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Dive into the research topics where Jason Grant Kettle is active.

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Featured researches published by Jason Grant Kettle.


Drug Discovery Today | 2015

Designing novel building blocks is an overlooked strategy to improve compound quality

Frederick W. Goldberg; Jason Grant Kettle; Thierry Kogej; Matthew Perry

One pragmatic way to improve compound quality, while enhancing and accelerating drug discovery projects, is the ability to access a high quality, novel, diverse building block collection. Here, we outline general principles that should be applied to ensure that a building block collection has the greatest impact on drug discovery projects, by discussing design principles for novel reagents and what types of reagents are popular with medicinal chemists in general. We initiated a program in 2009 to address this, which has already delivered three candidate drugs, and the success of that program provides evidence that focussing on building block design is a useful strategy for drug discovery.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Discovery of 4-Amino-N-[(1S)-1-(4-chlorophenyl)-3-hydroxypropyl]-1-(7H-pyrrolo[2,3-d]pyrimidin-4-yl)piperidine-4-carboxamide (AZD5363), an Orally Bioavailable, Potent Inhibitor of Akt Kinases.

Matt Addie; Peter Ballard; David Buttar; Claire Crafter; Gordon S. Currie; Barry R. Davies; J.E. Debreczeni; Hannah Dry; Philippa Dudley; Ryan Greenwood; Paul D. Johnson; Jason Grant Kettle; Clare Lane; Gillian M. Lamont; Andrew G. Leach; Richard William Arthur Luke; Jeff Morris; Donald J. Ogilvie; Ken Page; Martin Pass; Stuart E. Pearson; Linette Ruston

Wide-ranging exploration of analogues of an ATP-competitive pyrrolopyrimidine inhibitor of Akt led to the discovery of clinical candidate AZD5363, which showed increased potency, reduced hERG affinity, and higher selectivity against the closely related AGC kinase ROCK. This compound demonstrated good preclinical drug metabolism and pharmacokinetics (DMPK) properties and, after oral dosing, showed pharmacodynamic knockdown of phosphorylation of Akt and downstream biomarkers in vivo, and inhibition of tumor growth in a breast cancer xenograft model.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008

Inhibitors of the Tyrosine Kinase Ephb4. Part 1: Structure-Based Design and Optimization of a Series of 2,4-Bis-Anilinopyrimidines

Catherine Bardelle; Darren Cross; Sara Davenport; Jason Grant Kettle; Eun Jung Ko; Andrew G. Leach; Andrew Austen Mortlock; Jon Read; Nicola J. Roberts; Peter Robins; Emma J. Williams

A series of bis-anilinopyrimidines have been identified as potent inhibitors of the tyrosine kinase EphB4. Structural information from two alternative series identified from screening efforts was combined to identify the initial leads.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Diverse heterocyclic scaffolds as allosteric inhibitors of AKT.

Jason Grant Kettle; Simon Brown; Claire Crafter; Barry R. Davies; Phillippa Dudley; Gary Fairley; Paul Faulder; Shaun Fillery; Hannah Greenwood; Janet Hawkins; Michael Rabinder James; Keith A. Johnson; Clare Lane; Martin Pass; Jennifer H. Pink; Helen Plant; Sabina Cosulich

Wide-ranging exploration of potential replacements for a quinoline-based inhibitor of activation of AKT kinase led to number of alternative, novel scaffolds with potentially improved potency and physicochemical properties. Examples showed predictable DMPK properties, and one such compound demonstrated pharmacodynamic knockdown of phosphorylation of AKT and downstream biomarkers in vivo and inhibition of tumor growth in a breast cancer xenograft model.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008

Inhibitors of the Tyrosine Kinase Ephb4. Part 2: Structure-Based Discovery and Optimisation of 3,5-Bis Substituted Anilinopyrimidines.

Catherine Bardelle; Tanya Coleman; Darren Cross; Sara Davenport; Jason Grant Kettle; Eun Jung Ko; Andrew G. Leach; Andrew Austen Mortlock; Jon Read; Nicola J. Roberts; Peter Robins; Emma J. Williams

Crystallographic studies of a range of 3-substituted anilinopyrimidine inhibitors of EphB4 have highlighted two alternative C-2 aniline conformations and this discovery has been exploited in the design of a highly potent series of 3,5-disubstituted anilinopyrimidines. The observed range of cellular activities has been rationalised on the basis of physicochemical and structural characteristics.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008

Novel 3-alkoxy-1H-pyrazolo[3,4-d]pyrimidines as EGFR and erbB2 receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors.

Richard Ducray; Peter Ballard; Bernard Barlaam; Mark Hickinson; Jason Grant Kettle; Donald J. Ogilvie; Catherine B. Trigwell

Novel 4-anilino-1H-pyrazolo[3,4-d]pyrimidines have been synthesized and evaluated in vitro for erbB2 and EGFR kinase inhibition. A representative compound displaying oral bioavailability in rat and dog illustrates the potential of this series to provide orally active erbB2 inhibitors.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2011

Systematic Enumeration of Heteroaromatic Ring Systems as Reagents for Use in Medicinal Chemistry

Jason Grant Kettle

The availability of suitable chemical building blocks, or reagents, is a key factor that determines the degree of effort required to make a target molecule. If a reagent is not available and requires synthesizing, this increases the total number of synthetic steps in the route and may result in a less attractive synthetic target. This can impact most in compound collection enhancement activities or early lead identification (LI) where typically not enough information or data are available to commit to such long multistep syntheses. In lead optimization (LO) projects, having access to commonly used reagents may improve the efficiency of building structure-activity relationships (SARs) and structure-property relationships (SPRs) around a core scaffold. This paper describes the systematic enumeration of key heteroaromatic reagent classes and the subsequent analysis of the availability of these in a number of commonly used databases.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Inhibitors of the tyrosine kinase EphB4. Part 4: Discovery and optimization of a benzylic alcohol series

Bernard Barlaam; Richard Ducray; Christine Lambert-van der Brempt; Patrick Ple; Catherine Bardelle; Nigel Brooks; Tanya Coleman; Darren Cross; Jason Grant Kettle; Jon Read

Optimization of our bis-anilino-pyrimidine series of EphB4 kinase inhibitors led to the discovery of compound 12 which incorporates a key m-hydroxymethylene group on the C4 aniline. 12 displays a good kinase selectivity profile, good physical properties and pharmacokinetic parameters, suggesting it is a suitable candidate to investigate the therapeutic potential of EphB4 kinase inhibitors.


Biochemical Journal | 2014

A novel DYRK1B inhibitor AZ191 demonstrates that DYRK1B acts independently of GSK3β to phosphorylate cyclin D1 at Thr(286), not Thr(288).

Anne L. Ashford; David Oxley; Jason Grant Kettle; Kevin Hudson; Sylvie Guichard; Simon J. Cook; Pamela A. Lochhead

DYRK1B (dual-specificity tyrosine phosphorylation-regulated kinase 1B) is amplified in certain cancers and may be an oncogene; however, our knowledge of DYRK1B has been limited by the lack of selective inhibitors. In the present study we describe AZ191, a potent small molecule inhibitor that selectively inhibits DYRK1B in vitro and in cells. CCND1 (cyclin D1), a key regulator of the mammalian G1-S-phase transition, is phosphorylated on Thr(286) by GSK3β (glycogen synthase kinase 3β) to promote its degradation. DYRK1B has also been proposed to promote CCND1 turnover, but was reported to phosphorylate Thr(288) rather than Thr(286). Using in vitro kinase assays, phospho-specific immunoblot analysis and MS in conjunction with AZ191 we now show that DYRK1B phosphorylates CCND1 at Thr(286), not Thr(288), in vitro and in cells. In HEK (human embryonic kidney)-293 and PANC-1 cells (which exhibit DYRK1B amplification) DYRK1B drives Thr(286) phosphorylation and proteasome-dependent turnover of CCND1 and this is abolished by AZ191 or DYRK1B RNAi, but not by GSK3β inhibitors or GSK3β RNAi. DYRK1B expression causes a G1-phase cell-cycle arrest, but overexpression of CCND1 (wild-type or T286A) fails to overcome this; indeed, DYRK1B also promotes the expression of p21CIP1 (21 kDa CDK-interacting protein 1) and p27KIP1 (CDK-inhibitory protein 1). The results of the present study demonstrate for the first time that DYRK1B is a novel Thr(286)-CCND1 kinase that acts independently of GSK3β to promote CCND1 degradation. Furthermore, we anticipate that AZ191 may prove useful in defining further substrates and biological functions of DYRK1B.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015

Structure-Based Design of Potent and Selective Inhibitors of the Metabolic Kinase PFKFB3

Scott Boyd; Joanna Brookfield; Susan E. Critchlow; Iain A. Cumming; Nicola Curtis; J.E. Debreczeni; Sébastien L. Degorce; Craig S. Donald; Nicola J. Evans; Sam D. Groombridge; Philip Hopcroft; Neil P. Jones; Jason Grant Kettle; Scott Lamont; Hilary J. Lewis; Philip MacFaull; Sheila McLoughlin; Laurent Jean Martin Rigoreau; James M. Smith; Steve St-Gallay; Julie K. Stock; Andrew P. Turnbull; Edward Wheatley; Jon Winter; Jonathan Wingfield

A weak screening hit with suboptimal physicochemical properties was optimized against PFKFB3 kinase using critical structure-guided insights. The resulting compounds demonstrated high selectivity over related PFKFB isoforms and modulation of the target in a cellular context. A selected example demonstrated exposure in animals following oral dosing. Examples from this series may serve as useful probes to understand the emerging biology of this metabolic target.

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