Yazhong Huang
Bristol-Myers Squibb
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Featured researches published by Yazhong Huang.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008
Robert G. Gentles; Katherine Grant-Young; Shuanghua Hu; Yazhong Huang; Michael A. Poss; Charles J. Andres; Tracey Fiedler; Ronald J. Knox; Nicholas J. Lodge; C. David Weaver; David G. Harden
An initial SAR study on a series of apamin-displacing 2-aminothiazole K(Ca)2 channel blockers is described. Potent inhibitors such as N-(4-methylpyridin-2-yl)-4-(pyridin-2-yl)thiazol-2-amine (13) are disclosed, and for select members of the series, the relationship between the observed activity in a thallium flux, a binding and a whole-cell electrophysiology assay is presented.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2002
Sing-Yuen Sit; Yazhong Huang; Ildiko Antal-Zimanyi; Sally A Ward; Graham S. Poindexter
The dihydropyridine is currently one of the lead compounds in the neuropeptide-Y(1) (NPY-Y(1)) receptor antagonist program. Compound is a selective, high affinity ligand at the NPY-Y(1) receptors (IC(50)=4.2 nM) in SK-N-MC cells. To further expand the SAR study surrounding this dihydropyridine core structure we succeeded in synthesizing an analogous series of dihydropyrazine derivatives. This structural modification yielded compounds substantially different from the parent molecules in terms of molecular polarization and electron distribution while the overall molecular structure was generally preserved. This altered property should therefore provide us with additional SAR information on the optimal binding requirement with NPY receptors.
Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2015
Martin A. Lewis; Lisa Hunihan; John Watson; Robert G. Gentles; Shuanghua Hu; Yazhong Huang; Joanne J. Bronson; John E. Macor; Brett R. Beno; Meredith Ferrante; Adam Hendricson; Ronald J. Knox; Thaddeus F. Molski; Yan Kong; Mary Ellen Cvijic; Kristin L. Rockwell; Michael R. Weed; Angela Cacace; Ryan S. Westphal; Andrew Alt; Jeffrey M. Brown
The present studies represent the first published report of a dopamine D1 positive allosteric modulator (PAM). D1 receptors have been proposed as a therapeutic target for the treatment of cognitive deficits associated with schizophrenia. However, the clinical utility of orthosteric agonist compounds is limited by cardiovascular side effects, poor pharmacokinetics, lack of D1 selectivity, and an inverted dose response. A number of these challenges may be overcome by utilization of a selective D1 PAM. The current studies describe two chemically distinct D1 PAMs: Compound A [1-((rel-1S,3R,6R)-6-(benzo[d][1,3]dioxol-5-yl)bicyclo[4.1.0]heptan-3-yl)-4-(2-bromo-5-chlorobenzyl)piperazine] and Compound B [rel-(9R,10R,12S)-N-(2,6-dichloro-3-methylphenyl)-12-methyl-9,10-dihydro-9,10-ethanoanthracene-12-carboxamide]. Compound A shows pure PAM activity, with an EC50 of 230 nM and agonist activity at the D2 receptor in D2-expressing human embryonic kidney cells. Compound B shows superior potency (EC50 of 43 nM) and selectivity for D1 versus D2 dopamine receptors. Unlike Compound A, Compound B is selective for human and nonhuman primate D1 receptors, but lacks activity at the rodent (rat and mouse) D1 receptors. Using molecular biology techniques, a single amino acid was identified at position 130, which mediates the species selectivity of Compound B. These data represent the first described D1-selective PAMs and define critical amino acids that regulate species selectivity.
Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2016
W. Kostich; B. D. Hamman; Y.-W. Li; S. Naidu; K. Dandapani; J. Feng; A. Easton; C. Bourin; K. Baker; J. Allen; K. Savelieva; J. V. Louis; M. Dokania; S. Elavazhagan; P. Vattikundala; V. Sharma; M. L. Das; G. Shankar; A. Kumar; Vinay K. Holenarsipur; M. Gulianello; Thaddeus F. Molski; Jeffrey M. Brown; Martin A. Lewis; Yazhong Huang; Y. Lu; Rick L. Pieschl; K. OMalley; J. Lippy; A. Nouraldeen
To identify novel targets for neuropathic pain, 3097 mouse knockout lines were tested in acute and persistent pain behavior assays. One of the lines from this screen, which contained a null allele of the adapter protein-2 associated kinase 1 (AAK1) gene, had a normal response in acute pain assays (hot plate, phase I formalin), but a markedly reduced response to persistent pain in phase II formalin. AAK1 knockout mice also failed to develop tactile allodynia following the Chung procedure of spinal nerve ligation (SNL). Based on these findings, potent, small-molecule inhibitors of AAK1 were identified. Studies in mice showed that one such inhibitor, LP-935509, caused a reduced pain response in phase II formalin and reversed fully established pain behavior following the SNL procedure. Further studies showed that the inhibitor also reduced evoked pain responses in the rat chronic constriction injury (CCI) model and the rat streptozotocin model of diabetic peripheral neuropathy. Using a nonbrain-penetrant AAK1 inhibitor and local administration of an AAK1 inhibitor, the relevant pool of AAK1 for antineuropathic action was found to be in the spinal cord. Consistent with these results, AAK1 inhibitors dose-dependently reduced the increased spontaneous neural activity in the spinal cord caused by CCI and blocked the development of windup induced by repeated electrical stimulation of the paw. The mechanism of AAK1 antinociception was further investigated with inhibitors of α2 adrenergic and opioid receptors. These studies showed that α2 adrenergic receptor inhibitors, but not opioid receptor inhibitors, not only prevented AAK1 inhibitor antineuropathic action in behavioral assays, but also blocked the AAK1 inhibitor–induced reduction in spinal neural activity in the rat CCI model. Hence, AAK1 inhibitors are a novel therapeutic approach to neuropathic pain with activity in animal models that is mechanistically linked (behaviorally and electrophysiologically) to α2 adrenergic signaling, a pathway known to be antinociceptive in humans.
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 | 2014
Shuanghua Hu; Yazhong Huang; Yong-Jin Wu; Huan He; Katherine Grant-Young; Robert L. Bertekap; Valerie J. Whiterock; Patrick J. Brassil; Kimberley A. Lentz; Prasanna Sivaprakasam; David R. Langley; Ryan Westphal; Paul Michael Scola
Comprehensive structure activity relationship (SAR) studies were conducted on a focused screening hit, 2-(methylthio)-3-(phenylsulfonyl)-4H-pyrido[1,2-a]pyrimidin-4-imine (1, IC50: 4.0 nM), as 5-HT6 selective antagonists. Activity was improved some 2-4 fold when small, electron-donating groups were added to the central core as observed in 19, 20 and 26. Molecular docking of key compounds in a homology model of the human 5-HT6 receptor was used to rationalize our structure-activity relationship (SAR) findings. In pharmacokinetic experiments, compound 1 displayed good brain uptake in rats following intra-peritoneal administration, but limited oral bioavailability.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008
Robert G. Gentles; Shuanghua Hu; Yazhong Huang; Katherine Grant-Young; Michael A. Poss; Charles J. Andres; Tracey Fiedler; Ronald J. Knox; Nicholas J. Lodge; C. David Weaver; David G. Harden
An exploratory SAR study on a series of potent, non-apamin-displacing 4-(aminomethylaryl)pyrazolopyrimidine K(Ca) channel blockers is described and their selectivity against K(Ca) channel subtypes is reported. The most potent analog, 5-chloro-N-(thiophen-2-ylmethyl)pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidin-7-amine (24) displayed sub-micromolar activity in both a thallium flux and whole-cell electrophysiology assay and did not displace apamin in a competitive binding study.
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012
Shuanghua Hu; Yazhong Huang; Milind Deshpande; Guanglin Luo; Marc Bruce; Ling Chen; Gail K. Mattson; Lawrence G. Iben; Jie Zhang; John W. Russell; Wendy Clarke; John B. Hogan; Astrid Ortiz; Oliver Flint; Andrew Henwood; Qi Gao; Ildiko Antal-Zimanyi; Graham S. Poindexter
A novel class of bicyclo[3.1.0]hexanylpiperazine neuropeptide Y (NPY) Y1 antagonists has been designed and synthesized. Scatchard binding analysis showed these compounds to be noncompetitive with [(125)I]PYY binding to the Y1 receptor. The most potent member, 1-((1α,3α,5α,6β)-6-(3-ethoxyphenyl)-3-methylbicyclo[3.1.0]hexan-6-yl)-4-phenylpiperazine (2) had an IC50 = 62 nM and displayed excellent oral bioavailability in rat (% F po = 80), as well as good brain penetration (B/P ratio = 0.61). In a spontaneous nocturnal feeding study with male Sprague-Dawley rats, 2 significantly reduced food intake during a 12 h period.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013
Guanglin Luo; Ling Chen; Shuanghua Hu; Yazhong Huang; Gail K. Mattson; Lawrence G. Iben; John W. Russell; Wendy Clarke; John B. Hogan; Ildiko Antal-Zimanyi; Graham S. Poindexter
A convergent synthesis route for the heterocyclic modification of a novel bicyclo[3.1.0]hexane NPY1 antagonist 2 was developed and the structure activity relationship of these modifications on NPY1 binding is reported. Two heterocyclic analogs 9 and 10 showed comparable Y1 binding potency to 2, but with improved aqueous solubility. Compound 9 demonstrated reduced spontaneous nocturnal food intake in a rat model when dosed ip. Compound 9 was also shown to be orally bioavailable and brain penetrable.
Archive | 1998
Graham S. Poindexter; R. Thomas Swann; Marc Bruce; Mendi A. Morton; Yazhong Huang; Sing-Yuen Sit; James Guy Breitenbucher