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Dive into the research topics where Alfons Enhsen is active.

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Featured researches published by Alfons Enhsen.


Drug Discovery Today | 1998

Bile acids in drug discovery

Alfons Enhsen; Werner Kramer; Gunther Wess

Abstract Recent advances have provided important new information on the physiological mechanisms of bile acid transport and metabolism. Bile acids, which are essential for the digestion and absorption of lipids and lipid-soluble vitamins, are metabolic products of cholesterol and are a major regulator of cholesterol homeostasis. Bile acids are pharmacologically interesting as potential carriers of liver-specific drugs, absorption enhancers and as new cholesterol-lowering agents. Furthermore, the tools of molecular recognition and combinatorial chemistry have been used to explore the drug discovery possibilities of bile acids. The authors explore current understanding and future prospects for bile acid research.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1994

Bile acid derived HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors

Werner Kramer; Gunther Wess; Alfons Enhsen; Klaus Bock; Eugen Falk; Axel Hoffman; Georg Neckermann; Dietrich Gantz; Siefried Schulz; Lutz Nickau; Ernst Petzinger; Stephen D. Turley; John M. Dietschy

The target organ for HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors to decrease cholesterol biosynthesis in hypercholesterolemic patients is the liver. Since bile acids undergo an enterohepatic circulation showing a strict organotropism for the liver and the small intestine, the structural elements of an inhibitor for HMG-CoA reductase were combined with those for specific molecular recognition of a bile acid molecule for selective uptake by hepatocytes. Either, the HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors HR 780 and mevinolin were covalently attached to 3 xi-(omega-aminoalkoxy)-7 alpha, 12 alpha-dihydroxy-5 beta-cholan-24-oic acids to obtain bile acid prodrugs, or the side chain of bile acids at C-17 was replaced by 3,5-dihydroxy-heptanoic acid--a structural element essential for inhibition of HMG-CoA reductase--to obtain hybrid bile acid: HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors. The prodrugs could, as expected, not inhibit rat liver HMG-CoA reductase to a significant extent, whereas the hybrid inhibitors showed a stereospecific inhibition of HMG-CoA reductase from rat liver microsomes with an IC50-value of 0.7 microM for the most potent compound S 2467 and 6 microM for its diastereomere S 2468. Uptake measurements with isolated rat hepatocytes and ileal brush-border membrane vesicles from rabbit small intestine revealed a specific interaction of both classes of bile acid-derived HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors with the hepatocyte and ileocyte bile acid uptake systems. Photoaffinity labeling studies using 3-azi- or 7-azi-derivatives of taurocholate with freshly isolated rat hepatocytes or rabbit ileal brush-border membrane vesicles revealed a specific interaction of bile acid derived HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors with the respective putative bile acid transporters in the liver and the ileum demonstrating the bile acid character of these derivatives, both for the prodrugs and the hybrids. Cholesterol biosynthesis in Hep G2 cells was inhibited by the bile acid prodrugs with IC50-values in the range of 68 nM to 600 nM compared to 13 nM for HR 780 and 130 nM for mevinolin. Among the hybrid inhibitors, S 2467 was the most active compound with an IC50-value of 16 microM compared to 55 microM for its diastereomere S 2468. Preliminary in vivo experiments showed an inhibition of hepatic cholesterol biosynthesis after oral dosage only with prodrugs such as S 3554, whereas the hybrid molecules were inactive after oral application.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


Journal of Controlled Release | 1997

Modified bile acids as carriers for peptides and drugs

Werner Kramer; Gunther Wess; Alfons Enhsen; Eugen Falk; Axel Hoffmann; Georg Neckermann; Gerrit Schubert; Matthias Urmann

Abstract For the development of future drugs two aspects are of major importance, a site-specific drug action without adverse side-effects and a preferably oral applicability. The liver has a central role in drug action and many disorders are unique to the liver demanding a liver-specific drug action. In oral drug therapy the small intestine is often the limiting barrier of drug absorption. Bile acids are natural substrates undergoing an enterohepatic circulation involving the liver and the small intestine. This organotropism of bile acids is achieved by specific Na + -dependent transport systems in the plasma membrane of hepatocytes and ileocytes. Di- and tripeptides as well as orally active α -amino- β -lactam antibiotics are intestinally absorbed by a H + /oligopeptide cotransport system of high transport capacity. We, therefore, investigated whether the hepatic and the intestinal bile acid transport systems as well as the intestinal H + /oligopeptide transporter can be used in drug therapy to improve the membrane permeability and intestinal absorption of peptide drugs, to target a drug to the liver and the biliary system and to obtain liver-specific drugs. For this, modified bile acids with linkers of varying structure, length, position and stereochemistry at the steroid nucleus were synthesized and covalently linked to drugs or peptides or alternatively bile acid structural elements were introduced into drugs. To investigate the H + /oligopeptide transporter as a putative peptide delivery system, peptides were covalently attached to the 3′-position of the tripeptide-analogue d -cephalexin. The interaction of these bile acid and cephalexin conjugates with the hepatic and intestinal bile acid and peptide transport systems as well as their pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic behaviour was investigated by transport measurements and photoaffinity labeling techniques using membrane vesicles, isolated hepatocytes and in vivo models.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1992

Liver-specific drug targeting by coupling to bile acids.

Werner Kramer; Gunther Wess; Gerrit Schubert; M Bickel; Frank Girbig; Ulrike Gutjahr; Simone Kowalewski; K H Baringhaus; Alfons Enhsen; Heiner Glombik


Archive | 1999

Benzothiepine 1, 1-dioxide derivatives, a process for their preparation, pharmaceuticals comprising these compounds, and their use

Wendelin Frick; Alfons Enhsen; Heiner Glombik; Hubert Heuer


Journal of Lipid Research | 1999

Substrate specificity of the ileal and the hepatic Na(+)/bile acid cotransporters of the rabbit. I. Transport studies with membrane vesicles and cell lines expressing the cloned transporters.

Werner Kramer; Siegfried Stengelin; Karl-Heinz Baringhaus; Alfons Enhsen; Hubert Heuer; Wolfgang Becker; Daniel Corsiero; Frank Girbig; Rüdiger Noll; Claudia Weyland


Archive | 2003

Acyl-4-carboxyphenylurea derivatives, method for production and use thereof

Elisabeth Defossa; Dieter Kadereit; Karl Schoenafinger; Thomas Klabunde; Hans-Joerg Burger; Andreas Herling; Karl-Urlich Wendt; Roedern Erich Von; Alfons Enhsen; Joerg Rieke-Zapp


Archive | 1998

Hypolipidemic 1,4-benzothiazepine-1,1-dioxides

Alfons Enhsen; Eugen Falk; Heiner Glombik; Siegfried Stengelin


FEBS Journal | 1997

Topological Photoaffinity Labeling of the Rabbit Ileal Na+/Bile‐Salt‐Cotransport System

Werner Kramer; Gunther Wess; Ulrike Bewersdorf; Daniel Corsiero; Frank Girbig; Claudia Weyland; Siegfried Stengelin; Alfons Enhsen; Klaus Bock; Horst Kleine; Marie-Anne Dreau; Hans-Ludwig Schäfer


Archive | 2002

Carboxamide-substituted phenylurea derivatives and method for production thereof as medicaments

Elisabeth Defossa; Thomas Klabunde; Hans-Joerg Burger; Andreas Herling; Roedern Erich Von; Stefan Peukert; Alfons Enhsen; Armin Bauer; Berd Neises; Karl Ulrich Wendt

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