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Dive into the research topics where John Paul Mathias is active.

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Featured researches published by John Paul Mathias.


Tetrahedron-asymmetry | 1998

Sulfur–imine mixed donor chelate ligands for asymmetric catalysis: enantioselective allylic alkylation

James C. Anderson; Daniel S. James; John Paul Mathias

Abstract A new series of sulfur–imine mixed donor chiral ligands, prepared in only two steps from commercially available ( S )-valinol, have been shown to give up to 94% enantiomeric excess in a palladium-catalysed allylic substitution reaction.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Fragment based discovery of a novel and selective PI3 kinase inhibitor

Samantha J. Hughes; David Simon Millan; Iain Kilty; Russell Andrew Lewthwaite; John Paul Mathias; Mark O’Reilly; Andrew Pannifer; Anne Phelan; Frank Stuhmeier; Darren A. Baldock; David Brown

We report the use of fragment screening and fragment based drug design to develop a PI3γ kinase fragment hit into a lead. Initial fragment hits were discovered by high concentration biochemical screening, followed by a round of virtual screening to identify additional ligand efficient fragments. These were developed into potent and ligand efficient lead compounds using structure guided fragment growing and merging strategies. This led to a potent, selective, and cell permeable PI3γ kinase inhibitor with good metabolic stability that was useful as a preclinical tool compound.


Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling | 2012

Shaping a Screening File for Maximal Lead Discovery Efficiency and Effectiveness: Elimination of Molecular Redundancy

Gregory A. Bakken; Andrew Simon Bell; Markus Boehm; Jeremy R. Everett; Rosalia Gonzales; David Hepworth; Jacquelyn Klug-McLeod; Jeremy Lanfear; Jens Loesel; John Paul Mathias; Terence P. Wood

High Throughput Screening (HTS) is a successful strategy for finding hits and leads that have the opportunity to be converted into drugs. In this paper we highlight novel computational methods used to select compounds to build a new screening file at Pfizer and the analytical methods we used to assess their quality. We also introduce the novel concept of molecular redundancy to help decide on the density of compounds required in any region of chemical space in order to be confident of running successful HTS campaigns.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2012

Biosensor-Based Approach to the Identification of Protein Kinase Ligands with Dual-Site Modes of Action

Iva Navratilova; Graeme Macdonald; Colin Robinson; Samantha J. Hughes; John Paul Mathias; Christopher Phillips; Andrew Simon Cook

The authors have used a surface plasmon resonance (SPR)–based biosensor approach to identify and characterize compounds with a unique binding mode to protein kinases. Biacore was used to characterize hits from an enzymatic high-throughput screen of the Tec family tyrosine kinase, IL2-inducible T cell kinase (ITK). Complex binding kinetics was observed for some compounds, which led to identification of compounds that bound simultaneously at both the adenosine triphosphate (ATP) binding site and a second, allosteric site on ITK. The presence of the second binding site was confirmed by X-ray crystallography. The second site is located in the N-terminal lobe of the protein kinase catalytic domain, adjacent to but distinct from the ATP site. To enable rapid optimization of binding properties, a competition-based Biacore assay has been developed to successfully identify second site noncompetitive binders that have been confirmed by X-ray crystallographic studies. The authors have found that SPR technology is a key method for rapid identification of compounds with dual-site modes of action.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017

Discovery of Clinical Candidate 1-{[(2S,3S,4S)-3-Ethyl-4-fluoro-5-oxopyrrolidin-2-yl]methoxy}-7-methoxyisoquinoline-6-carboxamide (PF-06650833), a Potent, Selective Inhibitor of Interleukin-1 Receptor Associated Kinase 4 (IRAK4), by Fragment-Based Drug Design

Katherine L. Lee; Catherine M. Ambler; David R. Anderson; Brian P. Boscoe; Andrea G Bree; Joanne Brodfuehrer; Jeanne S. Chang; Chulho Choi; Seung Won Chung; Kevin J. Curran; Jacqueline E. Day; Christoph Martin Dehnhardt; Ken Dower; Susan E. Drozda; Richard K. Frisbie; Lori Krim Gavrin; Joel Adam Goldberg; Seungil Han; Martin Hegen; David Hepworth; Heidi R. Hope; Satwik Kamtekar; Iain Kilty; Arthur Lee; Lih-Ling Lin; Frank Lovering; Michael Dennis Lowe; John Paul Mathias; Heidi M Morgan; Elizabeth Murphy

Through fragment-based drug design focused on engaging the active site of IRAK4 and leveraging three-dimensional topology in a ligand-efficient manner, a micromolar hit identified from a screen of a Pfizer fragment library was optimized to afford IRAK4 inhibitors with nanomolar potency in cellular assays. The medicinal chemistry effort featured the judicious placement of lipophilicity, informed by co-crystal structures with IRAK4 and optimization of ADME properties to deliver clinical candidate PF-06650833 (compound 40). This compound displays a 5-unit increase in lipophilic efficiency from the fragment hit, excellent kinase selectivity, and pharmacokinetic properties suitable for oral administration.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

The discovery of UK-369003, a novel PDE5 inhibitor with the potential for oral bioavailability and dose-proportional pharmacokinetics

David James Rawson; Stephen Ballard; Christopher Gordon Barber; Laura Barker; Kevin Beaumont; Mark Edward Bunnage; Susan Cole; Martin Corless; Stephen Martin Denton; David Ellis; Marion Floc’h; Laura Foster; James R. Gosset; Frances Holmwood; Charlotte Alice Louise Lane; David Leahy; John Paul Mathias; Graham Nigel Maw; William A. Million; Cedric Poinsard; Jenny Price; Rachel Russel; Stephen Derek Albert Street; Lesa Watson

This paper describes our recent efforts to design and synthesise potent and selective PDE5 inhibitors and the use of in vitro predictors of clearance, absorption and permeability to maximise the potential for dose-proportional pharmacokinetics and good oral bioavailability in man. Optimisation of the preclinical profile resulted in the identification of UK-369003 (19a) and its nomination as a clinical candidate. The clinical pharmacokinetic and safety profile has enabled us to progress the compound to test its efficacy in patients with lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) associated with benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) and a paper describing its efficacy has recently been published.


Biochemical Journal | 2014

Selectively targeting an inactive conformation of interleukin-2-inducible T-cell kinase by allosteric inhibitors

Seungil Han; R.M Czerwinski; Nicole Caspers; David Limburg; Weidong Ding; Hong Wang; J.F Ohren; Francis Rajamohan; Thomas J. McLellan; Ray Unwalla; Chulho Choi; Mihir D. Parikh; N Seth; Jason Edmonds; Christopher Phillips; S Shakya; X Li; Spaulding; Samantha J. Hughes; Andrew Simon Cook; Colin Robinson; John Paul Mathias; I Navratilova; Quintus G. Medley; D.R Anderson; Ravi G. Kurumbail; A. Aulabaugh

ITK (interleukin-2-inducible T-cell kinase) is a critical component of signal transduction in T-cells and has a well-validated role in their proliferation, cytokine release and chemotaxis. ITK is an attractive target for the treatment of T-cell-mediated inflammatory diseases. In the present study we describe the discovery of kinase inhibitors that preferentially bind to an allosteric pocket of ITK. The novel ITK allosteric site was characterized by NMR, surface plasmon resonance, isothermal titration calorimetry, enzymology and X-ray crystallography. Initial screening hits bound to both the allosteric pocket and the ATP site. Successful lead optimization was achieved by improving the contribution of the allosteric component to the overall inhibition. NMR competition experiments demonstrated that the dual-site binders showed higher affinity for the allosteric site compared with the ATP site. Moreover, an optimized inhibitor displayed non-competitive inhibition with respect to ATP as shown by steady-state enzyme kinetics. The activity of the isolated kinase domain and auto-activation of the full-length enzyme were inhibited with similar potency. However, inhibition of the activated full-length enzyme was weaker, presumably because the allosteric site is altered when ITK becomes activated. An optimized lead showed exquisite kinome selectivity and is efficacious in human whole blood and proximal cell-based assays.


Heterocycles | 2006

Synthesis of 5-Heterocyclic Substituted Quinazolin-4-ones via 2-Aminobenzonitrile Derivatives

M. Jonathan Fray; Paul Allen; Paul R. Bradley; Clare E. Challenger; Michael D. Closier; Tim J. Evans; Mark L. Lewis; John Paul Mathias; Carly L. Nichols; Yvonne M. Po-Ba; Hayley Snow; Mark H. Stefaniak; Hannah V. Vuong

Two routes to prepare a series of six 5-heterocyclic substituted 2-chloro-7-methoxyquinazolin-4-ones are described, where the heterocycle is a substituted or unsubstituted 1-pyrazolyl, 5-pyrazolyl or 2-thiazolyl group. Both routes proceeded via key 2-aminobenzonitrile intermediates.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008

Highly potent and selective chiral inhibitors of PDE5: an illustration of Pfeiffer's rule.

Mark Edward Bunnage; John Paul Mathias; Anthony Wood; Duncan Charles Miller; Stephen Derek Albert Street

A series of potent chiral PDE5 inhibitors are described that are based on the sildenafil architecture but exhibit much greater selectivity over PDE6. Eudismic analysis of the SAR in this series provided a clear illustration of Pfeiffers rule and indicated that the chiral motif was involved in a highly-stereoselective interaction with PDE5. This PDE5 specificity translated to levels of selectivity over PDE6 that were hitherto unprecedented in the sildenafil scaffold. UK-371,800 (compound 8) was identified as a development candidate from this series that married sildenafil-like molecular properties with high selectivity over PDE6. Clinical data confirm that UK-371,800 has markedly superior human pharmacokinetics to a previously-described higher molecular weight achiral analogue in this template (compound 1).


Molecular Diversity | 2013

Plate-based diversity subset screening: an efficient paradigm for high throughput screening of a large screening file

Andrew Simon Bell; Joseph Bradley; Jeremy R. Everett; Michelle Knight; Jens Loesel; John Paul Mathias; David McLoughlin; James E. J. Mills; Robert E. Sharp; Christine Williams; Terence P. Wood

The screening files of many large companies, including Pfizer, have grown considerably due to internal chemistry efforts, company mergers and acquisitions, external contracted synthesis, or compound purchase schemes. In order to screen the targets of interest in a cost-effective fashion, we devised an easy-to-assemble, plate-based diversity subset (PBDS) that represents almost the entire computed chemical space of the screening file whilst comprising only a fraction of the plates in the collection. In order to create this file, we developed new design principles for the quality assessment of screening plates: the Rule of 40 (Ro40) and a plate selection process that insured excellent coverage of both library chemistry and legacy chemistry space. This paper describes the rationale, design, construction, and performance of the PBDS, that has evolved into the standard paradigm for singleton (one compound per well) high-throughput screening in Pfizer since its introduction in 2006.

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