Publications by authors named "Iain J Martin"

Protein tyrosine phosphatase SHP2 mediates RAS-driven MAPK signaling and has emerged in recent years as a target of interest in oncology, both for treating with a single agent and in combination with a KRAS inhibitor. We were drawn to the pharmacological potential of SHP2 inhibition, especially following the initial observation that drug-like compounds could bind an allosteric site and enforce a closed, inactive state of the enzyme. Here, we describe the identification and characterization of (formerly RLY-1971), a SHP2 inhibitor currently in clinical trials in combination with KRAS G12C inhibitor divarasib (GDC-6036) for the treatment of solid tumors driven by a KRAS G12C mutation.

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Lipophilicity has a dominant effect on many parameters that determine unbound drug exposure as well as drug potency. Despite this, analysis of a large body of drug data indicates lipophilicity has no consistent directional impact on dose. This can be rationalized based on the interplay of the effects of lipophilicity on individual parameter values in pharmacokinetic equations.

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In early drug discovery, where chiral syntheses may not yet have been elucidated or enantiomeric separation is not feasible, screening of racemates in metabolic stability assays may offer a pragmatic approach. To assess the risk of incorrectly deprioritizing enantiomers due to misclassification of apparent intrinsic clearance (CLint), we evaluated (1) theoretical simulations; (2) literature on enantiomeric CLint differences; (3) historic MSD data; and (4) new data on enantiomers with high eudysmic ratios and low predicted three-dimensional similarity. Overall, the results suggested minimal risk of not progressing an enantiomer due to an appreciably different (>3-fold) racemate CLint.

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Metabolite identification is an integral part of both preclinical and clinical drug discovery and development. Synthesis of drug metabolites is often required to support definitive identification, preclinical safety studies and clinical trials. Here we describe the use of microbial biotransformation as a tool to produce drug metabolites, complementing traditional chemical synthesis and other biosynthetic methods such as hepatocytes, liver microsomes and recombinant human drug metabolizing enzymes.

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A preclinical drug candidate, MRK-1 (Merck candidate drug parent compound), was found to elicit tumor regression in a mouse xenograft model. Analysis of samples from these studies revealed significant levels of two circulating metabolites, whose identities were confirmed by comparison with authentic standards using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. These metabolites were found to have an in vitro potency similar to that of MRK-1 against the pharmacological target and were therefore thought to contribute to the observed efficacy.

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Past publications have highlighted the influence of postdialysis plasma pH on the measured fraction unbound in plasma (fup). There is disparity in the industry as to which of two main methods is more suitable for controlling postdialysis plasma pH: the use of either a stronger buffer or a CO(2) atmosphere for the incubation. In the current study, it has been found that 10% CO(2) could be too high for the buffering capacities of both 100 mM sodium phosphate (pH 7.

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Rodent tissue distribution and pharmacokinetic studies were performed on basic compounds Org A and Org B in support of central nervous system drug discovery programs. A consistent observation from these studies was that drug concentrations in plasma obtained by cardiac puncture after CO(2) euthanasia were markedly higher compared with those from other sampling methods (serial sampling, isoflurane anesthesia, or cervical dislocation). Further investigations demonstrated that CO(2) euthanasia led to a reduction in blood pH in both rats and mice, which was not observed with the other sampling methods.

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The glucuronidation of (1S,2R,3R,5R)-3-(hydroxymethyl)-5-[7-{[(1R,2S)-2-phenylcyclopropyl]amino}-5-(propylthio)-3H-[1,2,3]triazolo[4,5-d]pyrimidin-3-yl]cyclopentane-1,2-diol (AZ11939714) was studied in UDP-glucuronic acid (UDPGA)-supplemented hepatic microsomes from rat, dog, and human liver. The major biliary metabolite of this compound after intraduodenal administration to a beagle dog was also studied. The techniques of HPLC, HPLC-MS and HPLC-NMR were used to characterize the glucuronides.

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The metabolism of 3-([3-(2-Chlorophenyl)-4,5-dihydro-5-thioxo-1H-1,2,4-triazol-1-yl]methyl)benzonitrile (AR-C133611XX) was studied in isolated dog hepatocytes. The major metabolite of AR-C133611XX was characterized by high performance liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry and NMR and found to be the product of direct glucuronidation. Evidence from 1H and 13C-NMR chemical shifts and a long-range proton carbon correlation experiment was used to deduce that glucuronidation had taken place on the sulfur atom.

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In response to the challenge laid down by advances in other drug discovery functions, DMPK has now established an array of automated, miniaturised in vitro screens, rapid bioanalytical methodologies and in silico tools with which to optimise or predict passive absorption, metabolic clearance and minimise drug-drug interaction potential. The awareness of the pivotal role that physicochemical properties play in the control of many of these processes has been key. This review highlights some of these structure-activity relationships with emphasis on drug absorption, clearance, protein binding and distribution.

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