Publications by authors named "B Aquila"

Arginase is a promising immuno-oncology target that can restore the innate immune response. However, it's highly polar active site often requires potent inhibitors to mimic amino acids, leading to poor passive permeability and low oral exposure. Using structure-based drug design, we discovered a novel proline-based arginase inhibitor () that was potent but had low oral bioavailability in rat.

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Arginase has long been a target of interest in immuno-oncology, but discovering an orally bioavailable inhibitor is severely constrained by the requisite boronic acid pharmacophore. We began our drug discovery campaign by building off the β-position of the literature inhibitor ABH (). A divergent synthesis with an Ireland-Claisen rearrangement as the key step allowed access to numerous compounds, some of which we crystallized in the active site of arginase 2.

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The direct -functionalization of saturated aza-heterocycles has remained a synthetic challenge because of the remote and unactivated nature of -C-H bonds in these motifs. Herein, we demonstrate the -functionalization of saturated aza-heterocycles enabled by a two-step organic photoredox catalysis approach. Initially, a photoredox-catalyzed copper-mediated dehydrogenation of saturated aza-heterocycles produces ene-carbamates.

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Minimizing the number and duration of design cycles needed to optimize hit or lead compounds into high-quality chemical probes or drug candidates is an ongoing challenge in biomedical research. Small structure modifications to hit or lead compounds can have meaningful impacts on pharmacological profiles due to significant effects on molecular and physicochemical properties and intra- and intermolecular interactions. Rapid pharmacological profiling of an efficiently prepared series of positional analogues stemming from the systematic exchange of methine groups with heteroatoms or other substituents in aromatic or heteroaromatic ring-containing hit or lead compounds is one approach toward minimizing design cycles (e.

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Over the last ten years, targeted covalent inhibition has become a key discipline within medicinal chemistry research, most notably in the development of oncology therapeutics. One area where this approach is underrepresented, however, is in targeting protein-protein interactions. This is primarily because these hydrophobic interfaces lack appropriately located cysteine residues to allow for standard conjugate addition chemistry.

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