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Dive into the research topics where Matthew Perry is active.

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Featured researches published by Matthew Perry.


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 | 2014

Impact of stereospecific intramolecular hydrogen bonding on cell permeability and physicochemical properties.

Björn Over; Patrick McCarren; Per Artursson; Michael Foley; Fabrizio Giordanetto; Gunnar Grönberg; Constanze Hilgendorf; Maurice D. Lee; Pär Matsson; Giovanni Muncipinto; Mélanie Pellisson; Matthew Perry; Richard Svensson; Jeremy R. Duvall; Jan Kihlberg

Profiling of eight stereoisomeric T. cruzi growth inhibitors revealed vastly different in vitro properties such as solubility, lipophilicity, pKa, and cell permeability for two sets of four stereoisomers. Using computational chemistry and NMR spectroscopy, we identified the formation of an intramolecular NH→NR3 hydrogen bond in the set of stereoisomers displaying lower solubility, higher lipophilicity, and higher cell permeability. The intramolecular hydrogen bond resulted in a significant pKa difference that accounts for the other structure–property relationships. Application of this knowledge could be of particular value to maintain the delicate balance of size, solubility, and lipophilicity required for cell penetration and oral administration for chemical probes or therapeutics with properties at, or beyond, Lipinski’s rule of 5.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2016

Structural and conformational determinants of macrocycle cell permeability

Björn Over; Pär Matsson; Christian Tyrchan; Per Artursson; Bradley C. Doak; Michael Foley; Constanze Hilgendorf; Stephen Johnston; Maurice D. Lee; Richard J. Lewis; Patrick McCarren; Giovanni Muncipinto; Ulf Norinder; Matthew Perry; Jeremy R. Duvall; Jan Kihlberg

Macrocycles are of increasing interest as chemical probes and drugs for intractable targets like protein-protein interactions, but the determinants of their cell permeability and oral absorption are poorly understood. To enable rational design of cell-permeable macrocycles, we generated an extensive data set under consistent experimental conditions for more than 200 non-peptidic, de novo-designed macrocycles from the Broad Institutes diversity-oriented screening collection. This revealed how specific functional groups, substituents and molecular properties impact cell permeability. Analysis of energy-minimized structures for stereo- and regioisomeric sets provided fundamental insight into how dynamic, intramolecular interactions in the 3D conformations of macrocycles may be linked to physicochemical properties and permeability. Combined use of quantitative structure-permeability modeling and the procedure for conformational analysis now, for the first time, provides chemists with a rational approach to design cell-permeable non-peptidic macrocycles with potential for oral absorption.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015

Identification of indole inhibitors of human hematopoietic prostaglandin D2 synthase (hH-PGDS).

Fredrik Edfeldt; Johan Evenäs; Matti Lepistö; Alison Ward; Jens Petersen; Lisa Wissler; Mattias Rohman; Ulf Sivars; Karin Svensson; Matthew Perry; Isabella Feierberg; Xiao-Hong Zhou; Thomas Hansson; Frank Narjes

Human H-PGDS has shown promise as a potential target for anti-allergic and anti-inflammatory drugs. Here we describe the discovery of a novel class of indole inhibitors, identified through focused screening of 42,000 compounds and evaluated using a series of hit validation assays that included fluorescence polarization binding, 1D NMR, ITC and chromogenic enzymatic assays. Compounds with low nanomolar potency, favorable physico-chemical properties and inhibitory activity in human mast cells have been identified. In addition, our studies suggest that the active site of hH-PGDS can accommodate larger structural diversity than previously thought, such as the introduction of polar groups in the inner part of the binding pocket.


Organic Letters | 2016

Asymmetric Reduction of Lactam-Based β-Aminoacrylates. Synthesis of Heterocyclic β2-Amino Acids

Hugo Rego Campello; Jeremy S. Parker; Matthew Perry; Per Ryberg; Timothy Gallagher

The ability to affect asymmetric reduction of heterocyclic β-aminoacrylates 1 (n = 1-3) has been assessed with pyrrolidine and piperidone variants generating the corresponding N-heterocyclic β(2)-amino acids 3b and 5b with high enantioselectivity (≥97% ee) using a Rh/WALPHOS catalyst combination. The use of the carboxylic acid substrate was essential; the corresponding esters do undergo reduction but led to racemic products. The seven-ring azepanone variant (as the carboxylic acid 9b) underwent reduction, but only a minimal level of asymmetric induction was observed.


Expert Opinion on Drug Discovery | 2017

Stabilization of protein-protein interactions in drug discovery

Sebastian A. Andrei; Eline Sijbesma; Michael M. Hann; Jeremy Davis; Gavin O’Mahony; Matthew Perry; Anna Karawajczyk; Jan Eickhoff; Luc Brunsveld; Richard G. Doveston; Lech-Gustav Milroy; Christian Ottmann

ABSTRACT Introduction: PPIs are involved in every disease and specific modulation of these PPIs with small molecules would significantly improve our prospects of developing therapeutic agents. Both industry and academia have engaged in the identification and use of PPI inhibitors. However in comparison, the opposite strategy of employing small-molecule stabilizers of PPIs is underrepresented in drug discovery. Areas covered: PPI stabilization has not been exploited in a systematic manner. Rather, this concept validated by a number of therapeutically used natural products like rapamycin and paclitaxel has been shown retrospectively to be the basis of the activity of synthetic molecules originating from drug discovery projects among them lenalidomide and tafamidis. Here, the authors cover the growing number of synthetic small-molecule PPI stabilizers to advocate for a stronger consideration of this as a drug discovery approach. Expert opinion: Both the natural products and the growing number of synthetic molecules show that PPI stabilization is a viable strategy for drug discovery. There is certainly a significant challenge to adapt compound libraries, screening techniques and downstream methodologies to identify, characterize and optimize PPI stabilizers, but the examples of molecules reviewed here in our opinion justify these efforts.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2017

Discovery of triazole aminopyrazines as a highly potent and selective series of PI3Kδ inhibitors

Ina Terstiege; Matthew Perry; Jens Petersen; Christian Tyrchan; Tor Svensson; Helena Lindmark; Linda Öster

A novel class of potent PI3Kδ inhibitors with >1000-fold selectivity against other class I PI3K isoforms is described. Optimization of the substituents on a triazole aminopyrazine scaffold, emerging from an in-house PI3Kα program, turned moderately selective PI3Kδ compounds into highly potent and selective PI3Kδ inhibitors. These efforts resulted in a series of aminopyrazines with PI3Kδ IC50⩽1nM in the enzyme assay, some of the most selective PI3Kδ inhibitors published to date, with a cell potency in a JeKo-cell assay of 20-120nM.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2018

Discovery of Highly Isoform Selective Orally Bioavailable Phosphoinositide 3-Kinase (PI3K)-γ Inhibitors

Nils Pemberton; Mickael Mogemark; Susanne Arlbrandt; Peter Bold; Rhona Jane Cox; Cristina Gardelli; Neil S. Holden; Kostas Karabelas; Johan Karlsson; Sarah Lever; Xueshan Li; Helena Lindmark; Monica Norberg; Matthew Perry; Jens Petersen; Sandra Rodrigo Blomqvist; Matthew Thomas; Christian Tyrchan; Annika Westin Eriksson; Pavol Zlatoidsky; Linda Öster

In this paper, we describe the discovery and optimization of a new chemotype of isoform selective PI3Kγ inhibitors. Starting from an HTS hit, potency and physicochemical properties could be improved to give compounds such as 15, which is a potent and remarkably selective PI3Kγ inhibitor with ADME properties suitable for oral administration. Compound 15 was advanced into in vivo studies showing dose-dependent inhibition of LPS-induced airway neutrophilia in rats when administered orally.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017

Design and Synthesis of Soluble and Cell-Permeable PI3Kδ Inhibitors for Long-Acting Inhaled Administration

Matthew Perry; Karin Björhall; Britta K. Bonn; Johan Carlsson; Yunhua Chen; Anders Eriksson; Linda Fredlund; Hai'e Hao; Neil S. Holden; Kostas Karabelas; Helena Lindmark; Feifei Liu; Nils Pemberton; Jens Petersen; Sandra Rodrigo Blomqvist; Reed W. Smith; Tor Svensson; Ina Terstiege; Christian Tyrchan; Wenzhen Yang; Shuchun Zhao; Linda Öster

PI3Kδ is a lipid kinase that is believed to be important in the migration and activation of cells of the immune system. Inhibition is hypothesized to provide a powerful yet selective immunomodulatory effect that may be beneficial for the treatment of conditions such as asthma or rheumatoid arthritis. In this work, we describe the identification of inhibitors based on a thiazolopyridone core structure and their subsequent optimization for inhalation. The initially identified compound (13) had good potency and isoform selectivity but was not suitable for inhalation. Addition of basic substituents to a region of the molecule pointing to solvent was tolerated (enzyme inhibition pIC50 > 9), and by careful manipulation of the pKa and lipophilicity, we were able to discover compounds (20b, 20f) with good lung retention and cell potency that could be taken forward to in vivo studies where significant target engagement could be demonstrated.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2005

Monocarboxylate transporter MCT1 is a target for immunosuppression

Clare Murray; Raymond Hutchinson; John Bantick; Graham Belfield; Amanda Benjamin; Diana Brazma; Robert V Bundick; I David Cook; Robert I. Craggs; Susan Edwards; Leslie R Evans; Richard Harrison; Elain Holness; Andrew Paul Jackson; Clive Geoffrey Jackson; Lee P. Kingston; Matthew Perry; Andrew R J Ross; Paul Rugman; Sasvinder S Sidhu; Michael Sullivan; David A Taylor-Fishwick; P Craig Walker; Yvonne M Whitehead; David J. Wilkinson; Andrew F. Wright; David Donald

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