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Dive into the research topics where Manu De Rycker is active.

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Featured researches published by Manu De Rycker.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2013

Comparison of a high-throughput high-content intracellular Leishmania donovani assay with an axenic amastigote assay.

Manu De Rycker; Irene Hallyburton; John Thomas; Lorna Campbell; Susan Wyllie; Dhananjay Joshi; Scott Cameron; Ian H. Gilbert; Paul G. Wyatt; Julie A. Frearson; Alan H. Fairlamb; David W. Gray

ABSTRACT Visceral leishmaniasis is a neglected tropical disease with significant health impact. The current treatments are poor, and there is an urgent need to develop new drugs. Primary screening assays used for drug discovery campaigns have typically used free-living forms of the Leishmania parasite to allow for high-throughput screening. Such screens do not necessarily reflect the physiological situation, as the disease-causing stage of the parasite resides inside human host cells. Assessing the drug sensitivity of intracellular parasites on scale has recently become feasible with the advent of high-content screening methods. We describe here a 384-well microscopy-based intramacrophage Leishmania donovani assay and compare it to an axenic amastigote system. A panel of eight reference compounds was tested in both systems, as well as a human counterscreen cell line, and our findings show that for most clinically used compounds both axenic and intramacrophage assays report very similar results. A set of 15,659 diverse compounds was also screened using both systems. This resulted in the identification of seven new antileishmanial compounds and revealed a high false-positive rate for the axenic assay. We conclude that the intramacrophage assay is more suited as a primary hit-discovery platform than the current form of axenic assay, and we discuss how modifications to the axenic assay may render it more suitable for hit-discovery.


Nature Reviews Microbiology | 2017

Anti-trypanosomatid drug discovery: an ongoing challenge and a continuing need

Mark C. Field; David Horn; Alan H. Fairlamb; Michael A. J. Ferguson; David W. Gray; Kevin D. Read; Manu De Rycker; Leah S. Torrie; Paul G. Wyatt; Susan Wyllie; Ian H. Gilbert

The WHO recognizes human African trypanosomiasis, Chagas disease and the leishmaniases as neglected tropical diseases. These diseases are caused by parasitic trypanosomatids and range in severity from mild and self-curing to near invariably fatal. Public health advances have substantially decreased the effect of these diseases in recent decades but alone will not eliminate them. In this Review, we discuss why new drugs against trypanosomatids are required, approaches that are under investigation to develop new drugs and why the drug discovery pipeline remains essentially unfilled. In addition, we consider the important challenges to drug discovery strategies and the new technologies that can address them. The combination of new drugs, new technologies and public health initiatives is essential for the management, and hopefully eventual elimination, of trypanosomatid diseases from the human population.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2013

The R Enantiomer of the Antitubercular Drug PA-824 as a Potential Oral Treatment for Visceral Leishmaniasis

Stephen Patterson; Susan Wyllie; Laste Stojanovski; Meghan R. Perry; Frederick R. C. Simeons; Suzanne Norval; Maria Osuna-Cabello; Manu De Rycker; Kevin D. Read; Alan H. Fairlamb

ABSTRACT The novel nitroimidazopyran agent (S)-PA-824 has potent antibacterial activity against Mycobacterium tuberculosis in vitro and in vivo and is currently in phase II clinical trials for tuberculosis (TB). In contrast to M. tuberculosis, where (R)-PA-824 is inactive, we report here that both enantiomers of PA-824 show potent parasiticidal activity against Leishmania donovani, the causative agent of visceral leishmaniasis (VL). In leishmania-infected macrophages, (R)-PA-824 is 6-fold more active than (S)-PA-824. Both des-nitro analogues are inactive, underlining the importance of the nitro group in the mechanism of action. Although the in vitro and in vivo pharmacological profiles of the two enantiomers are similar, (R)-PA-824 is more efficacious in the murine model of VL, with >99% suppression of parasite burden when administered orally at 100 mg kg of body weight−1, twice daily for 5 days. In M. tuberculosis, (S)-PA-824 is a prodrug that is activated by a deazaflavin-dependent nitroreductase (Ddn), an enzyme which is absent in Leishmania spp. Unlike the case with nifurtimox and fexinidazole, transgenic parasites overexpressing the leishmania nitroreductase are not hypersensitive to either (R)-PA-824 or (S)-PA-824, indicating that this enzyme is not the primary target of these compounds. Drug combination studies in vitro indicate that fexinidazole and (R)-PA-824 are additive whereas (S)-PA-824 and (R)-PA-824 show mild antagonistic behavior. Thus, (R)-PA-824 is a promising candidate for late lead optimization for VL and may have potential for future use in combination therapy with fexinidazole, currently in phase II clinical trials against VL.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2012

A Static-Cidal Assay for Trypanosoma brucei to Aid Hit Prioritisation for Progression into Drug Discovery Programmes

Manu De Rycker; Sandra M. O'Neill; Dhananjay Joshi; Lorna Campbell; David W. Gray; Alan H. Fairlamb

Human African Trypanosomiasis is a vector-borne disease of sub-Saharan Africa that causes significant morbidity and mortality. Current therapies have many drawbacks, and there is an urgent need for new, better medicines. Ideally such new treatments should be fast-acting cidal agents that cure the disease in as few doses as possible. Screening assays used for hit-discovery campaigns often do not distinguish cytocidal from cytostatic compounds and further detailed follow-up experiments are required. Such studies usually do not have the throughput required to test the large numbers of hits produced in a primary high-throughput screen. Here, we present a 384-well assay that is compatible with high-throughput screening and provides an initial indication of the cidal nature of a compound. The assay produces growth curves at ten compound concentrations by assessing trypanosome counts at 4, 24 and 48 hours after compound addition. A reduction in trypanosome counts over time is used as a marker for cidal activity. The lowest concentration at which cell killing is seen is a quantitative measure for the cidal activity of the compound. We show that the assay can identify compounds that have trypanostatic activity rather than cidal activity, and importantly, that results from primary high-throughput assays can overestimate the potency of compounds significantly. This is due to biphasic growth inhibition, which remains hidden at low starting cell densities and is revealed in our static-cidal assay. The assay presented here provides an important tool to follow-up hits from high-throughput screening campaigns and avoid progression of compounds that have poor prospects due to lack of cidal activity or overestimated potency.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015

Discovery of Indoline-2-carboxamide Derivatives as a New Class of Brain-Penetrant Inhibitors of Trypanosoma brucei

Laura A. T. Cleghorn; Sébastien Albrecht; Laste Stojanovski; Frederick R. J. Simeons; Suzanne Norval; Robert Kime; Iain T. Collie; Manu De Rycker; Lorna Campbell; Irene Hallyburton; Julie A. Frearson; Paul G. Wyatt; Kevin D. Read; Ian H. Gilbert

There is an urgent need for new, brain penetrant small molecules that target the central nervous system second stage of human African trypanosomiasis (HAT). We report that a series of novel indoline-2-carboxamides have been identified as inhibitors of Trypanosoma brucei from screening of a focused protease library against Trypanosoma brucei brucei in culture. We describe the optimization and characterization of this series. Potent antiproliferative activity was observed. The series demonstrated excellent pharmacokinetic properties, full cures in a stage 1 mouse model of HAT, and a partial cure in a stage 2 mouse model of HAT. Lack of tolerability prevented delivery of a fully curative regimen in the stage 2 mouse model and thus further progress of this series.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2016

Identification of Trypanocidal Activity for Known Clinical Compounds Using a New Trypanosoma cruzi Hit-Discovery Screening Cascade.

Manu De Rycker; John Thomas; Jennifer Riley; Stephen J Brough; Tim J. Miles; David W. Gray

Chagas disease is a significant health problem in Latin America and the available treatments have significant issues in terms of toxicity and efficacy. There is thus an urgent need to develop new treatments either via a repurposing strategy or through the development of new chemical entities. A key first step is the identification of compounds with anti-Trypanosoma cruzi activity from compound libraries. Here we describe a hit discovery screening cascade designed to specifically identify hits that have the appropriate anti-parasitic properties to warrant further development. The cascade consists of a primary imaging-based assay followed by newly developed and appropriately scaled secondary assays to predict the cidality and rate-of-kill of the compounds. Finally, we incorporated a cytochrome P450 CYP51 biochemical assay to remove compounds that owe their phenotypic response to inhibition of this enzyme. We report the use of the cascade in profiling two small libraries containing clinically tested compounds and identify Clemastine, Azelastine, Ifenprodil, Ziprasidone and Clofibrate as molecules having appropriate profiles. Analysis of clinical derived pharmacokinetic and toxicity data indicates that none of these are appropriate for repurposing but they may represent suitable start points for further optimisation for the treatment of Chagas disease.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2015

Development and Validation of a Novel Leishmania donovani Screening Cascade for High-Throughput Screening Using a Novel Axenic Assay with High Predictivity of Leishmanicidal Intracellular Activity

Andrea Nühs; Manu De Rycker; Sujatha Manthri; Eamon Comer; Christina Scherer; Stuart L. Schreiber; Jean-Robert Ioset; David Michael Gray

Visceral leishmaniasis is an important parasitic disease of the developing world with a limited arsenal of drugs available for treatment. The existing drugs have significant deficiencies so there is an urgent need for new and improved drugs. In the human host, Leishmania are obligate intracellular parasites which poses particular challenges in terms of drug discovery. To achieve sufficient throughput and robustness, free-living parasites are often used in primary screening assays as a surrogate for the more complex intracellular assays. We and others have found that such axenic assays have a high false positive rate relative to the intracellular assays, and that this limits their usefulness as a primary platform for screening of large compound collections. While many different reasons could lie behind the poor translation from axenic parasite to intracellular parasite, we show here that a key factor is the identification of growth slowing and cytostatic compounds by axenic assays in addition to the more desirable cytocidal compounds. We present a screening cascade based on a novel cytocidal-only axenic amastigote assay, developed by increasing starting density of cells and lowering the limit of detection, and show that it has a much improved translation to the intracellular assay. We propose that this assay is an improved primary platform in a new Leishmania screening cascade designed for the screening of large compound collections. This cascade was employed to screen a diversity-oriented-synthesis library, and yielded two novel antileishmanial chemotypes. The approach we have taken may have broad relevance to anti-infective and anti-parasitic drug discovery.


ChemMedChem | 2015

Discovery of Inhibitors of Trypanosoma brucei by Phenotypic Screening of a Focused Protein Kinase Library.

Andrew Woodland; Stephen Thompson; Laura A. T. Cleghorn; Neil R. Norcross; Manu De Rycker; Raffaella Grimaldi; Irene Hallyburton; Bhavya Rao; Suzanne Norval; Laste Stojanovski; Reto Brun; Marcel Kaiser; Julie A. Frearson; David W. Gray; Paul G. Wyatt; Kevin D. Read; Ian H. Gilbert

A screen of a focused kinase inhibitor library against Trypanosoma brucei rhodesiense led to the identification of seven series, totaling 121 compounds, which showed >50 % inhibition at 5 μm. Screening of these hits in a T. b. brucei proliferation assay highlighted three compounds with a 1H‐imidazo[4,5‐b]pyrazin‐2(3H)‐one scaffold that showed sub‐micromolar activity and excellent selectivity against the MRC5 cell line. Subsequent rounds of optimisation led to the identification of compounds that exhibited good in vitro drug metabolism and pharmacokinetics (DMPK) properties, although in general this series suffered from poor solubility. A scaffold‐hopping exercise led to the identification of a 1H‐pyrazolo[3,4‐b]pyridine scaffold, which retained potency. A number of examples were assessed in a T. b. brucei growth assay, which could differentiate static and cidal action. Compounds from the 1H‐imidazo[4,5‐b]pyrazin‐2(3H)‐one series were found to be either static or growth‐slowing and not cidal. Compounds with the 1H‐pyrazolo[3,4‐b]pyridine scaffold were found to be cidal and showed an unusual biphasic nature in this assay, suggesting they act by at least two mechanisms.


Nature | 2018

Cyclin-dependent kinase 12 is a drug target for visceral leishmaniasis

Susan Wyllie; Michael George Thomas; Stephen Patterson; Sabrinia Crouch; Manu De Rycker; Rhiannon Lowe; Stephanie Gresham; Michael D. Urbaniak; Thomas D. Otto; Laste Stojanovski; Frederick R. C. Simeons; Sujatha Manthri; Lorna MacLean; Fabio Zuccotto; Nadine Homeyer; Hannah Pflaumer; Markus Boesche; Lalitha Sastry; Paul Connolly; Sebastian Albrecht; Matthew Berriman; Gerard Drewes; David W. Gray; Sonja Ghidelli-Disse; Susan Dixon; Jose M. Fiandor; Paul G. Wyatt; Michael A. J. Ferguson; Alan H. Fairlamb; Timothy James Miles

Visceral leishmaniasis causes considerable mortality and morbidity in many parts of the world. There is an urgent need for the development of new, effective treatments for this disease. Here we describe the development of an anti-leishmanial drug-like chemical series based on a pyrazolopyrimidine scaffold. The leading compound from this series (7, DDD853651/GSK3186899) is efficacious in a mouse model of visceral leishmaniasis, has suitable physicochemical, pharmacokinetic and toxicological properties for further development, and has been declared a preclinical candidate. Detailed mode-of-action studies indicate that compounds from this series act principally by inhibiting the parasite cdc-2-related kinase 12 (CRK12), thus defining a druggable target for visceral leishmaniasis.A series of compounds are discovered for the treatment of visceral leishmaniasis, and cdc2-related kinase 12 (CRK12) is identified as the probable primary drug target.


ACS Infectious Diseases | 2017

Chemical Validation of Methionyl-tRNA Synthetase as a Druggable Target in Leishmania donovani

Leah S. Torrie; Stephen Brand; David A. Robinson; Eun Jung Ko; Laste Stojanovski; Frederick R. C. Simeons; Susan Wyllie; John Thomas; Lucy Ellis; Maria Osuna-Cabello; Ola Epemolu; Andrea Nühs; Jennifer Riley; Lorna MacLean; Sujatha Manthri; Kevin D. Read; Ian H. Gilbert; Alan H. Fairlamb; Manu De Rycker

Methionyl-tRNA synthetase (MetRS) has been chemically validated as a drug target in the kinetoplastid parasite Trypanosoma brucei. In the present study, we investigate the validity of this target in the related trypanosomatid Leishmania donovani. Following development of a robust high-throughput compatible biochemical assay, a compound screen identified DDD806905 as a highly potent inhibitor of LdMetRS (Ki of 18 nM). Crystallography revealed this compound binds to the methionine pocket of MetRS with enzymatic studies confirming DDD806905 displays competitive inhibition with respect to methionine and mixed inhibition with respect to ATP binding. DDD806905 showed activity, albeit with different levels of potency, in various Leishmania cell-based viability assays, with on-target activity observed in both Leishmania promastigote cell assays and a Leishmania tarentolae in vitro translation assay. Unfortunately, this compound failed to show efficacy in an animal model of leishmaniasis. We investigated the potential causes for the discrepancies in activity observed in different Leishmania cell assays and the lack of efficacy in the animal model and found that high protein binding as well as sequestration of this dibasic compound into acidic compartments may play a role. Despite medicinal chemistry efforts to address the dibasic nature of DDD806905 and analogues, no progress could be achieved with the current chemical series. Although DDD806905 is not a developable antileishmanial compound, MetRS remains an attractive antileishmanial drug target.

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