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Dive into the research topics where Antonio Mete is active.

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Featured researches published by Antonio Mete.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2008

Anchored plasticity opens doors for selective inhibitor design in nitric oxide synthase

Elsa D. Garcin; Andrew S. Arvai; Robin J. Rosenfeld; Matt D. Kroeger; Brian R. Crane; Gunilla Andersson; Glen Andrews; Peter Hamley; Philip Mallinder; David Nicholls; Stephen St-Gallay; Alan Tinker; Nigel P. Gensmantel; Antonio Mete; David Cheshire; Stephen Connolly; Dennis J. Stuehr; Anders Åberg; Alan V. Wallace; John A. Tainer; Elizabeth D. Getzoff

Nitric oxide synthase (NOS) enzymes synthesize nitric oxide, a signal for vasodilatation and neurotransmission at low levels, and a defensive cytotoxin at higher levels. The high active-site conservation among all three NOS isozymes hinders the design of selective NOS inhibitors to treat inflammation, arthritis, stroke, septic shock, and cancer. Our structural and mutagenesis results identified an isozyme-specific induced-fit binding mode linking a cascade of conformational changes to a novel specificity pocket. Plasticity of an isozyme-specific triad of distant second- and third-shell residues modulates conformational changes of invariant first-shell residues to determine inhibitor selectivity. To design potent and selective NOS inhibitors, we developed the anchored plasticity approach: anchor an inhibitor core in a conserved binding pocket, then extend rigid bulky substituents towards remote specificity pockets, accessible upon conformational changes of flexible residues. This approach exemplifies general principles for the design of selective enzyme inhibitors that overcome strong active-site conservation.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2017

Discovery of AZD-2098 and AZD-1678, Two Potent and Bioavailable CCR4 Receptor Antagonists

Nicholas Kindon; Glen Andrews; Andrew Douglas Baxter; David Cheshire; Paul Hemsley; Timothy Johnson; Yu-Zhen Liu; Dermot F. McGinnity; Mark McHale; Antonio Mete; James Reuberson; Bryan Roberts; John Steele; Barry Teobald; John Unitt; Deborah Vaughan; Iain Walters; Michael J. Stocks

N-(5-Bromo-3-methoxypyrazin-2-yl)-5-chlorothiophene-2-sulfonamide 1 was identified as a hit in a CCR4 receptor antagonist high-throughput screen (HTS) of a subset of the AstraZeneca compound bank. As a hit with a lead-like profile, it was an excellent starting point for a CCR4 receptor antagonist program and enabled the rapid progression through the Lead Identification and Lead Optimization phases resulting in the discovery of two bioavailable CCR4 receptor antagonist candidate drugs.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2002

Design and Synthesis of a Novel and Potent Series of Inhibitors of Cytosolic Phospholipase A2 Based on a 1,3-Disubstituted Propan-2-one Skeleton

Stephen Connolly; Colin Bennion; Sarah Botterell; Pamela J. Croshaw; Catherine Hallam; Kim Hardy; Paul Hartopp; Clive G. Jackson; Sarah J. King; Louise Lawrence; Antonio Mete; David Murray; David Hulme Robinson; Gillian M. Smith; Linda Stein; Iain Walters; Edward Wells; W. John Withnall


Archive | 2001

NOVEL USE OF PHENYLHETEROALKYLAMINE DERIVATIVES

David Cheshire; Stephen Connolly; David AstraZeneca R D Charnwood Cox; Peter AstraZeneca R D Charnwood Hamley; Antonio Mete; Austen Pimm


Archive | 2004

Sulphonamide compounds that modulate chemokine receptor activity (ccr4)

Richard AstraZeneca R D Charnwood Harrison; Antonio Mete; Barry Teobald; Iain AstraZeneca R D Charnwood Walters


Archive | 2007

Quinuclidinol derivatives as muscarinic receptor antagonists

Rhonan Ford; Antonio Mete; Ian Millichip; Barry Teobald


Archive | 2004

Sulptionamide compounds that modulate chemokine receptor activity (CCR4)

Antonio Mete; Barry Teobald


Archive | 2007

Quiniclidine derivatives of (hetero) arylcycloheptanecarboxylic acid as muscarinic receptor antagonists

Rhonan Ford; Andrew Mather; Antonio Mete


Archive | 2007

Nitrogen containing heterocyclic compounds useful as m3-receptor modulators

Richard James Bull; Den Heuvel Marco Van; Antonio Mete; Alan John Nadin; Nicholas Charles Ray


Archive | 2002

Heteroarylheteroalkylamine derivatives and their use as inhibitors of nitric oxide synthase

David Cheshire; Stephen Connolly; Antonio Mete

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Rhonan Ford

Loughborough University

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