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Dive into the research topics where Graham L. Smith is active.

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Featured researches published by Graham L. Smith.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Discovery of (10R)-7-amino-12-fluoro-2,10,16-trimethyl-15-oxo-10,15,16,17-tetrahydro-2H-8,4-(metheno)pyrazolo[4,3-h][2,5,11]-benzoxadiazacyclotetradecine-3-carbonitrile (PF-06463922), a macrocyclic inhibitor of anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) and c-ros oncogene 1 (ROS1) with preclinical brain exposure and broad-spectrum potency against ALK-resistant mutations.

Ted W. Johnson; Paul F. Richardson; Simon Bailey; Alexei Brooun; Benjamin J. Burke; Michael Raymond Collins; J. Jean Cui; Judith Gail Deal; Ya-Li Deng; Dac M. Dinh; Lars D. Engstrom; Mingying He; Jacqui Elizabeth Hoffman; Robert Louis Hoffman; Qinhua Huang; Robert Steven Kania; John Charles Kath; Hieu Lam; Justine L. Lam; Phuong Thi Quy Le; Laura Lingardo; Wei Liu; Michele McTigue; Cynthia Louise Palmer; Neal W. Sach; Tod Smeal; Graham L. Smith; Albert E. Stewart; Sergei Timofeevski; Huichun Zhu

Although crizotinib demonstrates robust efficacy in anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK)-positive non-small-cell lung carcinoma patients, progression during treatment eventually develops. Resistant patient samples revealed a variety of point mutations in the kinase domain of ALK, including the L1196M gatekeeper mutation. In addition, some patients progress due to cancer metastasis in the brain. Using structure-based drug design, lipophilic efficiency, and physical-property-based optimization, highly potent macrocyclic ALK inhibitors were prepared with good absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion (ADME), low propensity for p-glycoprotein 1-mediated efflux, and good passive permeability. These structurally unusual macrocyclic inhibitors were potent against wild-type ALK and clinically reported ALK kinase domain mutations. Significant synthetic challenges were overcome, utilizing novel transformations to enable the use of these macrocycles in drug discovery paradigms. This work led to the discovery of 8k (PF-06463922), combining broad-spectrum potency, central nervous system ADME, and a high degree of kinase selectivity.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Design of Potent and Selective Inhibitors to Overcome Clinical Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase Mutations Resistant to Crizotinib.

Qinhua Huang; Ted W. Johnson; Simon Bailey; Alexei Brooun; Kevin D. Bunker; Benjamin J. Burke; Michael Raymond Collins; Andrew Simon Cook; J. Jean Cui; Kevin Neil Dack; Judith Gail Deal; Ya-Li Deng; Dac M. Dinh; Lars D. Engstrom; Mingying He; Jacqui Elizabeth Hoffman; Robert Louis Hoffman; Patrick Stephen Johnson; Robert Steven Kania; Hieu Lam; Justine L. Lam; Phuong Thi Quy Le; Qiuhua Li; Laura Lingardo; Wei Liu; Melissa West Lu; Michele McTigue; Cynthia Louise Palmer; Paul F. Richardson; Neal W. Sach

Crizotinib (1), an anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in 2011, is efficacious in ALK and ROS positive patients. Under pressure of crizotinib treatment, point mutations arise in the kinase domain of ALK, resulting in resistance and progressive disease. The successful application of both structure-based and lipophilic-efficiency-focused drug design resulted in aminopyridine 8e, which was potent across a broad panel of engineered ALK mutant cell lines and showed suitable preclinical pharmacokinetics and robust tumor growth inhibition in a crizotinib-resistant cell line (H3122-L1196M).


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2011

Design and Synthesis of Novel N-Hydroxy-Dihydronaphthyridinones as Potent and Orally Bioavailable HIV-1 Integrase Inhibitors

Ted W. Johnson; Steven P. Tanis; Scott L. Butler; Deepak Dalvie; Dorothy M. DeLisle; Klaus Ruprecht Dress; Erik J. Flahive; Qiyue Hu; Jon E. Kuehler; Atsuo Kuki; Wen Liu; Guy A. McClellan; Qinghai Peng; Michael Bruno Plewe; Paul F. Richardson; Graham L. Smith; Jim Solowiej; Khanh Tuan Tran; Hai Wang; Xiaoming Yu; Junhu Zhang; Huichun Zhu

HIV-1 integrase (IN) is one of three enzymes encoded by the HIV genome and is essential for viral replication, and HIV-1 IN inhibitors have emerged as a new promising class of therapeutics. Recently, we reported the synthesis of orally bioavailable azaindole hydroxamic acids that were potent inhibitors of the HIV-1 IN enzyme. Here we disclose the design and synthesis of novel tricyclic N-hydroxy-dihydronaphthyridinones as potent, orally bioavailable HIV-1 integrase inhibitors displaying excellent ligand and lipophilic efficiencies.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

4-methylpteridinones as orally active and selective PI3K/mTOR dual inhibitors.

Kevin K.-C. Liu; Shubha Bagrodia; Simon Bailey; Hengmiao Cheng; Hui Chen; Lisa Gao; Samantha Greasley; Jacqui Elizabeth Hoffman; Qiyue Hu; Ted O. Johnson; Dan Knighton; Zhengyu Liu; Matthew A. Marx; Mitchell David Nambu; Sacha Ninkovic; Bernadette Pascual; Kristina Rafidi; Caroline Rodgers; Graham L. Smith; Shaoxian Sun; Haitao Wang; Anle Yang; Jing Yuan; Aihua Zou

Pteridinones were designed based on a non-selective kinase template. Because of the uniqueness of the PI3K and mTOR binding pockets, a methyl group was introduced to C-4 position of the peteridinone core to give compounds with excellent selectivity for PI3K and mTOR. This series of compounds were further optimized to improve their potency against PI3Kα and mTOR. Finally, orally active compounds with improved solubility and robust in vivo efficacy in tumor growth inhibition were identified as well.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Acidic triazoles as soluble guanylate cyclase stimulators

Lee R. Roberts; Paul Anthony Bradley; Mark Edward Bunnage; Katherine S. England; David Fairman; Yvette M. Fobian; David Nathan Abraham Fox; Geoff E. Gymer; Steven E. Heasley; Jerome Molette; Graham L. Smith; Michelle Schmidt; Michael A. Tones; Kevin Neil Dack

A series of acidic triazoles with activity as soluble guanylate cyclase stimulators is described. Incorporation of the CF(3) triazole improved the overall physicochemical and drug-like properties of the molecule and is exemplified by compound 25.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Highly Selective and Potent Thiophenes as PI3K Inhibitors with Oral Antitumor Activity

Kevin Liu; JinJiang Zhu; Graham L. Smith; Min-Jean Yin; Simon Bailey; Jeffrey H. Chen; Qiyue Hu; Qinhua Huang; Chunze Li; Qing J. Li; Matthew A. Marx; Genevieve Paderes; Paul F. Richardson; Neal W. Sach; Marlena Walls; Peter A. Wells; Aihua Zou

Highly selective PI3K inhibitors with subnanomolar PI3Kα potency and greater than 7000-fold selectivity against mTOR kinase were discovered through structure-based drug design (SBDD). These tetra-substituted thiophenes were also demonstrated to have good in vitro cellular potency and good in vivo oral antitumor activity in a mouse PI3K driven NCI-H1975 xenograft tumor model. Compounds with the desired human PK predictions and good in vitro ADMET properties were also identified. In this communication, we describe the rationale behind the installation of a critical triazole moiety to maintain the intricate H-bonding network within the PI3K receptor leading to both better potency and selectivity. Furthermore, optimization of the C-4 phenyl group was exploited to maximize the compounds mTOR selectivity.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Azaindole N-methyl hydroxamic acids as HIV-1 integrase inhibitors-II. The impact of physicochemical properties on ADME and PK.

Steven P. Tanis; Michael Bruno Plewe; Ted W. Johnson; Scott L. Butler; Deepak Dalvie; Dorothy M. DeLisle; Klaus Ruprecht Dress; Qiyue Hu; Buwen Huang; Jon E. Kuehler; Atsuo Kuki; Wen Liu; Qinghai Peng; Graham L. Smith; Jim Solowiej; Khanh Tuan Tran; Hai Wang; Anle Yang; Chunfeng Yin; Xiaoming Yu; Junhu Zhang; Huichun Zhu

HIV-1 integrase is one of three enzymes encoded by the HIV genome and is essential for viral replication, and HIV-1 IN inhibitors have emerged as a new promising class of therapeutics. Recently, we reported the discovery of azaindole hydroxamic acids that were potent inhibitors of the HIV-1 IN enzyme. N-Methyl hydroxamic acids were stable against oxidative metabolism, however were cleared rapidly through phase 2 glucuronidation pathways. We were able to introduce polar groups at the β-position of the azaindole core thereby altering physical properties by lowering calculated log D values (c Log D) which resulted in attenuated clearance rates in human hepatocytes. Pharmacokinetic data in dog for representative compounds demonstrated moderate oral bioavailability and reasonable half-lives. These ends were accomplished without a large negative impact on enzymatic and antiviral activity, thus suggesting opportunities to alter clearance parameters in future series.


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2013

Abstract PR10: Is CNS availability for oncology a no-brainer? Discovery of PF-06463922, a novel small molecule inhibitor of ALK/ROS1 with preclinical brain availability and broad spectrum potency against ALK-resistant mutations.

Ted W. Johnson; Simon Bailey; Benjamin J. Burke; Michael Raymond Collins; J. Jean Cui; Judy G. Deal; Ya-Li Deng; Martin Paul Edwards; Mingying He; Jacqui Elizabeth Hoffman; Robert L. Hoffman; Qinhua Huang; Robert Steven Kania; Phuong T. Le; Michele McTigue; Cynthia Louise Palmer; Paul F. Richardson; Neal W. Sach; Graham L. Smith; Lars D. Engstrom; Wenyue Hu; Hieu Lam; Justine L. Lam; Tod Smeal; Helen Y. Zou

Oncogenic fusions of anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) define a subset of human lung adenocarcinoma. The 1st generation ALK inhibitor crizotinib demonstrated impressive clinical benefit in ALK-fusion positive lung cancers and was approved by the FDA for the treatment of ALK-fusion positive NSCLC in 2011. However, as seen with most kinase inhibitors, patients treated with crizotinib eventually develop resistance to therapy. Acquired ALK kinase domain mutations and disease progression in the central nervous system (CNS) are reported as main contributors to patient relapse after ALK inhibitor therapy. Preclinically, crizotinib lacks significant brain penetration and does not potently inhibit activity of ALK kinase domain mutants, so a drug discovery program was initiated aimed to develop a second generation ALK inhibitor that is more potent than existing ALK inhibitors, capable of inhibiting the resistant ALK mutants and penetrating the blood-brain-barrier. These objectives present a considerable challenge in kinase inhibitor chemical space. Here we report that PF-06463922, a novel small molecule ATP-competitive inhibitor of ALK/ROS1, showed exquisite potencies against non-mutant ALK (Ki 100 fold kinase selectivity against 95% of the kinases tested in a 207 recombinant kinase panel. Specific design considerations were developed leading to novel ATP-competitive kinase inhibitors with desired low efflux in cell lines over-expressing p-glycoprotein and breast cancer resistance protein, providing excellent blood-brain-barrier and cell penetration properties. Efforts to optimize ligand efficiency and lipophilic efficiency leveraging structure based drug design techniques led to ligands with overlapping broad spectrum potency and low efflux. Single and repeat dose preclinical rat in vivo studies of PF-06463922 demonstrated excellent oral bioavailability and CNS availability with free brain exposure approximately 30% of free plasma levels. In addition, CNS-directed safety studies showed no adverse events at predicted efficacious concentrations. It is anticipated that PF-06463922 with its potent activities on non-mutant ALK, ALK kinase domain mutations and CNS metastases would provide great promise for patients with ALK and ROS1 positive cancers. Citation Information: Mol Cancer Ther 2013;12(11 Suppl):PR10. Citation Format: Ted W. Johnson, Simon Bailey, Benjamin J. Burke, Michael R. Collins, J. Jean Cui, Judy Deal, Ya-Li Deng, Martin P. Edwards, Mingying He, Jacqui Hoffman, Robert L. Hoffman, Qinhua Huang, Robert S. Kania, Phuong Le, Michele McTigue, Cynthia L. Palmer, Paul F. Richardson, Neal W. Sach, Graham L. Smith, Lars Engstrom, Wenyue Hu, Hieu Lam, Justine L. Lam, Tod Smeal, Helen Y. Zou. Is CNS availability for oncology a no-brainer? Discovery of PF-06463922, a novel small molecule inhibitor of ALK/ROS1 with preclinical brain availability and broad spectrum potency against ALK-resistant mutations. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the AACR-NCI-EORTC International Conference: Molecular Targets and Cancer Therapeutics; 2013 Oct 19-23; Boston, MA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Mol Cancer Ther 2013;12(11 Suppl):Abstract nr PR10.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Discovery of (10R)-7-Amino-12-Fluoro-2,10,16-Trimethyl-15-Oxo-10,15,16,17-Tetrahydro-2H-8,4-(Metheno)Pyrazolo[4,3-H][2,5,11]Benzoxadiazacyclotetradecine-3-Carbonitrile (Pf-06463922), a Macrocyclic Inhibitor of Alk/Ros1 with Pre-Clinical Brain Exposure and Broad Spectrum Potency Against Alk-Resistant Mutations.

Ted W. Johnson; Paul F. Richardson; Simon Bailey; Alexei Brooun; Benjamin J. Burke; Michael Raymond Collins; J. Jean Cui; Judith Gail Deal; Ya-Li Deng; Dac M. Dinh; Lars D. Engstrom; Mingying He; Jacqui Elizabeth Hoffman; Robert Louis Hoffman; Qinhua Huang; John Charles Kath; Robert Steven Kania; Hieu Lam; Justine L. Lam; Phuong Thi Quy Le; Laura Lingardo; Wei Liu; Michele McTigue; Cynthia Louise Palmer; Neal W. Sach; Tod Smeal; Graham L. Smith; Albert E. Stewart; Sergei Timofeevski; Huichun Zhu


Organic Process Research & Development | 2011

Development of Scalable Syntheses of Selective PI3K inhibitors

Qinhua Huang; Paul F. Richardson; Neal W. Sach; JinJiang Zhu; Kevin Liu; Graham L. Smith; Daniel Merritt Bowles

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