. The synthesis and SAR of these compounds are described.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2002
Mark E. Fraley; Robert S. Rubino; William F. Hoffman; Scott R. Hambaugh; Kenneth L. Arrington; Randall W. Hungate; Mark T. Bilodeau; Andrew J. Tebben; Ruth Z. Rutledge; Richard L. Kendall; Rosemary C. McFall; William R. Huckle; Kathleen E. Coll; Kenneth A. Thomas
We have introduced solubilizing functionality to a 3,6-disubstituted pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidine series of KDR kinase inhibitors to improve the physical properties of these compounds. The addition of a basic side-chain to the 6-aryl ring, introduction of 3-pyridyl groups, and most significantly, incorporation of a 4-pyridinonyl substituent at the 6-position of the core are modifications that maintain and often enhance the intrinsic potency of this class of inhibitors. Moreover, the improvements in physical properties result in marked increases in cellular activity and more favorable pharmacokinetics in rats. The synthesis and SAR of these compounds are described.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2002
Robert S. Meissner; James J. Perkins; Le T. Duong; George D. Hartman; William F. Hoffman; Joel R. Huff; Nathan C. Ihle; Chih-Tai Leu; Rose M. Nagy; Adel M. Naylor-Olsen; Gideon A. Rodan; Sevgi B. Rodan; David B. Whitman; Gregg Wesolowski; Mark E. Duggan
Abstract Mimetics of the RGD tripeptide are described that are potent, selective antagonists of the integrin receptor, αvβ3. The use of the 5,6,7,8-tetrahydro[1,8]naphthyridine group as a potency-enhancing N-terminus is demonstrated. Two 3-substituted-3-amino-propionic acids previously contained in αIIbβ3 antagonists were utilized to enhance binding affinity and functional activity for the targeted receptor. Further affinity increases were then achieved through the use of cyclic glycyl amide bond constraints.
Cancer Research | 2004
Laura Sepp-Lorenzino; Elaine Rands; Xianzhi Mao; Brett Connolly; Jennifer M. Shipman; Joanne Antanavage; Susan Hill; Lenora Davis; Stephen C. Beck; Keith Rickert; Kathleen E. Coll; Patrice A. Ciecko; Mark E. Fraley; William F. Hoffman; George D. Hartman; David C. Heimbrook; Jackson B. Gibbs; Nancy E. Kohl; Kenneth A. Thomas
A strategy for antagonizing vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) -induced angiogenesis is to inhibit the kinase activity of its receptor, kinase insert domain-containing receptor (KDR), the first committed and perhaps the last unique step in the VEGF signaling cascade. We synthesized a novel ATP-competitive KDR tyrosine kinase inhibitor that potently suppresses human and mouse KDR activity in enzyme (IC50 = 7.8–19.5 nm) and cell-based assays (IC50 = 8 nm). The compound was bioavailable in vivo, leading to a dose-dependent decrease in basal- and VEGF-stimulated KDR tyrosine phosphorylation in lungs from naïve and tumor-bearing mice (IC50 = 23 nm). Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics guided drug dose selection for antitumor efficacy studies. HT1080 nude mice xenografts were treated orally twice daily with vehicle, or 33 or 133 mg/kg of compound. These doses afforded trough plasma concentrations approximately equal to the IC50 for inhibition of KDR autophosphorylation in vivo for the 33 mg/kg group, and higher than the IC99 for the 133 mg/kg group. Chronic treatment at these doses was well-tolerated and resulted in dose-dependent inhibition of tumor growth, decreased tumor vascularization, decreased proliferation, and enhanced cell death. Antitumor efficacy correlated with inhibition of KDR tyrosine phosphorylation in the tumor, as well as in a surrogate tissue (lung). Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics assessment indicated that the degree of tumor growth inhibition correlated directly with the extent of inhibition of KDR tyrosine phosphorylation in tumor or lung at trough. These observations highlight the need to design antiangiogenic drug regimens to ensure constant target suppression and to take advantage of PD end points to guide dose selection.
Current Medicinal Chemistry | 2004
Mark E. Fraley; William F. Hoffman; Kenneth L. Arrington; Randy W. Hungate; George D. Hartman; Rosemary C. McFall; Kathleen E. Coll; Keith Rickert; Kenneth A. Thomas; Georgia B. McGaughey
Small molecule inhibitors of KDR kinase activity have typically possessed poor intrinsic physical properties including low aqueous solubility and high lipophilicity. These features have often conferred limited cell permeability manifested in low levels of cell-based KDR inhibitory activity and oral bioavailability. Thus, the design of inhibitors with appropriate physical properties has played a critical role in the development of clinical candidates. We present a variety of structural modifications that have afforded improvements in physical properties and thereby have addressed suboptimal cellular potency and pharmacokinetics for three unique classes of KDR kinase inhibitors.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2003
Mark E. Fraley; Kenneth L. Arrington; Scott R. Hambaugh; William F. Hoffman; April M. Cunningham; Mary Beth Young; Randall W. Hungate; Andrew J. Tebben; Ruth Z. Rutledge; Richard L. Kendall; William R. Huckle; Rosemary C. McFall; Kathleen E. Coll; Kenneth A. Thomas
We have discovered 3-(5-thien-3-ylpyridin-3-yl)-1H-indoles as potent inhibitors of KDR kinase activity. This communication details the evolution of this novel class from a potent screening lead of vastly different structure with an emphasis on structural modifications that retained activity and provided improvements in key physical properties. The synthesis and in-depth evaluation of these inhibitors are described.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 1999
George D. Hartman; Mark E. Duggan; William F. Hoffman; Robert J. Meissner; James J. Perkins; Amy E. Zartman; Adel M. Naylor-Olsen; Jacquelynn J. Cook; Joan D. Glass; Robert J. Lynch; Guixiang Zhang; Robert J. Gould
A new series of potent, linearly-minimized, orally active, selective GPIIb/IIIa inhibitors is identified. Thus 15 (L-750,034) achieves interaction via a constrained, non-turned conformation that maintains the proper distance between its charged termini and full sulfonamide exosite interaction. The diminutive stature and the proposed linear conformation of L-750,034 define a new paradigm for the conceptualization of RGD mimics.
Journal of Labelled Compounds and Radiopharmaceuticals | 1996
Terence G. Hamill; Mark E. Duggan; George D. Hartman; William F. Hoffman; James J. Perkins; H. D. Burns
The synthesis of [ 3 H]L-734,217, 1b, an orally active fibrinogen receptor antagonist, is described. The conversion of 3-amino crotonate 6 to [ 3 H]L-734,217 was carried out via a two step sequence of catalytic tritiation followed by basic hydrolysis. Deuterium model reactions showed that the reduction of 6 with PtO2 occurred via hydrogen transfer from the solvent (ethanol or acetic acid) leading to poor isotope incorporation. When this reduction was conducted in methanol with 10% Pd/C, good isotope incorporation resulted. Ultimately, [ 3 H]L-734,217 was formed with a specific activity of 42 Ci/mmol.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2000
Mark E. Duggan; Le T. Duong; John E. Fisher; Terence G. Hamill; William F. Hoffman; Joel R. Huff; Nathan C. Ihle; Chih-Tai Leu; Rose M. Nagy; James J. Perkins; Sevgi B. Rodan; Gregg Wesolowski; David B. Whitman; Amy E. Zartman; Gideon A. Rodan; George D. Hartman
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2006
Mark E. Fraley; Robert M. Garbaccio; Kenneth L. Arrington; William F. Hoffman; Edward S. Tasber; Paul J. Coleman; Carolyn A. Buser; Eileen S. Walsh; Kelly Hamilton; Christine Fernandes; Michael D. Schaber; Robert B. Lobell; Weikang Tao; Victoria J. South; Youwei Yan; Lawrence C. Kuo; Thomayant Prueksaritanont; Cathy Shu; Maricel Torrent; D C Heimbrook; Nancy E. Kohl; Hans E. Huber; George D. Hartman