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Dive into the research topics where Alleyn T. Plowright is active.

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Featured researches published by Alleyn T. Plowright.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Oxadiazoles in medicinal chemistry.

Jonas Boström; Anders Hogner; Antonio Llinas; Eric Wellner; Alleyn T. Plowright

Oxadiazoles are five-membered heteroaromatic rings containing two carbons, two nitrogens, and one oxygen atom, and they exist in different regioisomeric forms. Oxadiazoles are frequently occurring motifs in druglike molecules, and they are often used with the intention of being bioisosteric replacements for ester and amide functionalities. The current study presents a systematic comparison of 1,2,4- and 1,3,4-oxadiazole matched pairs in the AstraZeneca compound collection. In virtually all cases, the 1,3,4-oxadiazole isomer shows an order of magnitude lower lipophilicity (log D), as compared to its isomeric partner. Significant differences are also observed with respect to metabolic stability, hERG inhibition, and aqueous solubility, favoring the 1,3,4-oxadiazole isomers. The difference in profile between the 1,2,4 and 1,3,4 regioisomers can be rationalized by their intrinsically different charge distributions (e.g., dipole moments). To facilitate the use of these heteroaromatic rings, novel synthetic routes for ready access of a broad spectrum of 1,3,4-oxadiazoles, under mild conditions, are described.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

A combined spectroscopic and crystallographic approach to probing drug-human serum albumin interactions

David Buttar; Nicola Colclough; Stefan Gerhardt; Philip A. MacFaul; Scott D. Phillips; Alleyn T. Plowright; Paul R.O. Whittamore; Kin Yip Tam; Klaus Maskos; Stefan Steinbacher; Holger Steuber

The displacement of probes that bind selectively to subdomains IIA or IIIA on human serum albumin (HSA) by competing compounds has been followed using fluorescence spectroscopy, and has therefore been used to assign a primary binding site for these compounds in the presence and absence of fatty acids. The crystal structures have also been solved for three compounds: a matched pair of carboxylic acids whose binding strength to HSA unexpectedly decreased as the lipophilicity increased; and a highly bound sulphonamide that appeared not to displace the probes in the displacement assay. The crystallography results support the findings from the fluorescence displacement assay. The results indicate that drug binding to subdomain IB might also be important location for certain compounds.


Chemical Communications | 2006

Skeletal diversity construction via a branching synthetic strategy

Emma E. Wyatt; Suzanne Fergus; Warren R. J. D. Galloway; Andreas Bender; David J. Fox; Alleyn T. Plowright; Alan S. Jessiman; Martin Welch; David R. Spring

A branching synthetic strategy was used to efficiently generate structurally diverse scaffolds, which span a broad area of chemical descriptor space, and their biological activity against MRSA was demonstrated.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

Identification, optimisation and in vivo evaluation of oxadiazole DGAT-1 inhibitors for the treatment of obesity and diabetes

William Mccoull; Matthew S. Addie; Alan Martin Birch; Susan Birtles; Linda K. Buckett; Roger John Butlin; Suzanne S. Bowker; Scott Boyd; Stephen Chapman; Robert D. M. Davies; Craig S. Donald; Clive Green; Chloe Jenner; Paul D. Kemmitt; Andrew G. Leach; Graeme C. Moody; Pablo Morentin Gutierrez; Nicholas John Newcombe; Thorsten Nowak; Martin J. Packer; Alleyn T. Plowright; John Revill; Paul Schofield; Chris Sheldon; Steve Stokes; Andrew V. Turnbull; Steven Wang; David Paul Whalley; J. Matthew Wood

A novel series of DGAT-1 inhibitors was discovered from an oxadiazole amide high throughput screening (HTS) hit. Optimisation of potency and ligand lipophilicity efficiency (LLE) resulted in a carboxylic acid containing clinical candidate 53 (AZD3988), which demonstrated excellent DGAT-1 potency (0.6 nM), good pharmacokinetics and pre-clinical in vivo efficacy that could be rationalised through a PK/PD relationship.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015

Discovery of AZD6642, an Inhibitor of 5-Lipoxygenase Activating Protein (FLAP) for the Treatment of Inflammatory Diseases

Malin Lemurell; Johan Ulander; Susanne Winiwarter; Anders Dahlén; Öjvind Davidsson; Hans Emtenäs; Johan Broddefalk; Marianne Swanson; Daniel Hovdal; Alleyn T. Plowright; Anna Pettersen; Marie Rydén-Landergren; Jonas G. Barlind; Antonio Llinas; Margareta Herslöf; Tomas Drmota; Kalle Sigfridsson; Sara Moses; Carl Whatling

A drug discovery program in search of novel 5-lipoxygenase activating protein (FLAP) inhibitors focused on driving a reduction in lipophilicity with maintained or increased ligand lipophilic efficiency (LLE) compared to previously reported compounds led to the discovery of AZD6642 (15b). Introduction of a hydrophilic tetrahydrofuran (THF) ring at the stereogenic central carbon atom led to a significant shift in physicochemical property space. The structure-activity relationship exploration and optimization of DMPK properties leading to this compound are described in addition to pharmacokinetic analysis and an investigation of the pharmacokinetic (PK)-pharmacodynamic (PD) relationship based on ex vivo leukotriene B4 (LTB4) levels in dog. AZD6642 shows high specific potency and low lipophilicity, resulting in a selective and metabolically stable profile. On the basis of initial PK/PD relation measured, a low dose to human was predicted.


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

Heart Regeneration: Opportunities and Challenges for Drug Discovery with Novel Chemical and Therapeutic Methods or Agents

Alleyn T. Plowright; Ola Engkvist; Adrian Gill; Laurent Knerr; Qing-Dong Wang

Following a heart attack, more than a billion cardiac muscle cells (cardiomyocytes) can be killed, leading to heart failure and sudden death. Much research in this area is now focused on the regeneration of heart tissue through differentiation of stem cells, proliferation of existing cardiomyocytes and cardiac progenitor cells, and reprogramming of fibroblasts into cardiomyocytes. Different chemical modalities (i.e. methods or agents), ranging from small molecules and RNA approaches (including both microRNA and anti-microRNA) to modified peptides and proteins, are showing potential to meet this medical need. In this Review, we outline the recent advances in these areas and describe both the modality and progress, including novel screening strategies to identify hits, and the upcoming challenges and opportunities to develop these hits into pharmaceuticals, at which chemistry plays a key role.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

Functional screening in human cardiac organoids reveals a metabolic mechanism for cardiomyocyte cell cycle arrest

Richard J. Mills; Drew M. Titmarsh; Xaver Koenig; Benjamin L. Parker; James G. Ryall; Gregory A. Quaife-Ryan; Holly K. Voges; Mark P. Hodson; Charles Ferguson; Lauren Drowley; Alleyn T. Plowright; Elise J. Needham; Qing Dong Wang; Paul Gregorevic; Mei Xin; Walter G. Thomas; Robert G. Parton; Lars K. Nielsen; Bradley S. Launikonis; David E. James; David A. Elliott; Enzo R. Porrello; James E. Hudson

Significance Engineered cardiac muscle can be used to promote the structural and functional maturation of human pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (hPSC-CMs). However, previous studies have not yet produced cardiac tissues with metabolic and proliferative maturation. Here, we develop a 96-well screening platform and screen for cardiac maturation conditions in engineered cardiac muscle. We found that simulating the postnatal switch in metabolic substrates from carbohydrates to fatty acids promoted a switch in metabolism, DNA damage response, and cell cycle arrest in hPSC-CM. Our study shows that this mechanism can be harnessed to enhance the maturation of human hPSC-CM and cardiac tissues, which has major implications for stem cell sciences, drug discovery, and regenerative medicine. The mammalian heart undergoes maturation during postnatal life to meet the increased functional requirements of an adult. However, the key drivers of this process remain poorly defined. We are currently unable to recapitulate postnatal maturation in human pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (hPSC-CMs), limiting their potential as a model system to discover regenerative therapeutics. Here, we provide a summary of our studies, where we developed a 96-well device for functional screening in human pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiac organoids (hCOs). Through interrogation of >10,000 organoids, we systematically optimize parameters, including extracellular matrix (ECM), metabolic substrate, and growth factor conditions, that enhance cardiac tissue viability, function, and maturation. Under optimized maturation conditions, functional and molecular characterization revealed that a switch to fatty acid metabolism was a central driver of cardiac maturation. Under these conditions, hPSC-CMs were refractory to mitogenic stimuli, and we found that key proliferation pathways including β-catenin and Yes-associated protein 1 (YAP1) were repressed. This proliferative barrier imposed by fatty acid metabolism in hCOs could be rescued by simultaneous activation of both β-catenin and YAP1 using genetic approaches or a small molecule activating both pathways. These studies highlight that human organoids coupled with higher-throughput screening platforms have the potential to rapidly expand our knowledge of human biology and potentially unlock therapeutic strategies.


Drug Discovery Today | 2012

What is the most important approach in current drug discovery: doing the right things or doing things right?

Thomas Elebring; Adrian Gill; Alleyn T. Plowright

Doing the right things or doing things right: what is the most important focus for current drug discovery to secure delivery of new drugs of sustainable value to patients, healthcare professionals and healthcare providers? Some of the challenges faced today in drug discovery are addressed here: the relationship between R&D speed, cost and quality; how selection of performance metrics can affect the quality of the R&D output; the importance of leadership and management; how process orientation can affect, for example, creativity and innovation; the importance of selecting the right pharmacologic target and the right chemical lead; and why the use of drug-target kinetic and thermodynamic data to drive lead selection and lead optimization could increase success rates.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Discovery of Agonists of Cannabinoid Receptor 1 with Restricted Central Nervous System Penetration Aimed for Treatment of Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease

Alleyn T. Plowright; Karolina Nilsson; Madeleine Antonsson; Kosrat Amin; Johan Broddefalk; Jörgen Jensen; Anders Lehmann; Shujuan Jin; Stephane St-Onge; Miroslaw Tomaszewski; Maxime Tremblay; Christopher Walpole; Zhongyong Wei; Hua Yang; Johan Ulander

Agonists of the cannabinoid receptor 1 (CB1) have been suggested as possible treatments for a range of medical disorders including gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD). While centrally acting cannabinoid agonists are known to produce psychotropic effects, it has been suggested that the CB1 receptors in the periphery could play a significant role in reducing reflux. A moderately potent and highly lipophilic series of 2-aminobenzamides was identified through focused screening of GPCR libraries. Development of this series focused on improving potency and efficacy at the CB1 receptor, reducing lipophilicity and limiting the central nervous system (CNS) exposure while maintaining good oral absorption. Improvement of the series led to compounds having excellent potency at the CB1 receptor and high levels of agonism, good physical and pharmacokinetic properties, and low penetration into the CNS. A range of compounds demonstrated a dose-dependent inhibition of transient lower esophageal sphincter relaxations in a dog model.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2011

Design of Small Molecule Inhibitors of Acetyl-Coa Carboxylase 1 and 2 Showing Reduction of Hepatic Malonyl-Coa Levels in Vivo in Obese Zucker Rats.

Christoffer Bengtsson; Stefan Blaho; David Blomberg Saitton; Kay Brickmann; Johan Broddefalk; Öjvind Davidsson; Tomas Drmota; Rutger H. A. Folmer; Kenth Hallberg; Stefan Hallén; Ragnar Hovland; Emre M. Isin; Petra Johannesson; Bengt Kull; Lars-Olof Larsson; Lars Löfgren; Kristina Nilsson; Tobias Noeske; Nick Oakes; Alleyn T. Plowright; Volker Schnecke; Pernilla Ståhlberg; Pernilla Sörme; Hong Wan; Eric Wellner; Linda Öster

Inhibition of acetyl-CoA carboxylases has the potential for modulating long chain fatty acid biosynthesis and mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation. Hybridization of weak inhibitors of ACC2 provided a novel, moderately potent but lipophilic series. Optimization led to compounds 33 and 37, which exhibit potent inhibition of human ACC2, 10-fold selectivity over inhibition of human ACC1, good physical and in vitro ADME properties and good bioavailability. X-ray crystallography has shown this series binding in the CT-domain of ACC2 and revealed two key hydrogen bonding interactions. Both 33 and 37 lower levels of hepatic malonyl-CoA in vivo in obese Zucker rats.

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