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Dive into the research topics where Yeheng Zhu is active.

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Featured researches published by Yeheng Zhu.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Reductions in log P improved protein binding and clearance predictions enabling the prospective design of cannabinoid receptor (CB1) antagonists with desired pharmacokinetic properties.

Bruce A. Ellsworth; Philip M. Sher; Ximao Wu; Gang Wu; Richard B. Sulsky; Zhengxiang Gu; Natesan Murugesan; Yeheng Zhu; Guixue Yu; Doree Sitkoff; Kenneth E. Carlson; Liya Kang; Yifan Yang; Ning Lee; Rose A. Baska; William J. Keim; Mary Jane Cullen; Anthony V. Azzara; Eva Zuvich; Michael Thomas; Kenneth W. Rohrbach; James Devenny; Helen Godonis; Susan J. Harvey; Brian J. Murphy; Gerry Everlof; Paul Stetsko; Olafur S. Gudmundsson; Susan Johnghar; Asoka Ranasinghe

Several strategies have been employed to reduce the long in vivo half-life of our lead CB1 antagonist, triazolopyridazinone 3, to differentiate the pharmacokinetic profile versus the lead clinical compounds. An in vitro and in vivo clearance data set revealed a lack of correlation; however, when compounds with <5% free fraction were excluded, a more predictable correlation was observed. Compounds with log P between 3 and 4 were likely to have significant free fraction, so we designed compounds in this range to give more predictable clearance values. This strategy produced compounds with desirable in vivo half-lives, ultimately leading to the discovery of compound 46. The progression of compound 46 was halted due to the contemporaneous marketing and clinical withdrawal of other centrally acting CB1 antagonists; however, the design strategy successfully delivered a potent CB1 antagonist with the desired pharmacokinetic properties and a clean off-target profile.


Drug Metabolism and Disposition | 2007

REDUCTION OF SITE-SPECIFIC CYP3A-MEDIATED METABOLISM FOR DUAL ANGIOTENSIN AND ENDOTHELIN RECEPTOR ANTAGONISTS IN VARIOUS IN VITRO SYSTEMS AND IN CYNOMOLGUS MONKEYS

Hongjian Zhang; Donglu Zhang; Wenying Li; Ming Yao; Celia Darienzo; Yi-Xin Li; William R. Ewing; Zhengxiang Gu; Yeheng Zhu; Natesan Murugesan; Wen-Chyi Shyu; William G. Humphreys

2-{Butyryl-[2′-(4,5-dimethyl-isoxazol-3-ylsulfamoyl)-biphenyl-4-ylmethyl]-amino}-N-isopropyl-3-methyl-butyramide (BMS-1) is a potent dual acting angiotensin-1 and endothelin-A receptor antagonist. The compound was subject to rapid metabolic clearance in monkey and human liver microsomes and exhibited low systemic exposure and marked interanimal variability in cynomolgus monkeys after p.o. administration. The variability pattern was identical to that of midazolam given p.o. in the same monkeys, as measured by area under the curve and Cmax values, suggesting that CYP3A-mediated metabolism might play a role in the rapid clearance and observed interanimal variability. Subsequent in vitro metabolism studies using human liver microsomes and cDNA-expressed human cytochrome P450 (P450) enzymes revealed that BMS-1 was a CYP3A4 substrate and was not metabolized by other human P450 enzymes. Mass spectral and NMR analyses of key metabolites led to the identification of the dimethyl isoxazole group as a major metabolic soft spot for BMS-1. Replacement of the 4-methyl group on the isoxazole ring with halogens not only improved overall metabolic stability but also decreased CYP3A-mediated hydroxylation of the isoxazole 5-methyl group. As exemplified by 2-{butyryl-[2′-(4-fluoro-5-methyl-isoxazol-3-ylsulfamoyl)-biphenyl-4-ylmethyl]-amino}-N-isopropyl-3-methyl-butyramide (BMS-3), a fluorinated analog of BMS-1, the structural modification resulted in an increase in the systemic exposure relative to previous analogs and a dramatic reduction in interanimal variability in the monkeys after p.o. administration. In addition, BMS-3 could be metabolized by both CYP2C9 and CYP3A4, thus avoiding the reliance on a single P450 enzyme for metabolic clearance. Integration of results obtained from in vitro metabolism studies and in vivo pharmacokinetic evaluations enabled the modulation of site-specific CYP3A-mediated metabolism, yielding analogs with improved overall metabolic profiles.


Archive | 2004

Azabicyclic heterocycles as cannabinoid receptor modulators

William R. Ewing; Yeheng Zhu; Bruce A. Ellsworth


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2000

N-3-Substituted Imidazoquinazolinones: Potent and Selective PDE5 Inhibitors as Potential Agents for Treatment of Erectile Dysfunction

David P. Rotella; Zhong Sun; Yeheng Zhu; John Krupinski; Ronald Pongrac; Laurie Seliger; Diane E. Normandin; John E. Macor


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2000

Optimization of substituted N-3-benzylimidazoquinazolinone sulfonamides as potent and selective PDE5 inhibitors.

David P. Rotella; Zhong Sun; Yeheng Zhu; John Krupinski; Ronald Pongrac; Laurie Seliger; Diane E. Normandin; John E. Macor


Archive | 2007

N-terminally modified glp-1 receptor modulators

William R. Ewing; Claudio Mapelli; Douglas James Riexinger; Ving G. Lee; Richard B. Sulsky; Yeheng Zhu


Archive | 2006

Sustained release glp-1 receptor modulators

Feng Qian; William R. Ewing; Claudio Mapelli; Douglas James Riexinger; Ving G. Lee; Richard B. Sulsky; Yeheng Zhu; Tasir S. Haque; Rogelio L. Martinez; Vijay H. Naringrekar; Nina Ni; Lori Burton


Archive | 2007

HUMAN GLUCAGON-LIKE-PEPTIDE-1 MODULATORS AND THEIR USE IN THE TREATMENT OF DIABETES RELATED CONDITIONS

Tasir S. Haque; William R. Ewing; Claudio Mapelli; Ving G. Lee; Richard B. Sulsky; Douglas James Riexinger; Rogelio L. Martinez; Yeheng Zhu; Zheming Ruan


Archive | 2015

Macrocycles with hetrocyclic p2' groups as factor xia inhibitors

James R. Corte; Lucca Indawati De; Tianan Fang; Wu Yang; Yufeng Wang; Andrew K. Dilger; Kumar Balashanmuga Pabbisetty; William R. Ewing; Yeheng Zhu; Ruth R. Wexler; Donald J. P. Pinto; Michael J. Orwat; Leon M Smith


Archive | 2015

MACROCYCLIC FACTOR XIA INHIBITORS CONDENSED WITH HETEROCYCLES

Andrew K. Dilger; James R. Corte; Lucca Indawati De; Tianan Fang; Wu Yang; Yufeng Wang; Kumar Balashanmuga Pabbisetty; William R. Ewing; Yeheng Zhu; Ruth R. Wexler; Donald J. P. Pinto; Michael J. Orwat; Ii Leon M. Smith

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Wu Yang

Bristol-Myers Squibb

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