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Kimberly J. Bush

Merck & Co., Inc., Rahway, NJ, USA (United States)

Publishes on Hepatitis C virus research, HIV/AIDS drug development and treatment, Monoclonal and Polyclonal Antibodies Research. 12 papers and 512 citations.

12Publications
512Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Discovery of MK-5172, a Macrocyclic Hepatitis C Virus NS3/4a Protease Inhibitor
Steven J. Harper, John A. McCauley, Michael T. Rudd et al.|ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters|2012
Cited by 201Open Access

A new class of HCV NS3/4a protease inhibitors containing a P2 to P4 macrocyclic constraint was designed using a molecular modeling-derived strategy. Building on the profile of previous clinical compounds and exploring the P2 and linker regions of the series allowed for optimization of broad genotype and mutant enzyme potency, cellular activity, and rat liver exposure following oral dosing. These studies led to the identification of clinical candidate 15 (MK-5172), which is active against genotype 1-3 NS3/4a and clinically relevant mutant enzymes and has good plasma exposure and excellent liver exposure in multiple species.

Discovery of Vaniprevir (MK-7009), a Macrocyclic Hepatitis C Virus NS3/4a Protease Inhibitor
John A. McCauley, Charles McIntyre, Michael T. Rudd et al.|Journal of Medicinal Chemistry|2010
Cited by 177

A new class of HCV NS3/4a protease inhibitors which contain a P2 to P4 macrocyclic constraint was designed using a molecular-modeling derived strategy. Exploration of the P2 heterocyclic region, the P2 to P4 linker, and the P1 side chain of this class of compounds via a modular synthetic strategy allowed for the optimization of enzyme potency, cellular activity, and rat liver exposure following oral dosing. These studies led to the identification of clinical candidate 35b (vaniprevir, MK-7009), which is active against both the genotype 1 and genotype 2 NS3/4a protease enzymes and has good plasma exposure and excellent liver exposure in multiple species.

Discovery of MK-1220: A Macrocyclic Inhibitor of Hepatitis C Virus NS3/4A Protease with Improved Preclinical Plasma Exposure
Michael T. Rudd, John A. McCauley, John W. Butcher et al.|ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters|2011
Cited by 32

The discovery of MK-1220 is reported along with the development of a series of HCV NS3/4A protease inhibitors containing a P2 to P4 macrocyclic constraint with improved preclinical pharmacokinetics. Optimization of the P2 heterocycle substitution pattern as well as the P3 amino acid led to compounds with greatly improved plasma exposure following oral dosing in both rats and dogs while maintaining excellent enzyme potency and cellular activity. These studies led to the identification of MK-1220.

Bismacrocyclic Inhibitors of Hepatitis C NS3/4a Protease
John A. McCauley, Michael T. Rudd, Kevin T. Nguyen et al.|Angewandte Chemie International Edition|2008
Cited by 29

Double time: The bismacrocycle 2 was prepared from 1 by a selective double ring-closing metathesis (RCM) reaction to form the 18- and 15-membered rings simultaneously. Derivative 3 shows excellent potency against NS3/4a protease. Detailed facts of importance to specialist readers are published as ”Supporting Information”. Such documents are peer-reviewed, but not copy-edited or typeset. They are made available as submitted by the authors. Please note: The publisher is not responsible for the content or functionality of any supporting information supplied by the authors. Any queries (other than missing content) should be directed to the corresponding author for the article.

Novel Quinoline-Based P2–P4 Macrocyclic Derivatives As Pan-Genotypic HCV NS3/4a Protease Inhibitors
Unmesh Shah, Charles Jayne, Samuel Chackalamannil et al.|ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters|2014
Cited by 25Open Access

We have previously reported the discovery of our P2-P4 macrocyclic HCV NS3/4a protease inhibitor MK-5172, which in combination with the NS5a inhibitor MK-8742 recently received a breakthrough therapy designation from the US FDA for treatment of chronic HCV infection. Our goal for the next generation NS3/4a inhibitor was to achieve pan-genotypic activity while retaining the pharmacokinetic profile of MK-5172. One of the areas for follow-up investigation involved replacement of the quinoxaline moiety in MK-5172 with a quinoline and studying the effect of substitution at 4-position of the quinoline. The rationale for this effort was based on molecular modeling, which indicated that such modifications would improve interactions with the S2 subsite, in particular with D79. We wish to report herein the discovery of highly potent inhibitors with pan-genotypic activity and an improved profile over MK-5172, especially against gt-3a and A156 mutants.