Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Andreas Marzinzik is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Andreas Marzinzik.


Current Topics in Medicinal Chemistry | 2005

Library Design for Fragment Based Screening

Ansgar Schuffenhauer; Simon Ruedisser; Andreas Marzinzik; Wolfgang Jahnke; Paul M. Selzer; Edgar Jacoby

According to Hanns model of molecular complexity an increased probability of detection binding to a target protein can be expected when small, low complex molecular fragments are screened with high sensitivity instead of full-sized ligands with lower sensitivity. Analysis of the HTS summary data of Novartis and comparison with NMR screening results obtained on generic fragment libraries indicate this expectation to be true with hitrates of 0.001% - 0.151% observed in the identification of ligands with an IC(50) threshold in the micromolar range in an HTS setup and hitrates above or equal to 3% observed in NMR screening of fragments with an affinity threshold in the millimolar range. It is however necessary to keep in mind that the sets of target studied were not identical for both method and the experience in NMR screening is too limited for a final conclusion. The term hitrate as used here reflects only the success rate in the observation of ligand binding event. It must not be confused with the overall success rate of fragment and high throughput screening in the lead finding process, which can be entirely different, since the steps required to follow-up a ligand binding event to a lead are different for both methods. A survey of fragment-based lead discovery case studies given in the literature shows that in approximately half of the cases the initial hit fragment was discovered by screening a generic library, whereas in the other cases some knowledge about an initial ligands or the protein binding site has been used, whereas systematic virtual screening of fragment databases has been only rarely reported. As comparatively high hitrates were obtained, further consideration to optimize the generic fragment screening library were directed to the chemical tractability of the fragment. As several functional groups preferred by chemists for modification and linking of the fragments are also preferentially involved in interactions between the fragments and the target protein, a set of screening fragments was derived from chemical building blocks by masking its linker group by a chemical transformation which can be later on used in the chemical follow-up of the fragment hit. For example primary amines can be masked as acetamides. If the screening fragment is active the related building block can then be used for synthesis of a follow-up library.


Organic Letters | 2011

Safe and Reliable Synthesis of Diazoketones and Quinoxalines in a Continuous Flow Reactor

Laetitia J. Martin; Andreas Marzinzik; Steven V. Ley; Ian R. Baxendale

A flow method for the synthesis of aliphatic and aromatic diazoketones from acyl chloride precursors has been developed and used to prepare quinoxalines in a multistep sequence without isolation of the potentially explosive diazoketone. The protocol showcases an efficient in-line purification using supported scavengers with time-saving and safety benefits and in particular a reduction in the operators exposure to carcinogenic phenylenediamines.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2010

Allosteric non-bisphosphonate FPPS inhibitors identified by fragment-based discovery.

Wolfgang Jahnke; Jean-Michel Rondeau; Simona Cotesta; Andreas Marzinzik; Xavier Francois Andre Pelle; Martin Geiser; André Strauss; Marjo Götte; Francis Bitsch; René Hemmig; Chrystèle Henry; Sylvie Lehmann; J. Fraser Glickman; Thomas P. Roddy; Steven Stout; Jonathan Green

Bisphosphonates are potent inhibitors of farnesyl pyrophosphate synthase (FPPS) and are highly efficacious in the treatment of bone diseases such as osteoporosis, Pagets disease and tumor-induced osteolysis. In addition, the potential for direct antitumor effects has been postulated on the basis of in vitro and in vivo studies and has recently been demonstrated clinically in early breast cancer patients treated with the potent bisphosphonate zoledronic acid. However, the high affinity of bisphosphonates for bone mineral seems suboptimal for the direct treatment of soft-tissue tumors. Here we report the discovery of the first potent non-bisphosphonate FPPS inhibitors. These new inhibitors bind to a previously unknown allosteric site on FPPS, which was identified by fragment-based approaches using NMR and X-ray crystallography. This allosteric and druggable pocket allows the development of a new generation of FPPS inhibitors that are optimized for direct antitumor effects in soft tissue.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Binding or bending: distinction of allosteric Abl kinase agonists from antagonists by an NMR-based conformational assay.

Wolfgang Jahnke; Robert Martin Grotzfeld; Xavier Francois Andre Pelle; André Strauss; Gabriele Fendrich; Sandra W. Cowan-Jacob; Simona Cotesta; Doriano Fabbro; Pascal Furet; Jürgen Mestan; Andreas Marzinzik

Allosteric inhibitors of Bcr-Abl have emerged as a novel therapeutic option for the treatment of CML. Using fragment-based screening, a search for novel Abl inhibitors that bind to the myristate pocket was carried out. Here we show that not all myristate ligands are functional inhibitors, but that the conformational state of C-terminal helix_I is a structural determinant for functional activity. We present an NMR-based conformational assay to monitor the conformation of this crucial helix_I and show that myristate ligands that bend helix_I are functional antagonists, whereas ligands that bind to the myristate pocket but do not induce this conformational change are kinase agonists. Activation of c-Abl by allosteric agonists has been confirmed in a biochemical assay.


Nature | 2017

The allosteric inhibitor ABL001 enables dual targeting of BCR-ABL1.

Andrew Wylie; Joseph Schoepfer; Wolfgang Jahnke; Sandra W. Cowan-Jacob; Alice Loo; Pascal Furet; Andreas Marzinzik; Xavier Francois Andre Pelle; Jerry Donovan; Wenjing Zhu; Silvia Buonamici; A. Quamrul Hassan; Franco Lombardo; Varsha Iyer; Michael Palmer; Giuliano Berellini; Stephanie Dodd; Sanjeev Thohan; Hans Bitter; Susan Branford; David M. Ross; Timothy P. Hughes; Lilli Petruzzelli; K. Gary Vanasse; Markus Warmuth; Francesco Hofmann; Nicholas Keen; William R. Sellers

Chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML) is driven by the activity of the BCR–ABL1 fusion oncoprotein. ABL1 kinase inhibitors have improved the clinical outcomes for patients with CML, with over 80% of patients treated with imatinib surviving for more than 10 years. Second-generation ABL1 kinase inhibitors induce more potent molecular responses in both previously untreated and imatinib-resistant patients with CML. Studies in patients with chronic-phase CML have shown that around 50% of patients who achieve and maintain undetectable BCR–ABL1 transcript levels for at least 2 years remain disease-free after the withdrawal of treatment. Here we characterize ABL001 (asciminib), a potent and selective allosteric ABL1 inhibitor that is undergoing clinical development testing in patients with CML and Philadelphia chromosome-positive (Ph+) acute lymphoblastic leukaemia. In contrast to catalytic-site ABL1 kinase inhibitors, ABL001 binds to the myristoyl pocket of ABL1 and induces the formation of an inactive kinase conformation. ABL001 and second-generation catalytic inhibitors have similar cellular potencies but distinct patterns of resistance mutations, with genetic barcoding studies revealing pre-existing clonal populations with no shared resistance between ABL001 and the catalytic inhibitor nilotinib. Consistent with this profile, acquired resistance was observed with single-agent therapy in mice; however, the combination of ABL001 and nilotinib led to complete disease control and eradicated CML xenograft tumours without recurrence after the cessation of treatment.


Future Medicinal Chemistry | 2011

Recent trends and observations in the design of high-quality screening collections

Steffen Renner; Maxim Popov; Ansgar Schuffenhauer; Hans-Joerg Roth; Werner Breitenstein; Andreas Marzinzik; Ian Lewis; Philipp Krastel; Florian Nigsch; Jeremy L. Jenkins; Edgar Jacoby

The design of a high-quality screening collection is of utmost importance for the early drug-discovery process and provides, in combination with high-quality assay systems, the foundation of future discoveries. Herein, we review recent trends and observations to successfully expand the access to bioactive chemical space, including the feedback from hit assessment interviews of high-throughput screening campaigns; recent successes with chemogenomics target family approaches, the identification of new relevant target/domain families, diversity-oriented synthesis and new emerging compound classes, and non-classical approaches, such as fragment-based screening and DNA-encoded chemical libraries. The role of in silico library design approaches are emphasized.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2010

Inhibitors of the Abl kinase directed at either the ATP- or myristate-binding site.

Doriano Fabbro; Paul W. Manley; Wolfgang Jahnke; Janis Liebetanz; Alexandra Szyttenholm; Gabriele Fendrich; André Strauss; Jianming Zhang; Nathanael S. Gray; Francisco Adrian; Markus Warmuth; Xavier Francois Andre Pelle; Robert Martin Grotzfeld; Frederic Berst; Andreas Marzinzik; Sandra W. Cowan-Jacob; Pascal Furet

The ATP-competitive inhibitors dasatinib and nilotinib, which bind to catalytically different conformations of the Abl kinase domain, have recently been approved for the treatment of imatinib-resistant CML. These two new drugs, albeit very efficient against most of the imatinib-resistant mutants of Bcr-Abl, fail to effectively suppress the Bcr-Abl activity of the T315I (or gatekeeper) mutation. Generating new ATP site-binding drugs that target the T315I in Abl has been hampered, amongst others, by target selectivity, which is frequently an issue when developing ATP-competitive inhibitors. Recently, using an unbiased cellular screening approach, GNF-2, a non-ATP-competitive inhibitor, has been identified that demonstrates cellular activity against Bcr-Abl transformed cells. The exquisite selectivity of GNF-2 is due to the finding that it targets the myristate binding site located near the C-terminus of the Abl kinase domain, as demonstrated by genetic approaches, solution NMR and X-ray crystallography. GNF-2, like myristate, is able to induce and/or stabilize the clamped inactive conformation of Abl analogous to the SH2-Y527 interaction of Src. The molecular mechanism for allosteric inhibition by the GNF-2 inhibitor class, and the combined effects with ATP-competitive inhibitors such as nilotinib and imatinib on wild-type Abl and imatinib-resistant mutants, in particular the T315I gatekeeper mutant, are reviewed.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

A Novel Class of Oral Direct Renin Inhibitors: Highly Potent 3,5-Disubstituted Piperidines Bearing a Tricyclic P3–P1 Pharmacophore

Nils Ostermann; Simon Ruedisser; Claus Ehrhardt; Werner Breitenstein; Andreas Marzinzik; Edgar Jacoby; Eric Vangrevelinghe; Johannes Ottl; Martin Klumpp; J. Constanze D. Hartwieg; Frederic Cumin; Ulrich Hassiepen; Jörg Trappe; Richard Sedrani; Sabine Geisse; Bernd Gerhartz; Paul Richert; Eric Francotte; Trixie Wagner; Markus Krömer; Takatoshi Kosaka; Randy Lee Webb; Dean F. Rigel; Jürgen Maibaum; Daniel Kaspar Baeschlin

A small library of fragments comprising putative recognition motifs for the catalytic dyad of aspartic proteases was generated by in silico similarity searches within the corporate compound deck based on rh-renin active site docking and scoring filters. Subsequent screening by NMR identified the low-affinity hits 3 and 4 as competitive active site binders, which could be shown by X-ray crystallography to bind to the hydrophobic S3-S1 pocket of rh-renin. As part of a parallel multiple hit-finding approach, the 3,5-disubstituted piperidine (rac)-5 was discovered by HTS using a enzymatic assay. X-ray crystallography demonstrated the eutomer (3S,5R)-5 to be a peptidomimetic inhibitor binding to a nonsubstrate topography of the rh-renin prime site. The design of the potent and selective (3S,5R)-12 bearing a P3(sp)-tethered tricyclic P3-P1 pharmacophore derived from 3 is described. (3S,5R)-12 showed oral bioavailability in rats and demonstrated blood pressure lowering activity in the double-transgenic rat model.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015

Optimization of a Dibenzodiazepine Hit to a Potent and Selective Allosteric PAK1 Inhibitor.

Alexei Karpov; Payman Amiri; Cornelia Bellamacina; Marie-Helene Bellance; Werner Breitenstein; Dylan Daniel; Regis Denay; Doriano Fabbro; César Fernández; Inga Galuba; Stephanie Guerro-Lagasse; Sascha Gutmann; Linda Hinh; Wolfgang Jahnke; Julia Klopp; Albert Lai; Mika Lindvall; Sylvia Ma; Henrik Möbitz; Sabina Pecchi; Gabriele Rummel; Kevin Shoemaker; Joerg Trappe; Charles Voliva; Sandra W. Cowan-Jacob; Andreas Marzinzik

The discovery of inhibitors targeting novel allosteric kinase sites is very challenging. Such compounds, however, once identified could offer exquisite levels of selectivity across the kinome. Herein we report our structure-based optimization strategy of a dibenzodiazepine hit 1, discovered in a fragment-based screen, yielding highly potent and selective inhibitors of PAK1 such as 2 and 3. Compound 2 was cocrystallized with PAK1 to confirm binding to an allosteric site and to reveal novel key interactions. Compound 3 modulated PAK1 at the cellular level and due to its selectivity enabled valuable research to interrogate biological functions of the PAK1 kinase.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2015

Large scale meta-analysis of fragment-based screening campaigns: privileged fragments and complementary technologies.

Peter S. Kutchukian; Anne Mai Wassermann; Mika Lindvall; S. Kirk Wright; Johannes Ottl; Jaison Jacob; Clemens Scheufler; Andreas Marzinzik; Natasja Brooijmans; Meir Glick

A first step in fragment-based drug discovery (FBDD) often entails a fragment-based screen (FBS) to identify fragment “hits.” However, the integration of conflicting results from orthogonal screens remains a challenge. Here we present a meta-analysis of 35 fragment-based campaigns at Novartis, which employed a generic 1400-fragment library against diverse target families using various biophysical and biochemical techniques. By statistically interrogating the multidimensional FBS data, we sought to investigate three questions: (1) What makes a fragment amenable for FBS? (2) How do hits from different fragment screening technologies and target classes compare with each other? (3) What is the best way to pair FBS assay technologies? In doing so, we identified substructures that were privileged for specific target classes, as well as fragments that were privileged for authentic activity against many targets. We also revealed some of the discrepancies between technologies. Finally, we uncovered a simple rule of thumb in screening strategy: when choosing two technologies for a campaign, pairing a biochemical and biophysical screen tends to yield the greatest coverage of authentic hits.

Collaboration


Dive into the Andreas Marzinzik's collaboration.

Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge