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Dive into the research topics where Nicola Colclough is active.

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Featured researches published by Nicola Colclough.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Discovery of a Potent and Selective EGFR Inhibitor (AZD9291) of Both Sensitizing and T790M Resistance Mutations That Spares the Wild Type Form of the Receptor

M. Raymond V. Finlay; Mark J. Anderton; Susan Ashton; Peter Ballard; Paul A. Bethel; Matthew R. Box; Robert Hugh Bradbury; Simon Brown; Sam Butterworth; Andrew Campbell; Christopher G. Chorley; Nicola Colclough; Darren Cross; Gordon S. Currie; Matthew Grist; Lorraine Hassall; George B. Hill; Daniel S. James; Michael James; Paul D. Kemmitt; Teresa Klinowska; Gillian M. Lamont; Scott Lamont; Nathaniel G. Martin; Heather L. McFarland; Martine J. Mellor; Jonathon P. Orme; David Perkins; Paula Perkins; Graham Richmond

Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) inhibitors have been used clinically in the treatment of non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients harboring sensitizing (or activating) mutations for a number of years. Despite encouraging clinical efficacy with these agents, in many patients resistance develops leading to disease progression. In most cases, this resistance is in the form of the T790M mutation. In addition, EGFR wild type receptor inhibition inherent with these agents can lead to dose limiting toxicities of rash and diarrhea. We describe herein the evolution of an early, mutant selective lead to the clinical candidate AZD9291, an irreversible inhibitor of both EGFR sensitizing (EGFRm+) and T790M resistance mutations with selectivity over the wild type form of the receptor. Following observations of significant tumor inhibition in preclinical models, the clinical candidate was administered clinically to patients with T790M positive EGFR-TKI resistant NSCLC and early efficacy has been observed, accompanied by an encouraging safety profile.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Structure- and Reactivity-Based Development of Covalent Inhibitors of the Activating and Gatekeeper Mutant Forms of the Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor (EGFR)

Mark J. Anderton; Susan Ashton; Paul A. Bethel; Matthew R. Box; Sam Butterworth; Nicola Colclough; Christopher G. Chorley; Claudio Chuaqui; Darren Cross; Les A. Dakin; Judit É. Debreczeni; Cath Eberlein; M. Raymond V. Finlay; George B. Hill; Matthew Grist; Teresa Klinowska; Clare Lane; Scott Martin; Jonathon P. Orme; Peter Smith; Fengjiang Wang; Michael J. Waring

A novel series of small-molecule inhibitors has been developed to target the double mutant form of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) tyrosine kinase, which is resistant to treatment with gefitinib and erlotinib. Our reported compounds also show selectivity over wild-type EGFR. Guided by molecular modeling, this series was evolved to target a cysteine residue in the ATP binding site via covalent bond formation and demonstrates high levels of activity in cellular models of the double mutant form of EGFR. In addition, these compounds show significant activity against the activating mutations, which gefitinib and erlotinib target and inhibition of which gives rise to their observed clinical efficacy. A glutathione (GSH)-based assay was used to measure thiol reactivity toward the electrophilic functionality of the inhibitor series, enabling both the identification of a suitable reactivity window for their potency and the development of a reactivity quantitative structure-property relationship (QSPR) to support design.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

A combined spectroscopic and crystallographic approach to probing drug-human serum albumin interactions

David Buttar; Nicola Colclough; Stefan Gerhardt; Philip A. MacFaul; Scott D. Phillips; Alleyn T. Plowright; Paul R.O. Whittamore; Kin Yip Tam; Klaus Maskos; Stefan Steinbacher; Holger Steuber

The displacement of probes that bind selectively to subdomains IIA or IIIA on human serum albumin (HSA) by competing compounds has been followed using fluorescence spectroscopy, and has therefore been used to assign a primary binding site for these compounds in the presence and absence of fatty acids. The crystal structures have also been solved for three compounds: a matched pair of carboxylic acids whose binding strength to HSA unexpectedly decreased as the lipophilicity increased; and a highly bound sulphonamide that appeared not to displace the probes in the displacement assay. The crystallography results support the findings from the fluorescence displacement assay. The results indicate that drug binding to subdomain IB might also be important location for certain compounds.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015

Structure-Guided Design of Highly Selective and Potent Covalent Inhibitors of Erk1/2.

Nicola Colclough; Mairi Challinor; J.E. Debreczeni; Kay Eckersley; Gary Fairley; Lyman Feron; Vikki Flemington; Mark A. Graham; Ryan Greenwood; Philip Hopcroft; Tina Howard; Michael R. James; Clifford David Jones; Christopher R. Jones; Jonathan Renshaw; Karen Roberts; Lindsay Snow; Michael Tonge; Kay Yeung

The RAS/RAF/MEK/ERK signaling pathway has been targeted with a number of small molecule inhibitors in oncology clinical development across multiple disease indications. Importantly, cell lines with acquired resistance to B-RAF and MEK inhibitors have been shown to maintain sensitivity to ERK1/2 inhibition by small molecule inhibitors. There are a number of selective, noncovalent ERK1/2 inhibitors reported along with the promiscuous hypothemycin (and related analogues) that act via a covalent mechanism of action. This article reports the identification of multiple series of highly selective covalent ERK1/2 inhibitors informed by structure-based drug design (SBDD). As a starting point for these covalent inhibitors, reported ERK1/2 inhibitors and a chemical series identified via high-throughput screening were exploited. These approaches resulted in the identification of selective covalent tool compounds for potential in vitro and in vivo studies to assess the risks and or benefits of targeting this pathway through such a mechanism of action.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2011

Gradient elution in counter-current chromatography: A new layout for an old path

Svetlana Ignatova; Neil Sumner; Nicola Colclough; Ian Sutherland

Gradient elution in CCC is a powerful tool, which needs further systematic development to become robust and easy to use. The first attempt to build a correlation between gradient elution profile and distribution ratio (K(D)) values for model mixtures containing typical representatives of pharmaceutical compounds is presented in this paper. The three step estimation of the solvent system composition of a heptane-ethyl acetate-methanol-water (HEMWat) series is described. The estimation is based on simple measurements of initial and final stationary phase retention for gradient elution run, calculating gradient distribution ratio and correlating it with static K(D) against HEMWat number.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Small-molecule androgen receptor downregulators as an approach to treatment of advanced prostate cancer

Robert Hugh Bradbury; Neil J. Hales; Alfred A. Rabow; Graeme Walker; David G. Acton; David M. Andrews; Peter Ballard; Nigel Brooks; Nicola Colclough; Alan Girdwood; Urs Hancox; Owen Jones; David Jude; Sarah A. Loddick; Andrew Austen Mortlock

Chemical starting points were investigated for downregulation of the androgen receptor as an approach to treatment of advanced prostate cancer. Although prototypic steroidal downregulators such as 6a designed for intramuscular administration showed insufficient cellular potency, a medicinal chemistry program derived from a novel androgen receptor ligand 8a led to 6-[4-(4-cyanobenzyl)piperazin-1-yl]-3-(trifluoromethyl)[1,2,4]triazolo[4,3-b]pyridazine (10b), for which high plasma levels following oral administration in a preclinical model compensate for moderate cellular potency.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

High throughput solubility determination with application to selection of compounds for fragment screening.

Nicola Colclough; Alison Hunter; Peter W. Kenny; Rod S. Kittlety; Lynsey Lobedan; Kin Yip Tam; Mark A. Timms

The development and application of a high throughput aqueous solubility assay is reported. Measurements for up to 637 compounds can be made in a fully automated experiment. Results from this assay were used to quantify risk of unacceptable solubility as a function of lipophilicity for neutral fragment-like compounds. Assessment of risk of unacceptable solubility was combined with experimental solubility measurement to select compounds for inclusion in a fragment-screening library.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2013

Biophysical Methods in Drug Discovery from Small Molecule to Pharmaceutical

Geoffrey A. Holdgate; Stefan Geschwindner; Alex Breeze; Gareth Davies; Nicola Colclough; David Temesi; Lara Ward

Biophysical methods have become established in many areas of drug discovery. Application of these methods was once restricted to a relatively small number of scientists using specialized, low throughput technologies and methods. Now, automated high-throughput instruments are to be found in a growing number of laboratories. Many biophysical methods are capable of measuring the equilibrium binding constants between pairs of molecules crucial for molecular recognition processes, encompassing protein-protein, protein-small molecule, and protein-nucleic acid interactions, and several can be used to measure the kinetic or thermodynamic components controlling these biological processes. For a full characterization of a binding process, determinations of stoichiometry, binding mode, and any conformational changes associated with such interactions are also required. The suite of biophysical methods that are now available represents a powerful toolbox of techniques which can effectively deliver this full characterization.The aim of this chapter is to provide the reader with an overview of the drug discovery process and how biophysical methods, such as surface plasmon resonance (SPR), isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC), nuclear magnetic resonance, mass spectrometry (MS), and thermal unfolding methods can answer specific questions in order to influence project progression and outcomes. The selection of these examples is based upon the experiences of the authors at AstraZeneca, and relevant approaches are highlighted where they have utility in a particular drug discovery scenario.


MedChemComm | 2014

Species differences in drug plasma protein binding

Nicola Colclough; Linette Ruston; J. Matthew Wood; Philip A. MacFaul

Comparison of the human plasma protein binding data for a variety of drug discovery compounds indicates that compounds tend to be slightly more bound to human plasma proteins, than compared to plasma proteins from rats, dogs or mice. However, the majority of measurements from the pre-clinical species fall within 5-fold of the human plasma value, although there are some compounds that do show significantly different interspecies plasma protein binding.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

The discovery of benzanilides as c-Met receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors by a directed screening approach.

Joanne V. Allen; Catherine Bardelle; Kevin Blades; Dave Buttar; Louise Chapman; Nicola Colclough; Alexander G. Dossetter; Andrew P. Garner; Alan Girdwood; Christine Marie Paul Lambert; Andrew G. Leach; Brian Law; John S. Major; Helen Plant; Anthony M. Slater

A directed screen of a relatively small number of compounds, selected for kinase ATP pocket binding potential, yielded a novel series of hit compounds (1). Hit explosion on two binding residues identified compounds 27 and 43 as the best leads for an optimization program having reduced secondary metabolism, as measured by in vitro rat hepatocytes incubation, leading to oral bio-availability. Structure-activity relationships and molecular modeling have suggested a binding mode for the most potent inhibitor 12.

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