Emilie D. Smith
Durham University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Emilie D. Smith.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009
Kenneth He Huang; James Marvin Veal; R. Patrick Fadden; John W. Rice; Jeron Eaves; Jon-Paul Strachan; Amy F. Barabasz; Briana Foley; Thomas E. Barta; Wei Ma; Melanie Silinski; Mei Hu; Jeffrey M. Partridge; Anisa Scott; Laura G. Dubois; Tiffany A. Freed; Paul M. Steed; Andy J. Ommen; Emilie D. Smith; Philip F. Hughes; Angela R. Woodward; Gunnar J. Hanson; W. Stephen Mccall; Christopher John Markworth; Lindsay Hinkley; Matthew Jenks; Lifeng Geng; Meredith Lewis; James Otto; Bert Pronk
A novel class of heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90) inhibitors was developed from an unbiased screen to identify protein targets for a diverse compound library. These indol-4-one and indazol-4-one derived 2-aminobenzamides showed strong binding affinity to Hsp90, and optimized analogues exhibited nanomolar antiproliferative activity across multiple cancer cell lines. Heat shock protein 70 (Hsp70) induction and specific client protein degradation in cells on treatment with the inhibitors supported Hsp90 inhibition as the mechanism of action. Computational chemistry and X-ray crystallographic analysis of selected member compounds clearly defined the protein-inhibitor interaction and assisted the design of analogues. 4-[6,6-Dimethyl-4-oxo-3-(trifluoromethyl)-4,5,6,7-tetrahydro-1H-indazol-1-yl]-2-[(trans-4-hydroxycyclohexyl)amino]benzamide (SNX-2112, 9) was identified as highly selective and potent (IC(50) Her2 = 11 nM, HT-29 = 3 nM); its prodrug amino-acetic acid 4-[2-carbamoyl-5-(6,6-dimethyl-4-oxo-3-trifluoromethyl-4,5,6,7-tetrahydro-indazol-1-yl)-phenylamino]-cyclohexyl ester methanesulfonate (SNX-5422, 10) was orally bioavailable and efficacious in a broad range of xenograft tumor models (e.g. 67% growth delay in a HT-29 model) and is now in multiple phase I clinical trials.
Chemistry & Biology | 2010
Patrick Fadden; Kenneth He Huang; James M. Veal; Paul M. Steed; Amy F. Barabasz; Briana Foley; Mei Hu; Jeffrey M. Partridge; John R. Rice; Anisa Scott; Laura G. Dubois; Tiffany A. Freed; Melanie Silinski; Thomas E. Barta; Philip F. Hughes; Andy J. Ommen; Wei Ma; Emilie D. Smith; Angela Woodward Spangenberg; Jeron Eaves; Gunnar J. Hanson; Lindsay Hinkley; Matthew Jenks; Meredith Lewis; James Otto; Gijsbertus J. Pronk; Katleen Verleysen; Timothy A. J. Haystead; Steven E. Hall
A chemoproteomics-based drug discovery strategy is presented that utilizes a highly parallel screening platform, encompassing more than 1000 targets, with a focused chemical library prior to target selection. This chemoproteomics-based process enables a data-driven selection of both the biological target and chemical hit after the screen is complete. The methodology has been exemplified for the purine binding proteome (proteins utilizing ATP, NAD, FAD). Screening of an 8000 member library yielded over 1500 unique protein-ligand interactions, which included novel hits for the oncology target Hsp90. The approach, which also provides broad target selectivity information, was used to drive the identification of a potent and orally active Hsp90 inhibitor, SNX-5422, which is currently in phase 1 clinical studies.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012
Kenneth He Huang; Thomas E. Barta; John W. Rice; Emilie D. Smith; Andy J. Ommen; Wei Ma; James M. Veal; R. Patrick Fadden; Amy F. Barabasz; Briana Foley; Philip F. Hughes; Gunnar J. Hanson; Christopher John Markworth; Melanie Silinski; Jeffrey M. Partridge; Paul M. Steed; Steven E. Hall
A novel class of Hsp90 inhibitors, structurally distinct from previously reported scaffolds, was developed from rational design and optimization of a compound library screen hit. These aminoquinazoline derivatives, represented by compound 15 (SNX-6833) or 1-(2-amino-4-methylquinazolin-7-yl)-3,6,6-trimethyl-6,7-dihydro-1H-indol-4(5H)-one, selectively bind to Hsp90 and inhibit its cellular activities at concentrations as low as single digit nanomolar.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2017
Ian S. Cloudsdale; John K. Dickson; Thomas E. Barta; Brian S. Grella; Emilie D. Smith; John L. Kulp; Frank Guarnieri
We have applied simulated annealing of chemical potential (SACP) to a diverse set of ∼150 very small molecules to provide insights into new interactions in the binding pocket of human renin, a historically difficult target for which to find low molecular weight (MW) inhibitors with good bioavailability. In one of its many uses in drug discovery, SACP provides an efficient, thermodynamically principled method of ranking chemotype replacements for scaffold hopping and manipulating physicochemical characteristics for drug development. We introduce the use of Constrained Fragment Analysis (CFA) to construct and analyze ligands composed of linking those fragments with predicted high affinity. This technique addresses the issue of effectively linking fragments together and provides a predictive mechanism to rank order prospective inhibitors for synthesis. The application of these techniques to the identification of novel inhibitors of human renin is described. Synthesis of a limited set of designed compounds provided potent, low MW analogs (IC50s<100nM) with good oral bioavailability (F>20-58%).
Archive | 2007
Kenneth He Huang; James M. Veal; Thomas E. Barta; Emilie D. Smith; Wei Ma; Andy J. Ommen
Archive | 2007
Kenneth He Huang; James M. Veal; Thomas E. Barta; Emilie D. Smith; Wei Ma; Andy J. Ommen
Archive | 2008
Kenneth He Huang; Andy J. Ommen; Thomas E. Barta; Philip F. Hughes; James Marvin Veal; Wei Ma; Emilie D. Smith; Angela R. Woodward; W. Stephen Mccall
Archive | 2011
Robert N. Atkinson; Andy J. Ommen; James Marvin Veal; Kenneth He Huang; Emilie D. Smith
Archive | 2011
Zhong Wang; Emilie D. Smith; James Marvin Veal; Kenneth He Huang; Robert N. Atkinson; Rong Jiang
Archive | 2007
Kenneth He Huang; Emilie D. Smith; James Marvin Veal