Neil Stuart Garton
GlaxoSmithKline
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Publication
Featured researches published by Neil Stuart Garton.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011
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.
Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2016
Omer Gilan; Enid Y. N. Lam; Isabelle Becher; Dave Lugo; Ester Cannizzaro; Gerard Joberty; Aoife Ward; Meike Wiese; Chun Yew Fong; Sarah Ftouni; Dean Tyler; Kym Stanley; Laura MacPherson; Chen Fang Weng; Yih-Chih Chan; Margherita Ghisi; David Smil; Christopher Carpenter; Peter J. Brown; Neil Stuart Garton; Marnie E. Blewitt; Andrew J. Bannister; Tony Kouzarides; Brian J. P. Huntly; Ricky W. Johnstone; Gerard Drewes; Sarah-Jane Dawson; C.H. Arrowsmith; Paola Grandi; Rab K. Prinjha
Targeted therapies against disruptor of telomeric silencing 1-like (DOT1L) and bromodomain-containing protein 4 (BRD4) are currently being evaluated in clinical trials. However, the mechanisms by which BRD4 and DOT1L regulate leukemogenic transcription programs remain unclear. Using quantitative proteomics, chemoproteomics and biochemical fractionation, we found that native BRD4 and DOT1L exist in separate protein complexes. Genetic disruption or small-molecule inhibition of BRD4 and DOT1L showed marked synergistic activity against MLL leukemia cell lines, primary human leukemia cells and mouse leukemia models. Mechanistically, we found a previously unrecognized functional collaboration between DOT1L and BRD4 that is especially important at highly transcribed genes in proximity to superenhancers. DOT1L, via dimethylated histone H3 K79, facilitates histone H4 acetylation, which in turn regulates the binding of BRD4 to chromatin. These data provide new insights into the regulation of transcription and specify a molecular framework for therapeutic intervention in this disease with poor prognosis.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016
Susan Marie Westaway; Alex G.S. Preston; Michael David Barker; Fiona Brown; Jack A. Brown; Matthew Campbell; Chun-wa Chung; Gerard Drewes; Robert Eagle; Neil Stuart Garton; Laurie J. Gordon; Carl Haslam; Thomas G. Hayhow; Philip G. Humphreys; Gerard Joberty; Roy Katso; Laurens Kruidenier; Melanie Leveridge; Michelle Pemberton; Inma Rioja; Gail A. Seal; Tracy Jane Shipley; Onkar M. P. Singh; Colin J. Suckling; Joanna Taylor; Pamela Thomas; David M. Wilson; Kevin Lee; Rab K. Prinjha
Following the discovery of cell penetrant pyridine-4-carboxylate inhibitors of the KDM4 (JMJD2) and KDM5 (JARID1) families of histone lysine demethylases (e.g., 1), further optimization led to the identification of non-carboxylate inhibitors derived from pyrido[3,4-d]pyrimidin-4(3H)-one. A number of exemplars such as compound 41 possess interesting activity profiles in KDM4C and KDM5C biochemical and target-specific, cellular mechanistic assays.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2015
Josefa M. Sullivan; Ana Badimon; Uwe Schaefer; Pinar Ayata; James R. J. Gray; Chun-wa Chung; Melanie von Schimmelmann; Fan Zhang; Neil Stuart Garton; Nicholas Smithers; Huw D. Lewis; Alexander Tarakhovsky; Rab K. Prinjha; Anne Schaefer
Sullivan et al. showed that pharmacological suppression of BET proteins by a highly selective brain-permeable inhibitor, results in the suppression of genes that have been linked to autism spectrum disorders in humans. BET inhibitor treatment of young mice led to the induction of an autism-like syndrome characterized by alterations in social behaviors. These findings suggest a key role of the BET-controlled gene networks in the development of ASD.
Science | 2017
Dean Tyler; Johanna Vappiani; Tatiana Cañeque; Enid Y. N. Lam; Aoife Ward; Omer Gilan; Yih-Chih Chan; Antje Hienzsch; Anna Rutkowska; Thilo Werner; Anne J. Wagner; Dave Lugo; Richard Gregory; César Ramírez Molina; Neil Stuart Garton; Christopher Roland Wellaway; Susan Jackson; Laura MacPherson; Margarida Figueiredo; Sabine Stolzenburg; Charles C. Bell; Colin M. House; Sarah-Jane Dawson; Edwin D. Hawkins; Gerard Drewes; Rab K. Prinjha; Raphaël Rodriguez; Paola Grandi; Mark A. Dawson
Are better drugs just a click away? Drugs that show promise in preclinical models often fail in the clinic, in part because of limited information on drug localization within cells and across tissues. In a proof-of-concept study, Tyler et al. applied click chemistry methods to study the localization of bromodomain inhibitors. These are cancer drugs that alter chromatin structure and gene expression. Clickable derivatives of the drugs localized within chromatin and showed that the drugs exhibit distinct modes of binding at responsive and unresponsive genes. In a mouse leukemia model, the click-probes revealed that the drugs accumulate to different extents in the spleen and bone marrow, which are two tissue sources of leukemic cells. Science, this issue p. 1397 Conversion of an epigenetic drug into a probe amenable to click chemistry allows visualization of the drug’s activity in vivo. The success of new therapies hinges on our ability to understand their molecular and cellular mechanisms of action. We modified BET bromodomain inhibitors, an epigenetic-based therapy, to create functionally conserved compounds that are amenable to click chemistry and can be used as molecular probes in vitro and in vivo. We used click proteomics and click sequencing to explore the gene regulatory function of BRD4 (bromodomain containing protein 4) and the transcriptional changes induced by BET inhibitors. In our studies of mouse models of acute leukemia, we used high-resolution microscopy and flow cytometry to highlight the heterogeneity of drug activity within tumor cells located in different tissue compartments. We also demonstrate the differential distribution and effects of BET inhibitors in normal and malignant cells in vivo. This study provides a potential framework for the preclinical assessment of a wide range of drugs.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009
Terry Panchal; Nicholas Bailey; Mark J. Bamford; Emmanuel Demont; Richard L. Elliott; Irene Farre-Gutierrez; Neil Stuart Garton; Thomas G. Hayhow; Gail Hutley; Antoinette Naylor
A variety of basic, heterocyclic templates has been reported as potassium-competitive, acid pump antagonists. Herein, we report a comparison of potencies of these templates and others to establish which offers the best start point for further systematic optimisation. Modifications were carried out to improve the developability profile of the more potent 1H-pyrrolo[2,3-c]pyridine template, affording molecules with improved overall in vitro characteristics versus the reported clinical candidate AR-H047108, and comparable to the clinically efficacious AZD-0865.
ACS Chemical Biology | 2016
Gerard Joberty; Markus Boesche; Jack A. Brown; Dirk Eberhard; Neil Stuart Garton; Philip G. Humphreys; Toby Mathieson; Marcel Muelbaier; Nigel Ramsden; Valerie Reader; Anne Rueger; Robert J. Sheppard; Susan Marie Westaway; Marcus Bantscheff; Kevin Lee; David Wilson; Rab K. Prinjha; Gerard Drewes
The 2-oxoglutarate-dependent dioxygenase target class comprises around 60 enzymes including several subfamilies with relevance to human disease, such as the prolyl hydroxylases and the Jumonji-type lysine demethylases. Current drug discovery approaches are largely based on small molecule inhibitors targeting the iron/2-oxoglutarate cofactor binding site. We have devised a chemoproteomics approach based on a combination of unselective active-site ligands tethered to beads, enabling affinity capturing of around 40 different dioxygenase enzymes from human cells. Mass-spectrometry-based quantification of bead-bound enzymes using a free-ligand competition-binding format enabled the comprehensive determination of affinities for the cosubstrate 2-oxoglutarate and for oncometabolites such as 2-hydroxyglutarate. We also profiled a set of representative drug-like inhibitor compounds. The results indicate that intracellular competition by endogenous cofactors and high active site similarity present substantial challenges for drug discovery for this target class.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009
Nicholas Bailey; Mark J. Bamford; Delphine Brissy; Joanna Brookfield; Emmanuel Demont; Richard L. Elliott; Neil Stuart Garton; Irene Farre-Gutierrez; Thomas G. Hayhow; Gail Hutley; Antoinette Naylor; Terry Panchal; Hui-Xian Seow; David J. Spalding; Andrew K. Takle
Acid pump antagonists (APAs) such as the imidazo[1,2-a]pyridine AZD-0865 2 have proven efficacious at low oral doses in acid related gastric disorders. Herein we describe some of the broader SAR in this class of molecule and detail the discovery of an imidazo[1,2-a]pyridine 15 which has excellent efficacy in animal models of gastric acid secretion following oral administration, as well as a good overall developability profile. The discovery strategy focuses on use of heteroaryl and heterocyclic substituents at the C-6 position and optimization of developability characteristics through modulation of global physico-chemical properties.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010
Neil Stuart Garton; Nicholas Bailey; Mark J. Bamford; Emmanuel Demont; Irene Farre-Gutierrez; Gail Hutley; Gianpaolo Bravi; Paula Louise Pickering
We report the identification of a novel biaryl template for H(+)/K(+) ATPase inhibition. Evaluation of critical SAR features within the biaryl imidazole framework and the use of pharmacophore modelling against known imidazopyridine and azaindole templates suggested that the geometry of the molecule is key to achieving activity. Herein we present our work optimising the potency of the molecule through modifications and substitutions to each of the ring systems. In particular sub-micromolar potency is achieved with (4b) presumably through a proposed intramolecular hydrogen bond that ensures the required imidazole basic centre is appropriately located.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2016
Neil Stuart Garton; Michael David Barker; Robert P. Davis; Clement Douault; Edward Hooper-Greenhill; Emma Jones; Huw D. Lewis; John Liddle; Dave Lugo; Scott McCleary; Alex G.S. Preston; Cesar Ramirez-Molina; Margarete Neu; Tracy Jane Shipley; Don O. Somers; Robert J. Watson; David Wilson
The optimisation of the azanaphthyridine 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 hERG activity. A good pharmacokinetic profile was achieved by modification of the pKa. Morpholine compound 32 is a potent SYK inhibitor showing moderate selectivity, good oral bioavailability and good efficacy in the rat Arthus model but demonstrated a genotoxic potential in the Ames assay.