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Dive into the research topics where William Jay Moore is active.

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Featured researches published by William Jay Moore.


Bone | 2009

A small molecule inhibitor of the Wnt antagonist secreted frizzled-related protein-1 stimulates bone formation

Peter V.N. Bodine; Barbara Stauffer; Helga Ponce-de-Leon; Ramesh A. Bhat; Annamarie Mangine; Laura M. Seestaller-Wehr; Robert A. Moran; Julia Billiard; Shoichi Fukayama; Barry S. Komm; Keith Pitts; Girija Krishnamurthy; Ariamala Gopalsamy; Mengxiao Shi; Jeffrey Curtis Kern; Thomas Joseph Commons; Richard Page Woodworth; Matthew A. Wilson; Gregory S. Welmaker; Eugene John Trybulski; William Jay Moore

Canonical Wnt signaling has been demonstrated to increase bone formation, and Wnt pathway components are being pursued as potential drug targets for osteoporosis and other metabolic bone diseases. Deletion of the Wnt antagonist secreted frizzled-related protein (sFRP)-1 in mice activates canonical signaling in bone and increases trabecular bone formation in aged animals. We have developed small molecules that bind to and inhibit sFRP-1 in vitro and demonstrate robust anabolic activity in an ex vivo organ culture assay. A library of over 440,000 drug-like compounds was screened for inhibitors of human sFRP-1 using a cell-based functional assay that measured activation of canonical Wnt signaling with an optimized T-cell factor (TCF)-luciferase reporter gene assay. One of the hits in this screen, a diarylsulfone sulfonamide, bound to sFRP-1 with a K(D) of 0.35 microM in a tryptophan fluorescence quenching assay. This compound also selectively inhibited sFRP-1 with an EC(50) of 3.9 microM in the cell-based functional assay. Optimization of this high throughput screening hit for binding and functional potency as well as metabolic stability and other pharmaceutical properties led to improved lead compounds. One of these leads (WAY-316606) bound to sFRP-1 with a K(D) of 0.08 microM and inhibited it with an EC(50) of 0.65 microM. Moreover, this compound increased total bone area in a murine calvarial organ culture assay at concentrations as low as 0.0001 microM. This work demonstrates the feasibility of developing small molecules that inhibit sFRP-1 and stimulate canonical Wnt signaling to increase bone formation.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2004

Synthesis and activity of substituted 4-(indazol-3-yl)phenols as pathway-selective estrogen receptor ligands useful in the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis.

Robert J. Steffan; Edward Martin Matelan; Mark A. Ashwell; William Jay Moore; William Ronald Solvibile; Eugene John Trybulski; Christopher C. Chadwick; Susan Chippari; Thomas Kenney; Amy Eckert; Lisa Borges-Marcucci; James C. Keith; Zhang Xu; Lydia Mosyak; Douglas C. Harnish

Pathway-selective ligands for the estrogen receptor (ER) inhibit NF-kappaB-mediated inflammatory gene expression causing a reduction of cytokines, chemokines, adhesion molecules, and inflammatory enzymes. SAR development of a series of 4-(indazol-3-yl)phenols has led to the identification of WAY-169916 an orally active nonsteroidal ligand with the potential use in the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis without the classical proliferative effects associated with estrogens.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009

Modulation of Wnt signaling through inhibition of secreted frizzled-related protein I (sFRP-1) with N-substituted piperidinyl diphenylsulfonyl sulfonamides.

William Jay Moore; Jeffrey Curtis Kern; Ramesh A. Bhat; Thomas Joseph Commons; Shoichi Fukayama; Igor Goljer; Girija Krishnamurthy; Ronald L. Magolda; Lisa M. Nogle; Keith Pitts; Barb Stauffer; Eugene John Trybulski; Gregory S. Welmaker; Matthew A. Wilson; Peter V.N. Bodine

The diphenylsulfonyl sulfonamide scaffold represented by 1 (WAY-316606) are small molecule inhibitors of the secreted protein sFRP-1, an endogenous antagonist of the secreted glycoprotein Wnt. Modulators of the Wnt pathway have been proposed as anabolic agents for the treatment of osteoporosis or other bone-related disorders. Details of the structure-activity relationships and biological activity from the first structural class of this scaffold will be discussed.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015

Structure-Activity Study of Bioisosteric Trifluoromethyl and Pentafluorosulfanyl Indole Inhibitors of the AAA ATPase p97.

Celeste Alverez; Michelle R. Arkin; Stacie L. Bulfer; Raffaele Colombo; Marina Kovaliov; Matthew G. LaPorte; Chaemin Lim; Mary Liang; William Jay Moore; R. Jeffrey Neitz; Yongzhao Yan; Zhizhou Yue; Donna M. Huryn; Peter Wipf

Exploratory SAR studies of a new phenyl indole chemotype for p97 inhibition revealed C-5 indole substituent effects in the ADPGlo assay that did not fully correlate with either electronic or steric factors. A focused series of methoxy-, trifluoromethoxy-, methyl-, trifluoromethyl-, pentafluorosulfanyl-, and nitro-analogues was found to exhibit IC50s from low nanomolar to double-digit micromolar. Surprisingly, we found that the trifluoromethoxy-analogue was biochemically a better match of the trifluoromethyl-substituted lead structure than a pentafluorosulfanyl-analogue. Moreover, in spite of their almost equivalent strongly electron-depleting effect on the indole core, pentafluorosulfanyl- and nitro-derivatives were found to exhibit a 430-fold difference in p97 inhibitory activities. Conversely, the electronically divergent C-5 methyl- and nitro-analogues both showed low nanomolar activities.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

(S)-N-(5-Chlorothiophene-2-sulfonyl)-β,β-diethylalaninol a Notch-1-sparing γ-secretase inhibitor

Derek Cecil Cole; Joseph Raymond Stock; Anthony F. Kreft; Madelene Antane; Suzan Aschmies; Kevin Atchison; David S. Casebier; Thomas A. Comery; George Diamantidis; John W. Ellingboe; Boyd L. Harrison; Yun Hu; Mei Jin; Dennis M. Kubrak; Peimin Lu; Charles William Mann; Robert Martone; William Jay Moore; Aram Oganesian; David Riddell; June Sonnenberg-Reines; Shaiu-Ching Sun; Erik Wagner; Zheng Wang; Kevin R. Woller; Zheng Xu; Hua Zhou; J. Steven Jacobsen

Accumulation of beta-amyloid (Abeta), produced by the proteolytic cleavage of amyloid precursor protein (APP) by beta- and gamma-secretase, is widely believed to be associated with Alzheimers disease (AD). Research around the high-throughput screening hit (S)-4-chlorophenylsulfonyl isoleucinol led to the identification of the Notch-1-sparing (9.5-fold) gamma-secretase inhibitor (S)-N-(5-chlorothiophene-2-sulfonyl)-beta,beta-diethylalaninol 7.b.2 (Abeta(40/42) EC(50)=28 nM), which is efficacious in reduction of Abeta production in vivo.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Modulation of Wnt signaling through inhibition of secreted frizzled-related protein I (sFRP-1) with N-substituted piperidinyl diphenylsulfonyl sulfonamides: Part II

William Jay Moore; Jeffrey Curtis Kern; Ramesh A. Bhat; Peter V.N. Bodine; Shoichi Fukyama; Girija Krishnamurthy; Ronald L. Magolda; Keith Pitts; Barb Stauffer; Eugene John Trybulski

Piperidinyl diphenylsulfonyl sulfonamides are a novel class of molecules that have inhibitory binding affinity for sFRP-1. As a secreted protein sFRP-1 inhibits the function of the secreted Wnt glycoprotein. Therefore, as inhibitors of sFRP-1 these small molecules facilitate the Wnt/beta-catenin canonical signaling pathway. Details of the structure-activity relationships and biological activity of this structural class of compounds will be discussed.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2016

Allosteric Indole Amide Inhibitors of p97: Identification of a Novel Probe of the Ubiquitin Pathway

Celeste Alverez; Stacie L. Bulfer; Ramappa Chakrasali; Michael S. Chimenti; Raymond J. Deshaies; Neal Green; Mark J. S. Kelly; Matthew G. LaPorte; Taber S. Lewis; Mary Liang; William Jay Moore; R. Jeffrey Neitz; Vsevolod A. Peshkov; Michael A. Walters; Feng Zhang; Michelle R. Arkin; Peter Wipf; Donna M. Huryn

A high-throughput screen to discover inhibitors of p97 ATPase activity identified an indole amide that bound to an allosteric site of the protein. Medicinal chemistry optimization led to improvements in potency and solubility. Indole amide 3 represents a novel uncompetitive inhibitor with excellent physical and pharmaceutical properties that can be used as a starting point for drug discovery efforts.


Current Topics in Medicinal Chemistry | 2006

Control of chronic inflammation with pathway selective estrogen receptor ligands.

Robert J. Steffan; Edward Martin Matelan; Mark A. Ashwell; William Jay Moore; William Ronald Solvibile; Eugene John Trybulski; Christopher C. Chadwick; Susan Chippari; Thomas Kenney; Richard C. Winneker; Amy Eckert; Lisa Borges-Marcucci; Steven J. Adelman; Zhang Xu; Lydia Mosyak; Douglas C. Harnish

The discovery of novel intervention points in the inflammatory pathway has been a focus of drug development in recent years. We have identified pathway selective ligands for the estrogen receptor (ER) that inhibit NF-kappaB mediated inflammatory gene expression causing a reduction of cytokines, chemokines, adhesion molecules and inflammatory enzymes. SAR development of a series of 4-(Indazol-3-yl)-phenols has led to the identification of WAY-169916 an orally active non-steroidal ligand with the potential use in the treatment of inflammatory diseases without the classical proliferative effects associated with non-selective estrogens.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

3-(Arylamino)-3-phenylpropan-2-olamines as a new series of dual norepinephrine and serotonin reuptake inhibitors.

An T. Vu; Stephen Todd Cohn; Eugene A. Terefenko; William Jay Moore; Puwen Zhang; Paige Erin Mahaney; Eugene John Trybulski; Igor Goljer; Rebecca Dooley; Jenifer Bray; Grace H. Johnston; Jennifer Leiter; Darlene C. Deecher

A series of 3-(arylamino)-3-phenylpropan-2-olamines was prepared and screened for their ability to inhibit monoamine reuptake. A number of analogues displayed significant dual norepinephrine and serotonin reuptake inhibition. Compounds in this class exhibited minimal affinity for the dopamine transporter.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2018

Optimization of Phenyl Indole Inhibitors of the AAA ATPase p97

Matthew G. LaPorte; James C. Burnett; Raffaele Colombo; Stacie L. Bulfer; Celeste Alverez; Tsui-Fen Chou; R. Jeffrey Neitz; Neal Green; William Jay Moore; Zhizhou Yue; Shan Li; Michelle R. Arkin; Peter Wipf; Donna M. Huryn

Optimization of the side-chain of a phenyl indole scaffold identified from a high-throughput screening campaign for inhibitors of the AAA+ ATPase p97 is reported. The addition of an N-alkyl piperazine led to high potency of this series in a biochemical assay, activity in cell-based assays, and excellent pharmaceutical properties. Molecular modeling based on a subsequently obtained cryo-EM structure of p97 in complex with a phenyl indole was used to rationalize the potency of these allosteric inhibitors.

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Gregory S. Welmaker

Torrey Pines Institute for Molecular Studies

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