Skip to main content
Stephanie sitting on a chair and smiling at the camera

Dr Stephanie Myers

Senior Lecturer in Medicinal Chemistry

Pronouns:

she/her

About Dr Stephanie Myers

I completed my BSc (Hons) degree in Chemical and Pharmaceutical Sciences at the University of Sunderland in 2007 and undertook an industrial placement working at GlaxoSmithKline in the Psychiatry Centre of Excellence for Drug Discovery (CEDD). This was followed by successful completion of a master’s degree in Drug Chemistry, graduating from Newcastle University with Distinction.

I began my research career, completing a Cancer Research UK-funded PhD under the supervision of Dr Ian Hardcastle, alongside Dr Celine Cano, Professor Roger Griffin, and Professor Bernard Golding at the Northern Institute for Cancer Research, Newcastle University in 2012. During this time, I specialised in the field of small-molecule drug discovery, developing inhibitors of the protein kinase ERK5 as potential anti-cancer therapeutics, and went on to spend a further 18 months furthering the project as a Postdoctoral Research Associate.

I then moved to the prestigious Institute of Cancer Research in London (2014), working as a Postdoctoral Research Fellow, alongside Professor Ian Collins, initially working on the lead-optimisation of modulators of IRE-1 – a dual kinase-endoribonuclease enzyme – before taking a leading role in the hit triage, validation and hit-to-lead development of novel inhibitors on an exciting, undisclosed project.

I secured my first academic position at the University of Wolverhampton in 2016, beginning my independent research career as a Lecturer in Pharmaceutical Chemistry. I then moved back to the north-east, returning to my home city to take up a position as Senior Lecturer in Medicinal Chemistry at the University of Sunderland in 2017.