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Dive into the research topics where Daniel Christopher Brookings is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniel Christopher Brookings.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Characterization of the Interaction of Sclerostin with the Low Density Lipoprotein Receptor-related Protein (LRP) Family of Wnt Co-receptors

Gill Holdsworth; Patrick M. Slocombe; Carl Doyle; Bernadette Sweeney; Vaclav Veverka; Kelly Le Riche; Richard Jeremy Franklin; Joanne E. Compson; Daniel Christopher Brookings; James M. A. Turner; Jeffery Kennedy; Rachael Garlish; Jiye Shi; Laura E Newnham; David McMillan; Mariusz Muzylak; Mark D. Carr; Alistair J. Henry; Thomas Allen Ceska; Martyn K. Robinson

Background: Sclerostin, an inhibitor of Wnt signaling, binds to the β-propeller domain-containing Wnt co-receptors LRP6 and LRP4. Results: An NXI motif in sclerostin mediates interactions with LRP6 (but not LRP4) and blocks Wnt1 signaling. Conclusion: The sclerostin/LRP6 interaction shares features with the well characterized nidogen/laminin interaction. Significance: NXI motifs are important in mediating interactions with β-propeller containing proteins. LRP5 and LRP6 are proteins predicted to contain four six-bladed β-propeller domains and both bind the bone-specific Wnt signaling antagonist sclerostin. Here, we report the crystal structure of the amino-terminal region of LRP6 and using NMR show that the ability of sclerostin to bind to this molecule is mediated by the central core of sclerostin and does not involve the amino- and carboxyl-terminal flexible arm regions. We show that this structured core region interacts with LRP5 and LRP6 via an NXI motif (found in the sequence PNAIG) within a flexible loop region (loop 2) within the central core region. This sequence is related closely to a previously identified motif in laminin that mediates its interaction with the β-propeller domain of nidogen. However, the NXI motif is not involved in the interaction of sclerostin with LRP4 (another β-propeller containing protein in the LRP family). A peptide derived from the loop 2 region of sclerostin blocked the interaction of sclerostin with LRP5/6 and also inhibited Wnt1 but not Wnt3A or Wnt9B signaling. This suggests that these Wnts interact with LRP6 in different ways.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008

4-(1,3-Thiazol-2-yl)morpholine derivatives as inhibitors of phosphoinositide 3-kinase

Rikki Peter Alexander; Ahrani Balasundaram; Mark James Batchelor; Daniel Christopher Brookings; Karen Viviane Lucile Crépy; Tom Crabbe; Marie-France Deltent; Frank Driessens; Andrew Gill; Susan M. Harris; Gillian Hutchinson; Claire Louise Kulisa; Mark Merriman; Prakash Mistry; Ted A.H. Parton; James M. A. Turner; Ian Whitcombe; Sara Wright

4-(1,3-Thiazol-2-yl)morpholine derivatives have been identified as potent and selective inhibitors of phosphoinositide 3-kinase. The SAR data of selected examples are presented and the in vivo profiling of compound 18 is shown to demonstrate the utility of this class of compounds in xenograft models of tumor growth.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

Fused thiophene derivatives as MEK inhibitors

Victoria Elizabeth Laing; Daniel Christopher Brookings; Rachel Jane Carbery; Jose Miguel Gascon Simorte; Martin Clive Hutchings; Barry John Langham; Martin Alexander Lowe

A number of novel fused thiophene derivatives have been prepared and identified as potent inhibitors of MEK. The SAR data of selected examples and the in vivo profiling of compound 13 h demonstrates the functional activity of this class of compounds in HT-29 PK/PD models.


Journal of Structural Biology | 2012

Engineering human MEK-1 for structural studies: A case study of combinatorial domain hunting

Christoph Meier; Daniel Christopher Brookings; Thomas Allen Ceska; Carl Doyle; Haiping Gong; David McMillan; Gp Saville; Adeel Mushtaq; David Knight; Stefanie Reich; Laurence H. Pearl; Keith A Powell; Renos Savva; Rodger Allen

Structural biology studies typically require large quantities of pure, soluble protein. Currently the most widely-used method for obtaining such protein involves the use of bioinformatics and experimental methods to design constructs of the target, which are cloned and expressed. Recently an alternative approach has emerged, which involves random fragmentation of the gene of interest and screening for well-expressing fragments. Here we describe the application of one such fragmentation method, combinatorial domain hunting (CDH), to a target which historically was difficult to express, human MEK-1. We show how CDH was used to identify a fragment which covers the kinase domain of MEK-1 and which expresses and crystallizes significantly better than designed expression constructs, and we report the crystal structure of this fragment which explains some of its superior properties. Gene fragmentation methods, such as CDH, thus hold great promise for tackling difficult-to-express target proteins.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2017

Seletalisib: Characterization of a Novel, Potent, and Selective Inhibitor of PI3Kδ

Rodger Allen; Daniel Christopher Brookings; Mark Powell; Jean Delgado; Lindsay Shuttleworth; Mark Merriman; Ian J. Fahy; Roohi Tewari; John P. Silva; Louise J. Healy; Gareth C. G. Davies; Breda Twomey; Rona M. Cutler; Apoorva Kotian; Andrea Crosby; Gillian McCluskey; Gillian Watt; Andrew Payne

Phosphoinositide 3-kinases (PI3K) are key signaling enzymes regulating cellular survival, development, and function. Expression of the PI3Kδ isoform is largely restricted to leukocytes and it plays a key role in immune cell development and function. Seletalisib is a novel small-molecule inhibitor of PI3Kδ that was evaluated in biochemical assays, cellular assays of adaptive and innate immunity, and an in vivo rat model of inflammation. Our findings show that seletalisib is a potent, ATP-competitive, and selective PI3Kδ inhibitor able to block protein kinase B (AKT) phosphorylation following activation of the B-cell receptor in a B-cell line. Moreover, seletalisib inhibited N-formyl peptide–stimulated but not phorbol myristate acetate–stimulated superoxide release from human neutrophils, consistent with a PI3Kδ-specific activity. No indications of cytotoxicity were observed in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) or other cell types treated with seletalisib. Findings from cellular assays of adaptive immunity demonstrated that seletalisib blocks human T-cell production of several cytokines from activated T-cells. Additionally, seletalisib inhibited B-cell proliferation and cytokine release. In human whole blood assays, seletalisib inhibited CD69 expression upon B-cell activation and anti-IgE-mediated basophil degranulation. Seletalisib showed dose-dependent inhibition in an in vivo rat model of anti-CD3-antibody-induced interleukin 2 release. Collectively, these data characterize seletalisib as a selective PI3Kδ inhibitor and potential therapeutic candidate for the treatment of B-cell malignancies and autoimmune diseases driven by dysregulated proinflammatory cytokine secretion.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2018

Discovery of a Potent, Orally Bioavailable PI4KIIIβ Inhibitor (UCB9608) Able To Significantly Prolong Allogeneic Organ Engraftment in Vivo

James Thomas Reuberson; Helen Tracey Horsley; Richard Jeremy Franklin; Daniel James Ford; Judi Charlotte Neuss; Daniel Christopher Brookings; Qiuya Huang; Bart Vanderhoydonck; Ling-Jie Gao; Mi-Yeon Jang; Piet Herdewijn; Anant Ramrao Ghawalkar; Farnaz Fallah-Arani; Adnan R. Khan; Jamie Henshall; Mark Jairaj; Sarah Malcolm; Eleanor Ward; Lindsay Shuttleworth; Yuan Lin; Shengqiao Li; Thierry Louat; Mark Waer; Jean Herman; Andrew Payne; Tom Ceska; Carl Doyle; Will R. Pitt; Mark Daniel Calmiano; Martin Augustin

The primary target of a novel series of immunosuppressive 7-piperazin-1-ylthiazolo[5,4- d]pyrimidin-5-amines was identified as the lipid kinase, PI4KIIIβ. Evaluation of the series highlighted their poor solubility and unwanted off-target activities. A medicinal chemistry strategy was put in place to optimize physicochemical properties within the series, while maintaining potency and improving selectivity over other lipid kinases. Compound 22 was initially identified and profiled in vivo, before further modifications led to the discovery of 44 (UCB9608), a vastly more soluble, selective compound with improved metabolic stability and excellent pharmacokinetic profile. A co-crystal structure of 44 with PI4KIIIβ was solved, confirming the binding mode of this class of inhibitor. The much-improved in vivo profile of 44 positions it as an ideal tool compound to further establish the link between PI4KIIIβ inhibition and prolonged allogeneic organ engraftment, and suppression of immune responses in vivo.


Archive | 2003

Arylamine substututed bicyclic heteroaromatic compounds as p38 kinase inhibitors

Daniel Christopher Brookings; Jeremy Martin Davis; Barry John Celltech R D Limited Langham


Archive | 2002

Bicyclic oxopyridine and oxopyrimidine derivatives

Jeremy Martin Davis; Daniel Christopher Brookings; Barry John Langham


Archive | 2013

TNF -Alpha Modulating Benzimidazoles

Daniel Christopher Brookings; Mark Daniel Calmiano; Ellen Olivia Gallimore; Helen Tracey Horsley; Martin Clive Hutchings; James Andrew Johnson; Boris Kroeplien; Fabien Claude Lecomte; Martin Alexander Lowe; Timothy John Norman; Joanna Rachel Quincey; James Thomas Reuberson; Matthew Duncan Selby; Michael Alan Shaw; Zhaoning Zhu; Anne Marie Foley


Archive | 2003

bicyclic heteroaromatic compounds as kinase inhibitors.

Daniel Christopher Brookings; Jeremy Martin Davis; Barry John Celltech R D Limited Langham

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