Romain Luc Marie Gosmini
GlaxoSmithKline
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Romain Luc Marie Gosmini.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2011
Chun-wa Chung; Hervé Coste; Julia H. White; Olivier Mirguet; Jonathan I. Wilde; Romain Luc Marie Gosmini; Chris Delves; Sylvie M. Magny; Robert Woodward; Stephen A. Hughes; Eric Boursier; Helen R. Flynn; Anne Marie Jeanne Bouillot; Paul Bamborough; Jean-Marie Brusq; Françoise J. Gellibert; Emma Jones; Alizon Riou; Paul Homes; Sandrine Martin; Iain Uings; Jérôme Toum; Catherine A. Clément; Anne-Bénédicte Boullay; Rachel L. Grimley; Florence M. Blandel; Rab K. Prinjha; Kevin Lee; Jorge Kirilovsky; Edwige Nicodeme
Epigenetic mechanisms of gene regulation have a profound role in normal development and disease processes. An integral part of this mechanism occurs through lysine acetylation of histone tails which are recognized by bromodomains. While the biological and structural characterization of many bromodomain containing proteins has advanced considerably, the therapeutic tractability of this protein family is only now becoming understood. This paper describes the discovery and molecular characterization of potent (nM) small molecule inhibitors that disrupt the function of the BET family of bromodomains (Brd2, Brd3, and Brd4). By using a combination of phenotypic screening, chemoproteomics, and biophysical studies, we have discovered that the protein-protein interactions between bromodomains and acetylated histones can be antagonized by selective small molecules that bind at the acetylated lysine recognition pocket. X-ray crystal structures of compounds bound into bromodomains of Brd2 and Brd4 elucidate the molecular interactions of binding and explain the precisely defined stereochemistry required for activity.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013
Olivier Mirguet; Romain Luc Marie Gosmini; Jérôme Toum; Catherine A. Clément; Mélanie Barnathan; Jean-Marie Brusq; Jacqueline Elizabeth Mordaunt; Richard Martin Grimes; Miriam Crowe; Olivier Pineau; Myriam Ajakane; Alain Claude-Marie Daugan; Phillip Jeffrey; Leanne Cutler; Andrea Haynes; Nicholas Smithers; Chun-wa Chung; Paul Bamborough; Iain Uings; Antonia Lewis; Jason Witherington; Nigel James Parr; Rab K. Prinjha; Edwige Nicodeme
The bromo and extra C-terminal domain (BET) family of bromodomains are involved in binding epigenetic marks on histone proteins, more specifically acetylated lysine residues. This paper describes the discovery and structure-activity relationships (SAR) of potent benzodiazepine inhibitors that disrupt the function of the BET family of bromodomains (BRD2, BRD3, and BRD4). This work has yielded a potent, selective compound I-BET762 that is now under evaluation in a phase I/II clinical trial for nuclear protein in testis (NUT) midline carcinoma and other cancers.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Anastasia Wyce; Gopinath Ganji; Kimberly N. Smitheman; Chun-wa Chung; Susan Korenchuk; Yuchen Bai; Olena Barbash; BaoChau Le; Peter D. Craggs; Michael T. McCabe; Karen M. Kennedy-Wilson; Lydia V. Sanchez; Romain Luc Marie Gosmini; Nigel James Parr; Charles F. McHugh; Dashyant Dhanak; Rab K. Prinjha; Kurt R. Auger; Peter J. Tummino
BET family proteins are epigenetic regulators known to control expression of genes involved in cell growth and oncogenesis. Selective inhibitors of BET proteins exhibit potent anti-proliferative activity in a number of hematologic cancer models, in part through suppression of the MYC oncogene and downstream Myc-driven pathways. However, little is currently known about the activity of BET inhibitors in solid tumor models, and whether down-regulation of MYC family genes contributes to sensitivity. Here we provide evidence for potent BET inhibitor activity in neuroblastoma, a pediatric solid tumor associated with a high frequency of MYCN amplifications. We treated a panel of neuroblastoma cell lines with a novel small molecule inhibitor of BET proteins, GSK1324726A (I-BET726), and observed potent growth inhibition and cytotoxicity in most cell lines irrespective of MYCN copy number or expression level. Gene expression analyses in neuroblastoma cell lines suggest a role of BET inhibition in apoptosis, signaling, and N-Myc-driven pathways, including the direct suppression of BCL2 and MYCN. Reversal of MYCN or BCL2 suppression reduces the potency of I-BET726-induced cytotoxicity in a cell line-specific manner; however, neither factor fully accounts for I-BET726 sensitivity. Oral administration of I-BET726 to mouse xenograft models of human neuroblastoma results in tumor growth inhibition and down-regulation MYCN and BCL2 expression, suggesting a potential role for these genes in tumor growth. Taken together, our data highlight the potential of BET inhibitors as novel therapeutics for neuroblastoma, and suggest that sensitivity is driven by pleiotropic effects on cell growth and apoptotic pathways in a context-specific manner.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012
Olivier Mirguet; Yann Lamotte; Frédéric Donche; Jérôme Toum; Francoise Jeanne Gellibert; Anne Marie Jeanne Bouillot; Romain Luc Marie Gosmini; Van-Loc Nguyen; Delphine Delannée; Jonathan Thomas Seal; Florence M. Blandel; Anne-Bénédicte Boullay; Eric Boursier; Sandrine Martin; Jean-Marie Brusq; Gael Krysa; Alizon Riou; Rémi Tellier; Agnès Costaz; Pascal Huet; Yann Dudit; Lionel Trottet; Jorge Kirilovsky; Edwige Nicodeme
The discovery, synthesis and biological evaluation of a novel series of 7-isoxazoloquinolines is described. Several analogs are shown to increase ApoA1 expression within the nanomolar range in the human hepatic cell line HepG2.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014
Romain Luc Marie Gosmini; Van Loc Nguyen; Jérôme Toum; Christophe Simon; Jean-Marie Brusq; Gael Krysa; Olivier Mirguet; Alizon M. Riou-Eymard; Eric Boursier; Lionel Trottet; Paul Bamborough; Hugh F. Clark; Chun-wa Chung; Leanne Cutler; Emmanuel Hubert Demont; Rejbinder Kaur; Antonia Lewis; Mark B. Schilling; Peter E. Soden; Simon Taylor; Ann Louise Walker; Matthew D. Walker; Rab K. Prinjha; Edwige Nicodeme
Through their function as epigenetic readers of the histone code, the BET family of bromodomain-containing proteins regulate expression of multiple genes of therapeutic relevance, including those involved in tumor cell growth and inflammation. BET bromodomain inhibitors have profound antiproliferative and anti-inflammatory effects which translate into efficacy in oncology and inflammation models, and the first compounds have now progressed into clinical trials. The exciting biology of the BETs has led to great interest in the discovery of novel inhibitor classes. Here we describe the identification of a novel tetrahydroquinoline series through up-regulation of apolipoprotein A1 and the optimization into potent compounds active in murine models of septic shock and neuroblastoma. At the molecular level, these effects are produced by inhibition of BET bromodomains. X-ray crystallography reveals the interactions explaining the structure-activity relationships of binding. The resulting lead molecule, I-BET726, represents a new, potent, and selective class of tetrahydroquinoline-based BET inhibitors.
Archive | 2010
James Matthew Bailey; Romain Luc Marie Gosmini; Olivier Mirguet; Jason Witherington
Archive | 2010
Emmanuel Hubert Demont; Romain Luc Marie Gosmini
Archive | 2010
Miriam Crowe; Alain Claude-Marie Daugan; Romain Luc Marie Gosmini; Richard Martin Grimes; Olivier Mirguet; Jacqueline Elizabeth Mordaunt
Archive | 2010
Emmanuel Hubert Demont; Neil Stuart Garton; Romain Luc Marie Gosmini; Thomas G. Hayhow; Jonathan Thomas Seal; David M. Wilson; Michael D. Woodrow
Archive | 2003
Richard Bell; Paul John Beswick; Romain Luc Marie Gosmini; Christopher Charles Frederick Hamlett; Nigel Paul King; Vipulkumar Kantibhai Patel; Richard Martin Grimes; Millard Hurst Iii GlaxoSmithKline Lambert