Matthew Richards
Merck & Co.
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Featured researches published by Matthew Richards.
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012
Xiaohua Huang; Cliff C. Cheng; Thierry O. Fischmann; Jose S. Duca; Xianshu Yang; Matthew Richards; Gerald W. Shipps
A novel series of CHK1 inhibitors with a distinctive hinge binding mode, exemplified by 2-aryl-N-(2-(piperazin-1-yl)phenyl)thiazole-4-carboxamide, was discovered through high-throughput screening using the affinity selection-mass spectrometry (AS-MS)-based Automated Ligand Identification System (ALIS) platform. Structure-based ligand design and optimization led to significant improvements in potency to the single digit nanomolar range and hundred-fold selectivity against CDK2.
Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2016
Victoria Kutilek; Christine L. Andrews; Matthew Richards; Zangwei Xu; Tianxiao Sun; Yiping Chen; Andrew Hashke; Nadya Smotrov; Rafael Fernandez; Elliott Nickbarg; Chad Chamberlin; Berengere Sauvagnat; Patrick J. Curran; Ryan Boinay; Peter Saradjian; Samantha J. Allen; Noel Byrne; Nathaniel L. Elsen; Rachael E. Ford; Dawn L. Hall; Maria Kornienko; Keith W. Rickert; Sujata Sharma; Jennifer M. Shipman; Kevin J. Lumb; Kevin Coleman; Peter J. Dandliker; Ilona Kariv; Bruce A. Beutel
The primary objective of early drug discovery is to associate druggable target space with a desired phenotype. The inability to efficiently associate these often leads to failure early in the drug discovery process. In this proof-of-concept study, the most tractable starting points for drug discovery within the NF-κB pathway model system were identified by integrating affinity selection–mass spectrometry (AS-MS) with functional cellular assays. The AS-MS platform Automated Ligand Identification System (ALIS) was used to rapidly screen 15 NF-κB proteins in parallel against large-compound libraries. ALIS identified 382 target-selective compounds binding to 14 of the 15 proteins. Without any chemical optimization, 22 of the 382 target-selective compounds exhibited a cellular phenotype consistent with the respective target associated in ALIS. Further studies on structurally related compounds distinguished two chemical series that exhibited a preliminary structure-activity relationship and confirmed target-driven cellular activity to NF-κB1/p105 and TRAF5, respectively. These two series represent new drug discovery opportunities for chemical optimization. The results described herein demonstrate the power of combining ALIS with cell functional assays in a high-throughput, target-based approach to determine the most tractable drug discovery opportunities within a pathway.
ACS Chemical Biology | 2018
Noreen F. Rizvi; John A. Howe; Ali Nahvi; Daniel J. Klein; Thierry O. Fischmann; Hai-Young Kim; Mark A. McCoy; Scott S. Walker; Alan Hruza; Matthew Richards; Chad Chamberlin; Peter Saradjian; Margaret T. Butko; Gabriel Mercado; Julja Burchard; Corey Strickland; Peter J. Dandliker; Graham F. Smith; Elliott Nickbarg
Recent advances in understanding the relevance of noncoding RNA (ncRNA) to disease have increased interest in drugging ncRNA with small molecules. The recent discovery of ribocil, a structurally distinct synthetic mimic of the natural ligand of the flavin mononucleotide (FMN) riboswitch, has revealed the potential chemical diversity of small molecules that target ncRNA. Affinity-selection mass spectrometry (AS-MS) is theoretically applicable to high-throughput screening (HTS) of small molecules binding to ncRNA. Here, we report the first application of the Automated Ligand Detection System (ALIS), an indirect AS-MS technique, for the selective detection of small molecule-ncRNA interactions, high-throughput screening against large unbiased small-molecule libraries, and identification and characterization of novel compounds (structurally distinct from both FMN and ribocil) that target the FMN riboswitch. Crystal structures reveal that different compounds induce various conformations of the FMN riboswitch, leading to different activity profiles. Our findings validate the ALIS platform for HTS screening for RNA-binding small molecules and further demonstrate that ncRNA can be broadly targeted by chemically diverse yet selective small molecules as therapeutics.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013
Xiaohua Huang; Cliff C. Cheng; Thierry O. Fischmann; Jose S. Duca; Matthew Richards; Praveen K. Tadikonda; Panduranga Adulla P. Reddy; Lianyun Zhao; M. Arshad Siddiqui; David Parry; Nicole Davis; Wolfgang Seghezzi; Derek Wiswell; Gerald W. Shipps
Archive | 2007
Gerald W. Shipps; Cliff C. Cheng; Xiaohua Huang; Thierry O. Fischmann; Jose S. Duca; Matthew Richards; Hongbo Zeng; Binyuan Sun; Panduranga Adulla P. Reddy; Lianyun Zhao; Shuyi Tang; Tzu T. Wong; Praveen K. Tadikonda; Luis Torres; M. Arshad Siddiqui; Michael P. Dwyer; Kartik M. Keertikar; Timothy J. Guzi
Archive | 2007
Gerald W. Shipps; Cliff C. Cheng; Xiaohua Huang; Thierry O. Fischmann; Jose S. Duca; Matthew Richards; Hongbo Zeng; Binyuan Sun; Panduranga Adulla P. Reddy; Tzu T. Wong; Praveen K. Tadikonda; M. Arshad Siddiqui; Marc Labroli; Cory Poker; Timothy J. Guzi
Archive | 2008
Gerald W. Shipps; Matthew Richards; Cliff C. Cheng; Xiaohua Huang
Nature | 2018
Nathan J. Gesmundo; Berengere Sauvagnat; Patrick J. Curran; Matthew Richards; Christine L. Andrews; Peter J. Dandliker; Tim Cernak
Archive | 2008
Gerald W. Shipps; Matthew Richards; Cliff C. Cheng; Xiaohua Huang
Archive | 2010
Yongqi Deng; Binyuan Sun; Hongbo Zeng; Matthew Richards; Gerald W. Shipps; Cliff C. Cheng; Yinyan Zhao; Andrew Mcriner; Zhaoyang Meng; Yang Nan; Mehul F. Patel; Iwona E. Wrona; Panduranga Adulla P. Reddy; Brian M. Eklov; Shuyi Tang; Duan Liu; Amit K. Mandal; Lianyun Zhao; M. Arshad Siddiqui