Xiaofan Zheng
Bristol-Myers Squibb
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Publication
Featured researches published by Xiaofan Zheng.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014
Robert G. Gentles; Min Ding; John A. Bender; Carl P. Bergstrom; Katharine A. Grant-Young; Piyasena Hewawasam; Thomas William Hudyma; Scott Martin; Andrew Nickel; Alicia Regueiro-Ren; Yong Tu; Zhong Yang; Kap-Sun Yeung; Xiaofan Zheng; Sam T. Chao; Jung-Hui Sun; Brett R. Beno; Daniel M. Camac; Mian Gao; Paul E. Morin; Steven Sheriff; Jeff Tredup; John Wan; Mark R. Witmer; Dianlin Xie; Umesh Hanumegowda; Jay O. Knipe; Kathy Mosure; Kenneth S. Santone; Dawn D. Parker
Described herein are structure-activity relationship studies that resulted in the optimization of the activity of members of a class of cyclopropyl-fused indolobenzazepine HCV NS5B polymerase inhibitors. Subsequent iterations of analogue design and syntheses successfully addressed off-target activities, most notably human pregnane X receptor (hPXR) transactivation, and led to significant improvements in the physicochemical properties of lead compounds. Those analogues exhibiting improved solubility and membrane permeability were shown to have notably enhanced pharmacokinetic profiles. Additionally, a series of alkyl bridged piperazine carboxamides was identified as being of particular interest, and from which the compound BMS-791325 (2) was found to have distinguishing antiviral, safety, and pharmacokinetic properties that resulted in its selection for clinical evaluation.
Antiviral Research | 2010
Karen Rigat; Yi Wang; Thomas W. Hudyma; Min Ding; Xiaofan Zheng; Robert G. Gentles; Brett R. Beno; Min Gao; Susan B. Roberts
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (NS5B) is required for viral replication. Crystal structures of the NS5B apoprotein show that the finger and thumb domains interact to encircle the active site, and that inhibitors defined by P495 resistance that bind to the thumb-finger interface displace the Δ1 finger loop and disrupt this structure. Since crystal structures may not reveal all of the conformations of a protein in solution we have developed an alternative method, using limited trypsin protease digestion, to investigate the impact of inhibitors as well as substrates on the movement of the Δ1 loop. This assay can be used to study NS5B under conditions that support enzymatic activity. In the absence of inhibitors, no specific region of NS5B was hypersensitive to trypsin, and no specific intermediate cleavage products were formed. Binding of P495-site inhibitors to NS5B induced specific trypsin hypersensitivity at lysine residues 50 and 51. Previously characterized inhibitors and mutant polymerases were used to link this specific trypsin hypersensitivity to movement of the Δ1 loop. Trypsin hypersensitivity identical to the inhibitor pattern was also induced by the binding of the RNA template. The addition of primer to the NS5B-template complex eliminated the hypersensitivity. The data are consistent with displacement of the Δ1 finger loop from the thumb by the binding of template, and reversal by the addition of primer or NTP. Our results complement inhibitor-enzyme co-crystal studies, and the assay provides a rapid and sensitive method to study dynamic changes in HCV NS5B polymerase conformation under conditions that support functional activity.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011
Xiaofan Zheng; Thomas W. Hudyma; Scott W. Martin; Carl P. Bergstrom; Min Ding; Feng He; Jeffrey L. Romine; Michael A. Poss; John F. Kadow; John Wan; Mark R. Witmer; Paul E. Morin; Daniel M. Camac; Steven Sheriff; Brett R. Beno; Karen Rigat; Ying-Kai Wang; Robert A. Fridell; Julie A. Lemm; Dike Qiu; Mengping Liu; Stacey Voss; Lenore Pelosi; Susan B. Roberts; Min Gao; Jay O. Knipe; Robert G. Gentles
Herein, we present initial SAR studies on a series of bridged 2-arylindole-based NS5B inhibitors. The introduction of bridging elements between the indole N1 and the ortho-position of the 2-aryl moiety resulted in conformationally constrained heterocycles that possess multiple additional vectors for further exploration. The binding mode and pharmacokinetic (PK) properties of select examples, including: 13-cyclohexyl-6-oxo-6,7-dihydro-5H-indolo[2,1-d][1,4]benzodiazepine-10-carboxylic acid (7) (IC(50)=0.07 μM, %F=18), are reported.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012
Min Ding; Feng He; Thomas W. Hudyma; Xiaofan Zheng; Michael A. Poss; John F. Kadow; Brett R. Beno; Karen Rigat; Ying-Kai Wang; Robert A. Fridell; Julie A. Lemm; Dike Qiu; Mengping Liu; Stacey Voss; Lenore Pelosi; Susan B. Roberts; Min Gao; Jay O. Knipe; Robert G. Gentles
Presented here are initial structure-activity relationship (SAR) studies on a series of novel heteroaryl fused tetracyclic indole-based inhibitors of the hepatitis C viral polymerase, NS5B. The introduction of alternative heterocyclic moieties into the indolo-fused inhibitor class significantly expands the reported SAR and resulted in the identification of pyridino analogs, typified by compounds 44 and 45 that displayed excellent potency against the NS5B polymerase of both HCV 1a and HCV 1b genotypes.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011
Robert G. Gentles; Steven Sheriff; Brett R. Beno; Changhong Wan; Kevin Kish; Min Ding; Xiaofan Zheng; Louis S. Chupak; Michael A. Poss; Mark R. Witmer; Paul E. Morin; Ying-Kai Wang; Karen Rigat; Julie A. Lemm; Stacey Voss; Mengping Liu; Lenore Pelosi; Susan B. Roberts; Min Gao; John F. Kadow
Structure based rationales for the activities of potent N-benzyl-4-heteroaryl-1-(phenylsulfonyl)piperazine-2-carboxamide inhibitors of the hepatitis C viral polymerase are described herein. These compounds bind to the hepatitis C virus non-structural protein 5B (NS5B), and co-crystal structures of select examples from this series with NS5B are reported. Comparison of co-crystal structures of a potent analog with both NS5B genotype 1a and genotype 1b provides a possible explanation for the genotype-selectivity observed with this compound class and suggests opportunities for the further optimization of the series.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2016
Louis S. Chupak; Xiaofan Zheng; Shuanghua Hu; Yazhong Huang; Min Ding; Martin A. Lewis; Ryan Westphal; Yuval Blat; Andrea McClure; Robert G. Gentles
N-Benzylic-substituted glycine sulfonamides that reversibly inhibit diacylglycerol (DAG) lipases are reported. Detailed herein are the structure activity relationships, profiling characteristics and physico-chemical properties for the first reported series of DAG lipase (DAGL) inhibitors that function without covalent attachment to the enzyme. Highly potent examples are presented that represent valuable tool compounds for studying DAGL inhibition and constitute important leads for future medicinal chemistry efforts.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011
Robert G. Gentles; Min Ding; Xiaofan Zheng; Louis S. Chupak; Michael A. Poss; Brett R. Beno; Lenore Pelosi; Mengping Liu; Julie A. Lemm; Ying-Kai Wang; Susan B. Roberts; Min Gao; John F. Kadow
Described herein is the initial optimization of (+/-) N-benzyl-4-heteroaryl-1-(phenylsulfonyl)piperazine-2-carboxamide (1), a hit discovered in a high throughput screen run against the NS5B polymerase enzyme of the hepatitis C virus. This effort resulted in the identification of (S)-N-sec-butyl-6-((R)-3-(4-(trifluoromethoxy)benzylcarbamoyl)-4-(4-(trifluoromethoxy)phenylsulfonyl)piperazin-1-yl)pyridazine-3-carboxamide (2), that displayed potent replicon activities against HCV genotypes 1b and 1a (EC(50) 1b/1a=7/89 nM).
PLOS ONE | 2016
Amy K. Sheaffer; Min S. Lee; Huilin Qi; Susan Chaniewski; Xiaofan Zheng; Glen A. Farr; Kim Esposito; David G. Harden; Ming Lei; Liang Schweizer; Jacques Friborg; Michele Agler; Fiona McPhee; Robert G. Gentles; Brett R. Beno; Lou Chupak; Stephen Mason
A phenotypic high-throughput cell culture screen was performed to identify compounds that prevented proliferation of the human Papilloma virus type 16 (HPV-16) transformed cell line Ca Ski. A series of quinoxaline compounds exemplified by Compound 1 was identified. Testing against a panel of cell lines demonstrated that Compound 1 selectively inhibited replication of all HPV-16, HPV-18, and HPV-31 transformed cell lines tested with 50% Inhibitory Concentration (IC50) values of 2 to 8 μM relative to IC50 values of 28 to 73 μM in HPV-negative cell lines. Treatment with Compound 1 resulted in a cascade of multiple apoptotic events, including selective activation of effector caspases 3 and 7, fragmentation of cellular DNA, and PARP (poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase) cleavage in HPV-positive cells relative to HPV-negative cells. Unregulated proliferation of HPV transformed cells is dependent on the viral oncogenes, E6 and E7. Treatment with Compound 1 resulted in a decrease in HPV E7 protein in Ca Ski cells. However, the timing of this reduction relative to other effects of compound treatment suggests that this was a consequence, rather than a cause, of the apoptotic cascade. Likewise, compound treatment resulted in no obvious effects on the E6- and E7- mediated down regulation of p53 and Rb, or their downstream effectors, p21 or PCNA. Further investigation of apoptotic signals induced by Compound 1 revealed cleavage of Caspase-8 in HPV-positive cells as early as 2 hours post-treatment, suggesting the compound initiates apoptosis through the extrinsic, death receptor-mediated, pathway of cell death. These studies provide proof of concept that cells transformed by oncogenic Papillomaviruses can be selectively induced to undergo apoptosis by compound treatment.
Archive | 2006
Thomas W. Hudyma; Xiaofan Zheng; Feng He; Min Ding; Carl P. Bergstrom; Piyasena Hewawasam; Scott W. Martin; Robert G. Gentles
Archive | 2007
Nicholas A. Meanwell; Robert G. Gentles; Min Ding; John A. Bender; John F. Kadow; Piyasena Hewawasam; Thomas W. Hudyma; Xiaofan Zheng