·¬ÇÑÉçÇø

Phishing warning 01-May-2024
We are aware of phishing emails targeting speakers of events whose names appear on our events pages. If you are unsure if an email regarding event registration or accommodation has come from us please contact us and do not provide any credit card details or personal information.

Medicinal Chemistry Summer School 2026

7 - 12 June 2026, Loughborough, United Kingdom


Introduction
The ·¬ÇÑÉçÇø of Chemistry Medicinal Chemistry Summer School will cover topics of interest to drug discovery researchers, helping to increase understanding of the factors governing modern drug discovery from the initial concept through to translational science and intellectual property. Established since 1981, our Summer School has trained many of the world’s leading medicinal chemists working in the pharmaceutical industry and academic research institutes.

Who should attend?

The school is designed for graduate and post-doctoral chemists with 1-5 years’ experience in the field of drug research. Drug discovery is an interdisciplinary subject so delegates from biological or computational backgrounds will benefit from attendance at the school.

In addition, final year PhD students from pharmaceutical or organic chemistry contemplating a career in drug discovery are also encouraged to attend.

Method and Structure

The 2026 Summer School will take place over 5 days and content is delivered by experts in the field from industry and academia. The programme includes lectures focusing on the fundamental principles of drug discovery, hands-on tutorials allowing delegates to put into practice what they have learnt and case histories from previous drug discovery projects. The programme will also include an evening lecture from a distinguished speaker.

Throughout the week course tutors and speakers will be available for informal discussion and there will be plenty of opportunities to network with the broad range of academic and industrial researchers in attendance.

Subject to change, the programme will run from 08:00 on Monday 8 June and will finish at 13:00 on Friday 12 June. An optional welcome reception will take place on Sunday evening.

Topics

The course includes the following topics:
  • Target Validation
  • Computational Chemistry
  • Biological Mechanisms
  • Pharmacokinetics and Drug Metabolism
  • Screening of New Compounds
  • Patents
  • Molecular Biology in Medicinal Chemistry
  • Exploiting a Chemical Lead
  • Combinatorial Chemistry and Molecular Diversity
  • Case Histories of Drug Discovery
  • Toxicology in Drug Discovery
  • Pharmaceutical Considerations in Drug Development
  • Structure-guided Drug Design
  • Physical Properties and Quantitative Structure-Activity Relationships
  • Hints and Tips in Medicinal Chemistry

Handbook of Medicinal Chemistry

The ·¬ÇÑÉçÇø of Chemistry is pleased to offer all registered delegates the opportunity to purchase the 2nd edition of the Handbook of Medicinal Chemistry (published in 2022). The Handbook is written to complement the Medicinal Chemistry Summer School tutorial content and is recommended as an ideal overview of the content of the School.

Delegates can purchase the book at the discounted rate of 40% from the ·¬ÇÑÉçÇø online bookshop.

Careers consultations

Medicinal Chemistry Summer School delegates can also book one of 20 career consultation appointments with an ·¬ÇÑÉçÇø career and professional development adviser who will review your CV and provide one-to-one advice. 

Slots will be available to book via the link in the Introduction section of this page.  If the slots are fully booked, please email careers@rsc.org including information that you are attending the Medicinal Chemistry Summer School and the Careers Team will contact you directly to arrange an alternative slot.

Please note these consultations are only available for ·¬ÇÑÉçÇø members.
Speakers
Britta Bonn, Ribocure Pharmaceuticals, Sweden

Britta Bonn has over 20 years of experience in drug metabolism and pharmacokinetics (DMPK) within the pharmaceutical industry, holding senior scientific and leadership roles at AstraZeneca, Albireo, Ipsen, and currently Ribocure. She earned an MSc in Pharmaceutical Bioscience from the University of Gothenburg and a PhD in Drug Metabolism from the same university, where her doctoral research focused on experimental and computational investigations of affinity and selectivity in CYP2D6- and CYP3A4-mediated metabolism.
Throughout her career, Britta has contributed to projects across all stages of development—from early drug design through late-stage clinical development and global regulatory submissions. She has extensive expertise in drug discovery processes, strategies for optimizing project delivery, and building robust DMPK and clinical pharmacology packages to support worldwide filings.
In her current role as Senior Director, DMPK and Global Project Lead at Ribocure, Britta is responsible for the DMPK strategy of the company’s siRNA platform and provides strategic leadership across the broader portfolio.
With a deep scientific background in metabolism, pharmacokinetics, and drug design, Britta has also contributed to the scientific community as a co-author of book chapters on Metabolism and Pharmacokinetic Optimization in Drug Discovery and Design of Inhaled Medicine.


Janet Brownlees, MSD, United Kingdom

Dr Janet Brownlees is a Senior Director of Neuroscience Biology at the Merck Sharpe and Dohme Discovery Research Centre in London leading a team of biologists working on various mechanisms of neurodegeneration.

Janet has many years of experience in neuroscience research both in academia and drug discovery in industry previously working at GSK and LifeArc. She is an experienced Team Leader and Project Leader in neurodegeneration, pain and oncology from target identification and validation, lead optimisation to candidate selection.  She has led many academic, charity and biotech collaborations including the Dementia Consortium with Alzheimer’s Research U.K.  which involved teams of academic researchers and Pharma partners and was the Neuroscience lead at LifeArc. 

Janet completed a BSc (Hons) in Biochemistry at Queen’s University followed by a PhD in peptidase activity of the endothelia cells of the blood brain barrier.  Her post-doctoral positions at King’s College London focussed on neurofilament and mitochondria dynamics, axonal transport and tau phosphorylation.  Throughout her career she has published many papers and reviews. Janet is a Fellow of the ·¬ÇÑÉçÇø of Biology and currently serves on the Grant Review Board and for Alzheimer’s Research UK and the Biomedical Research Advisory Panel of the Motor Neurone Disease Association.


Jeremy Burrows, Medicines for Malaria Venture, Switzerland

Dr. Jeremy Burrows is VP, Head of Drug Discovery at Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV).  He heads up the Discovery team at MMV and works with Pharmaceutical companies, Universities and other institutions to delivery new candidate drugs for antimalarial therapy, anti-relapse, prophylaxis and transmission blocking. 
Jeremy obtained a MA in chemistry and a D.Phil. in synthetic organic chemistry at Oxford University (1989-1996).   In 1997 he joined ZENECA/ AstraZeneca as a medicinal chemist working in Infection, Cardiovascular and Inflammation research at Alderley Park in the UK.  In 2005 he was seconded to Södertälje, Sweden in CNS/Pain where he led a section focused on Alzheimer’s disease.  In 2008, he joined MMV and in 2010 became Head of the Discovery team, overseeing a growing portfolio of enabling technology, screening, Hit-to-lead and Lead Optimisation projects. 
He has been involved with the delivery of numerous candidate drugs for multiple disease areas, over 25 of which have been for malaria and has published over 150 papers, book chapters and patent applications. 
He sits on the advisory and review committees for several external drug discovery collaborations within the neglected disease area including the Wellcome funded DNDi-GSK Chagas collaboration.  He is a Fellow of the ·¬ÇÑÉçÇø of Chemistry and an Honorary Research Fellow at the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine.  He is a co-organiser of the Wellcome Practical Aspects of Drug Discovery Course.


Nicola Colclough, AstraZeneca, United Kingdom

Nicola is a principal scientist in oncology DMPK at AstraZeneca, Cambridge, UK and has over 30 years of industrial experience in the drug discovery field. A physical organic chemist by training Nicola gaining her PhD at the University of York, UK working in the group of Professor John Lindsay-Smith studying porphyrins as models for peroxidases and cytochrome P450s. She joined the Structural and Physical Sciences Section at Zeneca at Alderley Park, Cheshire UK where she became Physical Chemistry group leader with responsibility for providing physicochemical property support for all discovery projects at the site including Oncology, Cardiovascular, Respiratory and Inflammation areas. Nicola is currently a DMPK Project Leader within Oncology R & D at AstraZeneca, Cambridge, UK where she works on discovery projects ensuring molecules are designed with good druglike properties. Nicola’s interests include the study of ADME properties and understanding their relationship to molecular structure, covalently binding drugs and the design of molecules targeting the brain.


Andy Davis, AstraZeneca, United Kingdom

Andy Davis gained his degree in chemistry from Imperial College, London in 1982. He undertook a PhD at the University of Huddersfield with Professor MI Page, studying the alcoholysis of penicillins as a model of their antibacterial action. This was followed by a post-doctoral fellowship at University of Kent, dissecting the energetics of ribonuclease A catalysed hydrolysis of phosphodiesters through quantitative structure-reactivity relationships. In 1988, he joined Fisons Pharmaceuticals and has spent the subsequent 35 years with Fisons/Astra/AstraZeneca applying physical organic chemistry thinking in drug discovery projects, in science, line management, portfolio management and project leadership roles, mostly in the respiratory therapeutic area.
He has published over 80 papers in peer reviewed journals including many highly cited and high impact articles, covering his key interests of physical properties, structure-guided drug design, and the application of QSAR to drug discovery.  Most notably, he introduced the leadlike paradigm to medicinal chemistry, which has become a byword for quality in lead design, and an inspiration for fragment-based drug discovery.  For the past 18 years he has been scientific organiser of the internationally regarded ·¬ÇÑÉçÇø of Chemistry Medicinal Chemistry Summer School, and co-editor of the ·¬ÇÑÉçÇø of Chemistry’s  “Handbook of Medicinal Chemistry: Principles and Practice” (2014 and second edition 2023) and its associated IPAD APP.


Cheryl Doherty , GSK, United Kingdom

After carrying out a PhD at the University of Bath in Crystallography, Cheryl joined Pfizer Materials Sciences at the UK Sandwich site in 2006 as a small molecule crystallographer and moved to GSK in 2019 where she leads the GSK Materials Characterisation group at Ware and Stevenage. During her time at Pfizer and GSK her primary focus has been on developing API solid forms for drug candidates, involving combining experimental studies along with the application of advanced crystallographic methods and solid-state modelling to accelerate and enhance the solid form development process.  This has also included introducing advanced crystallographic techniques to trouble-shoot complex behaviour in pharmaceutical products, such as by using synchrotron sources to analyse API and drug product single crystals, powders and dosage forms. Cheryl is a member of the Diamond Light Source Industrial Liaison Committee and is a Fellow of the ·¬ÇÑÉçÇø of Chemistry.


Zoë Henley, GSK, United Kingdom

Dr Zoë Henley is a Scientific Team Leader at GSK. Zoë joined GSK in 2006 after gaining a Masters in Chemistry from the University of Bristol. In 2014, Zoë completed a collaborative Ph.D. between GSK and the University of Strathclyde on the design and synthesis of kinase inhibitors for respiratory indications.
During her career at GSK, Zoë has had significant scientific impact across multiple drug discovery programmes in respiratory, immuno-inflammation and cancer. Zoë was part of the team that discovered the inhaled candidate nemiralisib, which reached Phase 2, and led an Inhaled Sciences forum which increased GSK’s capability in inhaled compound design and is a go-to expert in the field. Zoë has led chemistry on multiple lead discovery and lead optimisation programmes, most recently in the field of Targeted Protein Degradation and the optimisation of PROTACs.
Zoë has supervised multiple industrial placement, PhD students and graduate chemists and became a team leader in 2021. Zoë was recognised as a TechWomen100 winner in 2021 and was one of five winners in the 2023 WeAreTheCity’s Rising Star Awards in the science and engineering category. Zoë was also a most meritorious runner-up for the EFMC Young Medicinal Chemist or Chemical Biologist in Industry in 2024.


Simon Hirst, Sygnature Discovery, United Kingdom

Simon is Sygnature’s founder and Chief Executive Officer. He is an entrepreneur and industry veteran with 30 years of experience in the pharmaceutical sector.  As well as founding Sygnature in 2004, he was an early stage investor and Director of Peak Proteins Ltd (now acquired by Sygnature), and a cofounder of Step Pharmaceuticals, a clinical stage biotech based in France. 

Simon began his research career as a medicinal chemist at AstraZeneca and later moved to OSI Pharmaceuticals where he was part of the senior leadership team. He has been engaged in the full spectrum of drug discovery programmes – from hit finding, to candidate selection. Simon has a BSc (Hons.) in chemistry and a PhD in organic chemistry from the University of Nottingham, and undertook post-doctoral research at the University of Pittsburgh.


Emma Rivers, AstraZeneca, United Kingdom

Dr Emma Rivers is a Director of Medicinal Chemistry within the Hit Discovery Department at AstraZeneca, Cambridge, UK. She leads a team of chemists and is responsible for the DNA-encoded library screening platform which delivers hits and lead series for projects across a wide range of targets and therapeutic areas, such as Oncology, Cardiovascular, and Respiratory. Following a MChem in chemistry at Durham University and a PhD in the synthesis of heterocycles at Imperial College London, Emma joined GSK as a medicinal chemist within the Neuroscience team. There she worked on both hit to lead and lead optimisation programs at the research site in Singapore for 8 years before joining AstraZeneca, where she has worked for the past 9 years, primarily on lead generation approaches for early-stage drug discovery projects. 


Simon Ward, Cardiff University, United Kingdom

Simon Ward is currently the Sêr Cymru Professor in Translational Drug Discovery and Director of the Medicines Institute at Cardiff University.

Simon has a wide-ranging experience from over 25 years of drug discovery in senior roles in major pharmaceutical companies, biotech & academia (GlaxoSmithKline, BioCrea, Knoll Pharmaceuticals, Vernalis, Chiroscience, University of Sussex, Cardiff University). He has led multidisciplinary project teams for a wide range of diseases. Within academia, he has successfully secured over £50M funding to lead a portfolio of drug discovery and clinical development projects. He also has considerable experience of commercial deal making and has multiple additional roles in biotech companies.

Simon is a Fellow of the ·¬ÇÑÉçÇø of Chemistry and is an internationally recognised expert in medicinal chemistry leading to many external roles on scientific advisory boards, charity and government funding panels and scientific societies.



Abstract Submission
Delegates registering to attend the Medicinal Chemistry Summer School are invited to present their research during the poster session which will be held on the Monday evening (8 June).

This interactive poster session will provide a chance to view the range of research interests amongst delegates as well as offering ample time to network.

Prizes will be presented to the best two posters.
Bursaries

Grants for Carers

With our Grants for carers, you can apply for up to £1,200 per year to help you attend a chemistry-related meeting, conference or workshop or a professional development event. This money would be used to cover any additional costs you incur, paying for care that you usually provide.  Please visit the website for further information and eligibility criteria.

Accessibility Grants

With our Accessibility grants, you can apply for up to £1,200 per year to help with the cost of specific support to attend a chemistry-related meeting, conference, workshop or professional development event. This support might be any form of equipment, service, or other personal expense associated with meeting your access needs.

Researcher Development and Travel Grants

If you are an ·¬ÇÑÉçÇø member and you are one of the following:
  • ​a PhD student actively undertaking a PhD course in the chemical sciences;
  • a researcher in the chemical sciences (including post docs, research technicians and research assistants);
  • working in academia, industry or any sector;
  • within 10 years of leaving full time education (at the time of the application deadline).
You can apply for up to £500 to support your participation in this event. Please note it is not necessary to have confirmation of abstract acceptance before applying for a Researcher Development and Travel Grants and we encourage you to apply as early as possible.

Please see the website for up-to-date information on eligibility, how to apply and submission deadlines.

Researcher Development and Travel Grants can be applied for in addition to Grants for Carers and Accessibility Grants.
Venue
Burleigh Court Conference Centre and Hotel

Burleigh Court Conference Centre and Hotel, Loughborough University, Loughborough, LE11 3TU, United Kingdom

Accommodation
Dinner, bed & breakfast packages at Burleigh Court Conference Centre can be booked when you register for the course. All overnight accommodation for the course will be in en-suite executive standard double rooms (reserved on a single occupancy basis).

The standard accommodation package is for the nights of Monday 8 - Thursday 12 June inclusive, to check out on Friday 12 June. For those arriving on Sunday, an additional dinner, bed and breakfast package is available for the night of Sunday 7 June. 

Accommodation packages include dinner, bed & breakfast, excluding 20% VAT.  All accommodation needs to be booked before 14 April 2026. We cannot guarantee availability for accommodation after that date:

Room for 1 night (Sunday 7 June)                                              £190
Room for 4 nights (8 June, 9 June, 10 June and 11 June)         £700

Please be aware that anyone who chooses to stay elsewhere or books their accommodation directly with Burleigh Court will not be entitled to the evening dinner.

Contact information
Search
 
 
Showing all upcoming events
Start Date
End Date
Location
Subject area
Event type

Advertisement
Spotlight


E-mail Enquiry
*
*
*
*