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Dive into the research topics where John Irvin Manchester is active.

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Featured researches published by John Irvin Manchester.


Nature Reviews Drug Discovery | 2015

ESKAPEing the labyrinth of antibacterial discovery

Ruben Tommasi; Dean G. Brown; Grant K. Walkup; John Irvin Manchester; Alita A. Miller

Antimicrobial drug resistance is a growing threat to global public health. Multidrug resistance among the ESKAPE organisms — encompassing Enterococcus faecium, Staphylococcus aureus, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Acinetobacter baumannii, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Enterobacter spp. — is of particular concern because they are responsible for many serious infections in hospitals. Although some promising agents are in the pipeline, there is an urgent need for new antibiotic scaffolds. However, antibacterial researchers have struggled to identify new small molecules with meaningful cellular activity, especially those effective against multidrug-resistant Gram-negative pathogens. This difficulty ultimately stems from an incomplete understanding of efflux systems and compound permeation through bacterial membranes. This Opinion article describes findings from target-based and phenotypic screening efforts carried out at AstraZeneca over the past decade, discusses some of the subsequent chemistry challenges and concludes with a description of new approaches comprising a combination of computational modelling and advanced biological tools which may pave the way towards the discovery of new antibacterial agents.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Fragment-to-Hit-to-Lead Discovery of a Novel Pyridylurea Scaffold of ATP Competitive Dual Targeting Type II Topoisomerase Inhibiting Antibacterial Agents.

Gregory S. Basarab; John Irvin Manchester; Shanta Bist; P.A Boriack-Sjodin; B Dangel; Ruth Illingworth; Brian Sherer; S Sriram; Maria Uria-Nickelsen; Ann E. Eakin

The discovery and optimization of a new class of bacterial topoisomerase (DNA gyrase and topoisomerase IV) inhibitors binding in the ATP domain are described. A fragment molecule, 1-ethyl-3-(2-pyridyl)urea, provided sufficiently potent enzyme inhibition (32 μM) to prompt further analogue work. Acids and acid isosteres were incorporated at the 5-pyridyl position of this fragment, bridging to a key asparagine residue, improving enzyme inhibition, and leading to measurable antibacterial activity. A CF3-thiazole substituent at the 4-pyridyl position improved inhibitory potency due to a favorable lipophilic interaction. Promising antibacterial activity was seen versus the Gram-positive pathogens Staphylococcus aureus and Streptococcus pneumoniae and the Gram-negative pathogens Haemophilus influenzae and Moraxella catarrhalis . Precursor metabolite incorporation and mutant analysis studies support the mode-of-action, blockage of DNA synthesis by dual target topoisomerase inhibition. Compound 35 was efficacious in a mouse S. aureus disease model, where a 4.5-log reduction in colony forming units versus control was demonstrated.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

Discovery of a novel azaindole class of antibacterial agents targeting the ATPase domains of DNA gyrase and Topoisomerase IV.

John Irvin Manchester; D.D Dussault; J.A Rose; P.A Boriack-Sjodin; Maria Uria-Nickelsen; Georgine Ioannidis; Shanta Bist; Paul R. Fleming; Kenneth Gregory Hull

We present the discovery and optimization of a novel series of bacterial topoisomerase inhibitors. Starting from a virtual screening hit, activity was optimized through a combination of structure-based design and physical property optimization. Synthesis of fewer than a dozen compounds was required to achieve inhibition of the growth of methicillin-resistant Staphyloccus aureus (MRSA) at compound concentrations of 1.56 μM. These compounds simultaneously inhibit DNA gyrase and Topoisomerase IV at similar nanomolar concentrations, reducing the likelihood of the spontaneous occurrence of target-based mutations resulting in antibiotic resistance, an increasing threat in the treatment of serious infections.


Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling | 2010

Evaluation of pKa Estimation Methods on 211 Druglike Compounds

John Irvin Manchester; Grant K. Walkup; Olga Rivin; Zhiping You

The pK(a) values of 211 discovery (druglike) compounds were determined experimentally using capillary electrophoresis coupled with ultraviolet spectroscopy and a novel fitting algorithm. These values were compared to those predicted by five different commercially available pK(a) estimation packages: ACDLabs/pK(a), Marvin (ChemAxon), MoKa (Molecular Discovery), Epik (Schrodinger), and Pipeline Pilot (Accelrys). Even though the topological method MoKa was noticeably faster than ACD, the accuracy of those two methods and Marvin was statistically indistinguishable, with a root-mean-squared error of about 1 pK(a) unit compared to experiment. Pipeline Pilot and EpiK both produced pK(a) estimates in significantly worse agreement with the experiment. Interestingly, on a number of compounds, the predictions due to ACD v12 were in poorer agreement with the experiment than ACD v10. Microscopic and apparent pK(a) predictions were also compared using ACD v10. Microscopic pK(a)s gave significantly worse agreement with the experiment than the apparent values. In all cases, the errors appeared to be randomly distributed across chemical series.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Optimization of pyrrolamide topoisomerase II inhibitors toward identification of an antibacterial clinical candidate (AZD5099).

Gregory S. Basarab; Pamela Hill; C. Edwin Garner; Ken Hull; Oluyinka Green; Brian Sherer; P. Brian Dangel; John Irvin Manchester; Shanta Bist; Sheila I. Hauck; Fei Zhou; Maria Uria-Nickelsen; Ruth Illingworth; Richard A. Alm; Mike Rooney; Ann E. Eakin

AZD5099 (compound 63) is an antibacterial agent that entered phase 1 clinical trials targeting infections caused by Gram-positive and fastidious Gram-negative bacteria. It was derived from previously reported pyrrolamide antibacterials and a fragment-based approach targeting the ATP binding site of bacterial type II topoisomerases. The program described herein varied a 3-piperidine substituent and incorporated 4-thiazole substituents that form a seven-membered ring intramolecular hydrogen bond with a 5-position carboxylic acid. Improved antibacterial activity and lower in vivo clearances were achieved. The lower clearances were attributed, in part, to reduced recognition by the multidrug resistant transporter Mrp2. Compound 63 showed notable efficacy in a mouse neutropenic Staphylococcus aureus infection model. Resistance frequency versus the drug was low, and reports of clinical resistance due to alteration of the target are few. Hence, 63 could offer a novel treatment for serious issues of resistance to currently used antibacterials.


Chemistry & Biology | 2015

Toward the Rational Design of Carbapenem Uptake in Pseudomonas aeruginosa

Vincent M. Isabella; Arthur J. Campbell; John Irvin Manchester; Mark Sylvester; Asha S. Nayar; Keith E. Ferguson; Ruben Tommasi; Alita A. Miller

Understanding how compound penetration occurs across the complex cell walls of Gram-negative bacteria is one of the greatest challenges in discovering new drugs to treat the infections they cause. A combination of next-generation transposon sequencing, computational metadynamics simulations (CMDS), and medicinal chemistry was used to define genetic and structural elements involved in facilitated carbapenem entry into Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Here we show for the first time that these compounds are taken up not only by the major outer membrane channel OccD1 (also called OprD or PA0958) but also by a closely related channel OccD3 (OpdP or PA4501). Transport-mediating molecular interactions predicted by CMDS for these channels were first confirmed genetically, then used to guide the design of carbapenem analogs with altered uptake properties. These results bring us closer to the rational design of channel transmissibility and may ultimately lead to improved permeability of compounds across bacterial outer membranes.


International Journal of Antimicrobial Agents | 2013

Novel topoisomerase inhibitors: microbiological characterisation and in vivo efficacy of pyrimidines

Maria Uria-Nickelsen; Georg Neckermann; Shubha Sriram; Beth Andrews; John Irvin Manchester; Dan Carcanague; Suzanne S. Stokes; Kenneth Gregory Hull

Pyrimidine compounds were identified as inhibitors of DNA topoisomerase IV through high-throughput screening. This study was designed to exemplify the in vitro activity of the pyrimidines against Gram-positive and Gram-negative microorganisms, to reveal the mode of action of these compounds and to demonstrate their in vivo efficacy. Frequencies of resistance to pyrimidines among Staphylococcus aureus and Streptococcus pneumoniae were <10(-10) at four times their minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs). These compounds exhibited a dual mode of action through inhibition of the ParE subunit of DNA topoisomerase IV as well as the GyrB subunit of DNA gyrase, a homologue of DNA topoisomerase IV. Pyrimidines were shown to have MIC(90) values (MIC that inhibited 90% of the strains tested) of ≤2 mg/L against Gram-positive pathogens, including meticillin-resistant S. aureus, quinolone- and meticillin-resistant S. aureus, vancomycin-resistant enterococci, penicillin-non-susceptible S. pneumoniae and Streptococcus pyogenes, and MIC(90) values of 2- to >16 mg/L and ≤0.5 mg/L against the Gram-negative pathogens Haemophilus influenzae and Moraxella catarrhalis, respectively. The pyrimidines were bactericidal and exhibited a ca. 1000-fold reduction of the bacterial counts at 300 mg/kg in a S. pneumoniae lung infection model. The microbiological properties and in vivo efficacy of pyrimidines underscore their potential as candidates for the treatment of soft-tissue infections and hospital-acquired pneumonia.


ChemMedChem | 2018

Structure-Based Design of Selective Noncovalent CDK12 Inhibitors

Jeffrey W. Johannes; Christopher R. Denz; Nancy Su; Allan Wu; Anna C. Impastato; Scott Mlynarski; Jeffrey G. Varnes; D. Bryan Prince; Justin Cidado; Ning Gao; Malcolm Haddrick; Natalie H. Jones; Shaobin Li; Xiuwei Li; Yang Liu; Toan B. Nguyen; Nichole O'Connell; Emma Rivers; Daniel W. Robbins; Ronald Tomlinson; Tieguang Yao; Xiahui Zhu; Andrew D. Ferguson; Michelle Lamb; John Irvin Manchester; Sylvie Guichard

Cyclin‐dependent kinase (CDK) 12 knockdown via siRNA decreases the transcription of DNA‐damage‐response genes and sensitizes BRCA wild‐type cells to poly(ADP‐ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibition. To recapitulate this effect with a small molecule, we sought a potent, selective CDK12 inhibitor. Crystal structures and modeling informed hybridization between dinaciclib and SR‐3029, resulting in lead compound 5 [(S)‐2‐(1‐(6‐(((6,7‐difluoro‐1H‐benzo[d]imidazol‐2‐yl)methyl)amino)‐9‐ethyl‐9H‐purin‐2‐yl)piperidin‐2‐yl)ethan‐1‐ol]. Further structure‐guided optimization delivered a series of selective CDK12 inhibitors, including compound 7 [(S)‐2‐(1‐(6‐(((6,7‐difluoro‐1H‐benzo[d]imidazol‐2‐yl)methyl)amino)‐9‐isopropyl‐9H‐purin‐2‐yl)piperidin‐2‐yl)ethan‐1‐ol]. Profiling of this compound across CDK9, 7, 2, and 1 at high ATP concentration, single‐point kinase panel screening against 352 targets at 0.1u2005μm, and proteomics via kinase affinity matrix technology demonstrated the selectivity. This series of compounds inhibits phosphorylation of Ser2 on the C‐terminal repeat domain of RNA polymeraseu2005II, consistent with CDK12 inhibition. These selective compounds were also acutely toxic to OV90 as well as THP1 cells.


Archive | 2009

4-amino-5- (hetero) aryl-2-phenylamino-pyrimidine or pyridine and their use as dna gyrase and/or topoisomerase iv inhibitors

Ann Boriack-Sjodin; Daniel Robert Carcanague; Daemian Dussault; Holia Hatoum-Mokdad; Kenneth G. Hull; Georgine Ioannidis; John Irvin Manchester; Helen M. McGuire; David Charles Mckinney; Suzanne S. Stokes


Archive | 2007

ANTIBACTERIAL POLYCYCLIC UREA COMPOUNDS

Gregory Basarab; Shanta Bist; John Irvin Manchester; Brian Sherer

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