Publications by authors named "D C Hunden"

The azetidinone LY307174 (1) was identified as a screening lead for the vasopressin V1a receptor (IC50 45 nM at the human V1a receptor) based on molecular similarity to ketoconazole (2), a known antagonist of the luteinizing hormone releasing hormone receptor. Structure-activity relationships for the series were explored to optimize receptor affinity and pharmacokinetic properties, resulting in compounds with Ki values <1nM and brain levels after oral dosing approximately 100-fold higher than receptor affinities.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

LY320135 is a selective antagonist for the brain CB1 receptor, having greater than 70-fold higher affinity for the CB1 than the peripheral CB2 receptor. The Ki values for LY320135 at the CB1 and CB2 receptors, transfected and stably expressed in cell lines, were 224 nM and > 10 microM, respectively. Similar Ki values were measured in binding studies performed on cerebellum and spleen membrane preparations endogenously expressing the CB1 (203 nM) and CB2 (> 10 microM) receptors, respectively.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Medicinal chemistry traditionally requires the identification of biologically active molecules by synthesizing and screening each purified substrate. Further progress in drug discovery then requires definition of the structure-activity relationship of the lead compound. More recently, combinatorial chemistry has emerged as a way to examine structure-activity relationships by screening a large mixture of compounds synthesized in a predictably random manner, without the labor-intensive costs of molecular isolation and purification.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Three positional analogues (4-, 5-, and 7-) of benzothienylglycine and (N-acetylindolinyl)-5-glycine were prepared and coupled to 7-aminodeacetoxycephalosporanic acid (7-ADCA) to give the cephalosporins 17a-c. In addition two isomeric (2,3-b and 3,2-b) thienothiopheneglycines were synthesized and coupled to 7-ADCA to yield cephalosporins 30d and 30e. In vitro testing of these new cephalosporins indicates good activity against Gram-positive bacteria.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF