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Professor Christopher Goldring
BSc, PhD

Professor, Deputy Executive Dean of the Institute for Systems, Molecular and Integrative Biology
Pharmacology & Therapeutics

About

Chris Goldring, Deputy Executive Dean of the Institute for Systems, Molecular and Integrative Biology, Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics.
Models and Biomarkers to Improve Drug Safety
Our research team aims to develop humanised biologically-relevant models to improve our ability to predict the safety of drugs in development, and those that are widely-used in patients but which possess some safety liability. In parallel we work on improving biomarkers that can allow a better definition of the safe use of medicines. The overarching goal of our research is to improve our understanding of adverse drug reactions from a human health perspective; therefore, we have established national and international links with academic scientists, clinicians and colleagues in the pharmaceutical industry, to ensure our work is relevant to patients and the process of drug development.
We have spent many years attempting to improve models of the human liver, and also other organs, for example leading the recent UKRI 3Dbionet project to enhance uptake of 3D in vitro models. Our philosophy in this endeavour is based on George Box’s famous aphorism, “All models are wrong, but some are useful" - we try to understand what is actually pharmacologically-relevant in a given model. Working with clinical colleagues, and through the kind agreement of many patients, we established a pipeline for the use of human primary liver cells (>380 freshly-isolated archived liver tissue and cell culture since 2011), this allowed the evaluation of 3D models of the liver using patient-derived tissue, as well as creating a bank of patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cells. We led an industry-academic consortium to evaluate the reproducibility of such in vitro models – an absolute priority for industry drug development - and an examination of the physiological relevance of such liver models, largely through a proteomic approach. Alongside twelve industry partners, this led to the development of a roadmap, accepted by and now being used by a number of European Pharmaceutical companies, for the adoption of different models for the safety assessment of pharmaceutical compounds. Through further Innovative Medicines Initiative funding we led an evaluation of the role of systems toxicology models in drug safety assessment, which will now be developed into a new published roadmap.
I sit on the management board of the MRC DIscoveryMEdicineNorth doctoral training programme, I am an advisor on the UoCambridge MRC Toxicology Unit’s Integrative Toxicology Training Programme, a panel member for NC3Rs Crack-It challenge funding, and I sit on the MHRA Herbal Medicines Advisory Committee and CHM Clinical Trials, Biologicals & Vaccines Expert Advisory Committee. I am co-director of the Faculty-supported Human Liver Research Facility. I am also co-director of the recently initiated Joint Centre for Pharmacology and Therapeutics, established between Liverpool and its partner XJTLU, in Suzhou, China, to enhance joint education, training and research in Pharmacology and related fields. I am a Fellow of the British Pharmacological Society.
University collaborations: across the Faculty, also with the Department of Chemistry
Three recent papers:
• Managing the challenge of drug-induced liver injury: a roadmap for the development and deployment of preclinical predictive models. Weaver et al. 2020 Nat Rev Drug Discov. 19:131-148. doi: 10.1038/s41573-019-0048-x.
• Proteomic profiling of murine biliary-derived hepatic organoids and their capacity for drug disposition, bioactivation and detoxification. Howell L, et al. Arch Tox. 2021 95:2413-2430. doi: 10.1007/s00204-021-03075-3.
• Genomic profiling of idiopathic peri-hilar cholangiocarcinoma reveals new targets and mutational pathways. Quinn LM et al. Sci Rep. 2023 13:6681. doi: 10.1038/s41598-023-33096-0.
Human Liver Research Facility
Centre for Drug Safety Science - Centre for Drug Safety Science - University of Liverpool
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