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Featured researches published by Yuanqing Tang.


Nature | 2004

Identification of an antimalarial synthetic trioxolane drug development candidate

Jonathan L. Vennerstrom; Sarah Arbe-Barnes; Reto Brun; Susan A. Charman; Francis Chi Keung Chiu; Jacques Chollet; Yuxiang Dong; Arnulf Dorn; Daniel Hunziker; Hugues Matile; Kylie Anne McIntosh; Maniyan Padmanilayam; Josefina Santo Tomas; Christian Scheurer; Bernard Scorneaux; Yuanqing Tang; Heinrich Urwyler; Sergio Wittlin; William N. Charman

The discovery of artemisinin more than 30 years ago provided a completely new antimalarial structural prototype; that is, a molecule with a pharmacophoric peroxide bond in a unique 1,2,4-trioxane heterocycle. Available evidence suggests that artemisinin and related peroxidic antimalarial drugs exert their parasiticidal activity subsequent to reductive activation by haem, released as a result of haemoglobin digestion by the malaria-causing parasite. This irreversible redox reaction produces carbon-centred free radicals, leading to alkylation of haem and proteins (enzymes), one of which—the sarcoplasmic-endoplasmic reticulum ATPase PfATP6 (ref. 7)—may be critical to parasite survival. Notably, there is no evidence of drug resistance to any member of the artemisinin family of drugs. The chemotherapy of malaria has benefited greatly from the semi-synthetic artemisinins artemether and artesunate as they rapidly reduce parasite burden, have good therapeutic indices and provide for successful treatment outcomes. However, as a drug class, the artemisinins suffer from chemical (semi-synthetic availability, purity and cost), biopharmaceutical (poor bioavailability and limiting pharmacokinetics) and treatment (non-compliance with long treatment regimens and recrudescence) issues that limit their therapeutic potential. Here we describe how a synthetic peroxide antimalarial drug development candidate was identified in a collaborative drug discovery project.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Synthetic ozonide drug candidate OZ439 offers new hope for a single-dose cure of uncomplicated malaria

Susan A. Charman; Sarah Arbe-Barnes; Ian Bathurst; Reto Brun; Michael Campbell; William N. Charman; Francis Chi Keung Chiu; Jacques Chollet; J. Carl Craft; Darren J. Creek; Yuxiang Dong; Hugues Matile; Melanie Maurer; Julia Morizzi; Tien Nguyen; Petros Papastogiannidis; Christian Scheurer; David M. Shackleford; Kamaraj Sriraghavan; Lukas Stingelin; Yuanqing Tang; Heinrich Urwyler; Xiaofang Wang; Karen L. White; Sergio Wittlin; Lin Zhou; Jonathan L. Vennerstrom

Ozonide OZ439 is a synthetic peroxide antimalarial drug candidate designed to provide a single-dose oral cure in humans. OZ439 has successfully completed Phase I clinical trials, where it was shown to be safe at doses up to 1,600 mg and is currently undergoing Phase IIa trials in malaria patients. Herein, we describe the discovery of OZ439 and the exceptional antimalarial and pharmacokinetic properties that led to its selection as a clinical drug development candidate. In vitro, OZ439 is fast-acting against all asexual erythrocytic Plasmodium falciparum stages with IC50 values comparable to those for the clinically used artemisinin derivatives. Unlike all other synthetic peroxides and semisynthetic artemisinin derivatives, OZ439 completely cures Plasmodium berghei-infected mice with a single oral dose of 20 mg/kg and exhibits prophylactic activity superior to that of the benchmark chemoprophylactic agent, mefloquine. Compared with other peroxide-containing antimalarial agents, such as the artemisinin derivatives and the first-generation ozonide OZ277, OZ439 exhibits a substantial increase in the pharmacokinetic half-life and blood concentration versus time profile in three preclinical species. The outstanding efficacy and prolonged blood concentrations of OZ439 are the result of a design strategy that stabilizes the intrinsically unstable pharmacophoric peroxide bond, thereby reducing clearance yet maintaining the necessary Fe(II)-reactivity to elicit parasite death.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

The Structure−Activity Relationship of the Antimalarial Ozonide Arterolane (OZ277)

Yuxiang Dong; Sergio Wittlin; Kamaraj Sriraghavan; Jacques Chollet; Susan A. Charman; William N. Charman; Christian Scheurer; Heinrich Urwyler; Josefina Santo Tomas; Christopher Snyder; Darren J. Creek; Julia Morizzi; Maria Koltun; Hugues Matile; Xiaofang Wang; Maniyan Padmanilayam; Yuanqing Tang; Arnulf Dorn; Reto Brun; Jonathan L. Vennerstrom

The structure and stereochemistry of the cyclohexane substituents of analogues of arterolane (OZ277) had little effect on potency against Plasmodium falciparum in vitro. Weak base functional groups were not required for high antimalarial potency, but they were essential for high antimalarial efficacy in P. berghei-infected mice. Five new ozonides with antimalarial efficacy and ADME profiles superior or equal to that of arterolane were identified.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

The comparative antimalarial properties of weak base and neutral synthetic ozonides

Yuanqing Tang; Sergio Wittlin; Susan A. Charman; Jacques Chollet; Francis Chi Keung Chiu; Julia Morizzi; Lisa Johnson; Josefina Santo Tomas; Christian Scheurer; Christopher Snyder; Lin Zhou; Yuxiang Dong; William N. Charman; Hugues Matile; Heinrich Urwyler; Arnulf Dorn; Jonathan L. Vennerstrom

Thirty-three N-acyl 1,2,4-dispiro trioxolanes (secondary ozonides) were synthesized. For these ozonides, weak base functional groups were not required for high antimalarial potency against Plasmodium falciparum in vitro, but were necessary for high antimalarial efficacy in Plasmodium berghei-infected mice. A wide range of LogP/D(pH)(7.4) values were tolerated, although more lipophilic ozonides tended to be less metabolically stable.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017

Structure-activity relationship of the antimalarial ozonide artefenomel (OZ439)

Yuxiang Dong; Xiaofang Wang; Sriraghavan Kamaraj; Vivek J. Bulbule; Francis Chi Keung Chiu; Jacques Chollet; Manickam Dhanasekaran; Christopher D. Hein; Petros Papastogiannidis; Julia Morizzi; David M. Shackleford; Helena Barker; Eileen Ryan; Christian Scheurer; Yuanqing Tang; Qingjie Zhao; Lin Zhou; Karen L. White; Heinrich Urwyler; William N. Charman; Hugues Matile; Sergio Wittlin; Susan A. Charman; Jonathan L. Vennerstrom

Building on insights gained from the discovery of the antimalarial ozonide arterolane (OZ277), we now describe the structure-activity relationship (SAR) of the antimalarial ozonide artefenomel (OZ439). Primary and secondary amino ozonides had higher metabolic stabilities than tertiary amino ozonides, consistent with their higher pKa and lower log D7.4 values. For primary amino ozonides, addition of polar functional groups decreased in vivo antimalarial efficacy. For secondary amino ozonides, additional functional groups had variable effects on metabolic stability and efficacy, but the most effective members of this series also had the highest log D7.4 values. For tertiary amino ozonides, addition of polar functional groups with H-bond donors increased metabolic stability but decreased in vivo antimalarial efficacy. Primary and tertiary amino ozonides with cycloalkyl and heterocycle substructures were superior to their acyclic counterparts. The high curative efficacy of these ozonides was most often associated with high and prolonged plasma exposure, but exposure on its own did not explain the presence or absence of either curative efficacy or in vivo toxicity.


Medicinal Research Reviews | 2004

Synthetic peroxides as antimalarials

Yuanqing Tang; Yuxiang Dong; Jonathan L. Vennerstrom


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2005

Spiro and dispiro-1,2,4-trioxolanes as antimalarial peroxides: charting a workable structure-activity relationship using simple prototypes.

Yuxiang Dong; Jacques Chollet; Hugues Matile; Susan A. Charman; Francis Chi Keung Chiu; William N. Charman; Bernard Scorneaux; Heinrich Urwyler; Josefina Santo Tomas; Christian Scheurer; Christopher Snyder; Arnulf Dorn; Xiaofang Wang; Jean M. Karle; Yuanqing Tang; Sergio Wittlin; Reto Brun; Jonathan L. Vennerstrom


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2005

Dispiro-1,2,4-trioxane Analogues of a Prototype Dispiro-1,2,4-trioxolane: Mechanistic Comparators for Artemisinin in the Context of Reaction Pathways with Iron(II)

Yuanqing Tang; Yuxiang Dong; Xiaofang Wang; Kamaraj Sriraghavan; James K. Wood; Jonathan L. Vennerstrom


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2004

Synthesis of Tetrasubstituted Ozonides by the Griesbaum Coozonolysis Reaction: Diastereoselectivity and Functional Group Transformations by Post-Ozonolysis Reactions

Yuanqing Tang; Yuxiang Dong; Jean M. Karle; Charles A. DiTusa; Jonathan L. Vennerstrom


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2006

Effect of functional group polarity on the antimalarial activity of spiro and dispiro-1,2,4-trioxolanes

Yuxiang Dong; Yuanqing Tang; Jacques Chollet; Hugues Matile; Sergio Wittlin; Susan A. Charman; William N. Charman; Josefina Santo Tomas; Christian Scheurer; Christopher Snyder; Bernard Scorneaux; Saroj Bajpai; Scott A Alexander; Xiaofang Wang; Maniyan Padmanilayam; Srinivasa Rao Cheruku; Reto Brun; Jonathan L. Vennerstrom

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Jonathan L. Vennerstrom

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Yuxiang Dong

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Jacques Chollet

Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute

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Sergio Wittlin

Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute

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Xiaofang Wang

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Christian Scheurer

Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute

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