We describe a series of potent and highly selective small-molecule MALT1 inhibitors, optimized from a High-Throughput Screening hit. Advanced analogues such as compound 40 show high potency (IC: 0.01 µM) in a biochemical assay measuring MALT1 enzymatic activity, as well as in cellular assays: Jurkat T cell activation (0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe designed and synthesized a new series of fatty acid synthase (FASN) inhibitors with potential utility for the treatment of cancer. Extensive SAR studies led to highly active FASN inhibitors with good cellular activity and oral bioavailability, exemplified by compound 34. Compound 34 is a potent inhibitor of human FASN (IC = 28 nM) that effectively inhibits proliferation of A2780 ovarian cells (IC = 13 nM) in lipid-reduced serum (LRS).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Antimicrob Chemother
August 2001
A 2(10-5) fractional factorial model was used to investigate the influence of 10 process variables in broth microdilution susceptibility tests with itraconazole against eight isolates of Candida species and six isolates of filamentous fungi in two growth media. An analysis of variance (ANOVA) indicated that glucose concentration and incubation time both significantly influenced control turbidity optical density (OD) values for most of the Candida spp. isolates, while incubation in >10% CO(2) versus ambient air, incubation temperature and inoculum size significantly influenced these OD values for about half of the yeast isolates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEvidence is presented that the growth medium used to prepare a Candida albicans challenge inoculum is a significant factor determining the ability of a fungus strain to gain an initial invasive hold immediately after injection into an animal host, and thus determining gross strain lethality. Three C. albicans strains, one known to be attenuated in virulence, were grown in two broth media and injected intravenously at different doses into female NMRI mice and male albino guinea pigs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Microbiol
October 1998
To establish the historical prevalence of the novel yeast species Candida dubliniensis, a survey of 2,589 yeasts originally identified as Candida albicans and maintained in a stock collection dating back to the early 1970s was undertaken. A total of 590 yeasts, including 93 (18.5%) beta-glucosidase-negative isolates among 502 isolates that showed abnormal colony colors on a differential chromogenic agar and 497 other isolates, were subjected to DNA fingerprinting with the moderately repetitive sequence Ca3.
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