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Dive into the research topics where Margarete Neu is active.

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Featured researches published by Margarete Neu.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Encoded Library Technology as a Source of Hits for the Discovery and Lead Optimization of a Potent and Selective Class of Bactericidal Direct Inhibitors of Mycobacterium tuberculosis InhA

Lourdes Encinas; Heather O’Keefe; Margarete Neu; Modesto J. Remuiñán; Amish Patel; Ana Guardia; Christopher P. Davie; Natalia Pérez-Macías; Hongfang Yang; Jeff A. Messer; Esther Pérez-Herrán; Paolo A. Centrella; Daniel Álvarez-Gómez; Matthew A. Clark; Sophie Huss; Gary O’Donovan; Fátima Ortega-Muro; William McDowell; Pablo Castañeda; Christopher C. Arico-Muendel; Stane Pajk; Joaquín Rullas; Iñigo Angulo-Barturen; Emilio Alvarez-Ruiz; Alfonso Mendoza-Losana; Lluís Pagès; Julia Castro-Pichel; Ghotas Evindar

Tuberculosis (TB) is one of the worlds oldest and deadliest diseases, killing a person every 20 s. InhA, the enoyl-ACP reductase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis, is the target of the frontline antitubercular drug isoniazid (INH). Compounds that directly target InhA and do not require activation by mycobacterial catalase peroxidase KatG are promising candidates for treating infections caused by INH resistant strains. The application of the encoded library technology (ELT) to the discovery of direct InhA inhibitors yielded compound 7 endowed with good enzymatic potency but with low antitubercular potency. This work reports the hit identification, the selected strategy for potency optimization, the structure-activity relationships of a hundred analogues synthesized, and the results of the in vivo efficacy studies performed with the lead compound 65.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008

Pyrazolopyridines as a novel structural class of potent and selective PDE4 inhibitors.

J. Nicole Hamblin; Tony D. Angell; Stuart P. Ballantine; Caroline Mary Cook; Anthony William James Cooper; John Dawson; Christopher J. Delves; Paul Jones; Mika Kristian Lindvall; Fiona S. Lucas; Charlotte Jane Mitchell; Margarete Neu; Lisa E. Ranshaw; Yemisi E. Solanke; Don O. Somers; Joanne Wiseman

Optimisation of a high-throughput screening hit resulted in the discovery of 4-(substituted amino)-1-alkyl-pyrazolo[3,4-b]pyridine-5-carboxamides as potent and selective inhibitors of Phosphodiesterase 4 (PDE4). Herein, we describe early SAR studies around this novel template highlighting preferred substituents and rationalization of SAR through X-ray crystal structures of analogues bound to the PDE4 active site. Pyrazolopyridine 20a was found to be a potent and selective PDE4 inhibitor which also inhibits LPS induced TNF-alpha production from isolated human peripheral blood mononuclear cells and has an encouraging rat PK profile suitable for oral dosing.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Quinolines as a novel structural class of potent and selective PDE4 inhibitors. Optimisation for inhaled administration.

Michael D. Woodrow; Stuart P. Ballantine; Michael David Barker; Beth J. Clarke; John Dawson; Tony W. Dean; Christopher J. Delves; Brian Evans; Sharon Lisa Gough; Steven B. Guntrip; Stuart Holman; Duncan S. Holmes; Michael Kranz; Mika K. Lindvaal; Fiona S. Lucas; Margarete Neu; Lisa E. Ranshaw; Yemisi E. Solanke; Don O. Somers; Peter Stevenage Ward; Joanne Wiseman

Crystallography-driven optimisation of a lead derived from similarity searching of the GSK compound collection resulted in the discovery of a series of quinoline derivatives that were highly potent and selective inhibitors of PDE4 with a good pharmacokinetic profile in the rat. Quinolines 43 and 48 have potential as oral medicines for the treatment of COPD.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Discovery of GSK143, a highly potent, selective and orally efficacious spleen tyrosine kinase inhibitor.

John Liddle; Francis Louis Atkinson; Michael David Barker; Paul S. Carter; Neil R. Curtis; Robert P. Davis; Clement Douault; Marion C. Dickson; Dorothy Elwes; Neil Stuart Garton; Matthew Gray; Thomas G. Hayhow; Clare I. Hobbs; Emma Jones; Stuart G. Leach; Karen Leavens; Huw D. Lewis; Scott McCleary; Margarete Neu; Vipulkumar Kantibhai Patel; Alex G.S. Preston; Cesar Ramirez-Molina; Tracy Jane Shipley; Philip Alan Skone; Nick Smithers; Donald O. Somers; Ann Louise Walker; Robert J. Watson; Gordon G. Weingarten

The lead optimisation of the diaminopyrimidine carboxamide series of spleen tyrosine kinase inhibitors is described. The medicinal chemistry strategy was focused on optimising the human whole blood activity whilst achieving a sufficient margin over liability kinases and hERG activity. GSK143 is a potent and highly selective SYK inhibitor showing good efficacy in the rat Arthus model.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2009

Identification of PDE4B Over 4D subtype-selective inhibitors revealing an unprecedented binding mode

Michael Kranz; Michael D. Wall; Brian Evans; Afjal H. Miah; Stuart P. Ballantine; Chris J. Delves; Brian Dombroski; Jeffrey W. Gross; Jessica Schneck; James P. Villa; Margarete Neu; Don O. Somers

A PDE4B over 4D-selective inhibitor programme was initiated to capitalise on the recently discovered predominance of the PDE4B subtype in inflammatory cell regulation. The SAR of a tetrahydrobenzothiophene (THBT) series did not agree with either of two proposed docking modes in the 4B binding site. A subsequent X-ray co-crystal structure determination revealed that the THBT ligand displaces the Gln-443 residue, invariably ligand-anchoring in previous PDE4 co-crystal structures, and even shifts helix-15 by 1-2A. For the first time, several residues of the C-terminus previously proposed to be involved in subtype selectivity are resolved and three of them extend into the ligand binding site potentially allowing for selective drug design.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

5-Aryl-4-carboxamide-1,3-oxazoles: Potent and selective GSK-3 inhibitors

Gabriella Gentile; Giancarlo Merlo; Alfonso Pozzan; Giovanni Bernasconi; Benjamin D. Bax; Paul Bamborough; Angela Bridges; Paul S. Carter; Margarete Neu; Gang Yao; Caroline Brough; Geoffrey J. Cutler; Aaron Coffin; Svetlana L. Belyanskaya

5-Aryl-4-carboxamide-1,3-oxazoles are a novel, potent and selective series of GSK-3 inhibitors. The optimization of the series to yield compounds with cell activity and brain permeability is described.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Pyrazolopyridines as potent PDE4B inhibitors: 5-heterocycle SAR.

Charlotte Jane Mitchell; Stuart P. Ballantine; Diane Mary Coe; Caroline Mary Cook; Christopher J. Delves; Mike D. Dowle; Chris D. Edlin; J. Nicole Hamblin; Stuart Holman; Martin R. Johnson; Paul Jones; Sue E. Keeling; Michael Kranz; Mika Kristian Lindvall; Fiona S. Lucas; Margarete Neu; Yemisi E. Solanke; Don O. Somers; Naimisha Trivedi; Joanne Wiseman

Following the discovery of 4-(substituted amino)-1-alkyl-pyrazolo[3,4-b]pyridine-5-carboxamides as potent and selective phosphodiesterase 4B inhibitors, [Hamblin, J. N.; Angell, T.; Ballentine, S., et al. Bioorg. Med. Chem. Lett.2008, 18, 4237] the SAR of the 5-position was investigated further. A range of substituted heterocycles showed good potencies against PDE4. Optimisation using X-ray crystallography and computational modelling led to the discovery of 16, with sub-nM inhibition of LPS-induced TNF-α production from isolated human peripheral blood mononuclear cells.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Identification of 2-(4-pyridyl)thienopyridinones as GSK-3β inhibitors.

Gabriella Gentile; Giovanni Bernasconi; Alfonso Pozzan; Giancarlo Merlo; Paola Marzorati; Paul Bamborough; Benjamin D. Bax; Angela Bridges; Caroline Brough; Paul S. Carter; Geoffrey J. Cutler; Margarete Neu; Mia Takada

The discovery of a novel series of 2-(4-pyridyl)thienopyridinone GSK-3β inhibitors is reported. X-ray crystallography reveals its binding mode and enables rationalization of the SAR. The initial optimization of the template for improved cellular activity and predicted CNS penetration is also presented.


Nature Communications | 2016

Identification of KasA as the cellular target of an anti-tubercular scaffold

Katherine A. Abrahams; Chun-wa Chung; Sonja Ghidelli-Disse; Joaquín Rullas; María José Rebollo-López; Sudagar S. Gurcha; Jonathan A. G. Cox; Alfonso Mendoza; Elena Jimenez-Navarro; María S. Martínez-Martínez; Margarete Neu; Anthony Shillings; Paul Homes; Argyrides Argyrou; Ruth Casanueva; Nicholas J. Loman; Patrick J. Moynihan; Joël Lelièvre; Carolyn Selenski; Matthew Axtman; Laurent Kremer; Marcus Bantscheff; Iñigo Angulo-Barturen; Mónica Cacho Izquierdo; Nicholas Cammack; Gerard Drewes; Lluis Ballell; David Barros; Gurdyal S. Besra; Robert H. Bates

Phenotypic screens for bactericidal compounds are starting to yield promising hits against tuberculosis. In this regard, whole-genome sequencing of spontaneous resistant mutants generated against an indazole sulfonamide (GSK3011724A) identifies several specific single-nucleotide polymorphisms in the essential Mycobacterium tuberculosis β-ketoacyl synthase (kas) A gene. Here, this genomic-based target assignment is confirmed by biochemical assays, chemical proteomics and structural resolution of a KasA-GSK3011724A complex by X-ray crystallography. Finally, M. tuberculosis GSK3011724A-resistant mutants increase the in vitro minimum inhibitory concentration and the in vivo 99% effective dose in mice, establishing in vitro and in vivo target engagement. Surprisingly, the lack of target engagement of the related β-ketoacyl synthases (FabH and KasB) suggests a different mode of inhibition when compared with other Kas inhibitors of fatty acid biosynthesis in bacteria. These results clearly identify KasA as the biological target of GSK3011724A and validate this enzyme for further drug discovery efforts against tuberculosis.


European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016

New direct inhibitors of InhA with antimycobacterial activity based on a tetrahydropyran scaffold

Stane Pajk; Matej Živec; Roman Šink; Izidor Sosič; Margarete Neu; Chun-wa Chung; María Martínez-Hoyos; Esther Pérez-Herrán; Daniel Álvarez-Gómez; Emilio Alvarez-Ruiz; Alfonso Mendoza-Losana; Julia Castro-Pichel; David Barros; Lluís Ballell-Pages; Robert J. Young; Lourdes Encinas; Stanislav Gobec

Tetrahydropyran derivative 1 was discovered in a high-throughput screening campaign to find new inhibitors of mycobacterial InhA. Following initial in-vitro profiling, a structure-activity relationship study was initiated and a focused library of analogs was synthesized and evaluated. This yielded compound 42 with improved antimycobacterial activity and low cytotoxicity. Additionally, the crystal structure of InhA in complex with inhibitor 1 was resolved, to reveal the binding mode and provide hints for further optimization.

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