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Dive into the research topics where Armin Heckel is active.

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Featured researches published by Armin Heckel.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2003

The small molecule Hesperadin reveals a role for Aurora B in correcting kinetochore–microtubule attachment and in maintaining the spindle assembly checkpoint

Silke Hauf; Richard W. Cole; Sabrina LaTerra; Christine Zimmer; Gisela Schnapp; Rainer Walter; Armin Heckel; Jacques van Meel; Conly L. Rieder; Jan-Michael Peters

The proper segregation of sister chromatids in mitosis depends on bipolar attachment of all chromosomes to the mitotic spindle. We have identified the small molecule Hesperadin as an inhibitor of chromosome alignment and segregation. Our data imply that Hesperadin causes this phenotype by inhibiting the function of the mitotic kinase Aurora B. Mammalian cells treated with Hesperadin enter anaphase in the presence of numerous monooriented chromosomes, many of which may have both sister kinetochores attached to one spindle pole (syntelic attachment). Hesperadin also causes cells arrested by taxol or monastrol to enter anaphase within <1 h, whereas cells in nocodazole stay arrested for 3–5 h. Together, our data suggest that Aurora B is required to generate unattached kinetochores on monooriented chromosomes, which in turn could promote bipolar attachment as well as maintain checkpoint signaling.


Cancer Research | 2008

BIBF 1120: Triple Angiokinase Inhibitor with Sustained Receptor Blockade and Good Antitumor Efficacy

Frank Hilberg; Gerald Juergen Roth; Martin Krššák; Susanna Kautschitsch; Wolfgang Sommergruber; Ulrike Tontsch-Grunt; Pilar Garin-Chesa; Gerd Bader; Andreas Zoephel; Jens Juergen Quant; Armin Heckel; Wolfgang J. Rettig

Inhibition of tumor angiogenesis through blockade of the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) signaling pathway is a novel treatment modality in oncology. Preclinical findings suggest that long-term clinical outcomes may improve with blockade of additional proangiogenic receptor tyrosine kinases: platelet-derived growth factor receptors (PDGFR) and fibroblast growth factor receptors (FGFR). BIBF 1120 is an indolinone derivative potently blocking VEGF receptor (VEGFR), PDGFR and FGFR kinase activity in enzymatic assays (IC(50), 20-100 nmol/L). BIBF 1120 inhibits mitogen-activated protein kinase and Akt signaling pathways in three cell types contributing to angiogenesis, endothelial cells, pericytes, and smooth muscle cells, resulting in inhibition of cell proliferation (EC(50), 10-80 nmol/L) and apoptosis. In all tumor models tested thus far, including human tumor xenografts growing in nude mice and a syngeneic rat tumor model, BIBF 1120 is highly active at well-tolerated doses (25-100 mg/kg daily p.o.), as measured by magnetic resonance imaging of tumor perfusion after 3 days, reducing vessel density and vessel integrity after 5 days, and inducing profound growth inhibition. A distinct pharmacodynamic feature of BIBF 1120 in cell culture is sustained pathway inhibition (up to 32 hours after 1-hour treatment), suggesting slow receptor off-kinetics. Although BIBF 1120 is rapidly metabolized in vivo by methylester cleavage, resulting in a short mean residence time, once daily oral dosing is fully efficacious in xenograft models. These distinctive pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties may help explain clinical observations with BIBF 1120, currently entering phase III clinical development.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009

Design, synthesis, and evaluation of indolinones as triple angiokinase inhibitors and the discovery of a highly specific 6-methoxycarbonyl-substituted indolinone (BIBF 1120).

Gerald Juergen Roth; Armin Heckel; Florian Colbatzky; Sandra Handschuh; Jörg Kley; Thorsten Lehmann-Lintz; Ralf Lotz; Ulrike Tontsch-Grunt; Rainer Walter; Frank Hilberg

Inhibition of tumor angiogenesis through blockade of the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) signaling pathway is a new treatment modality in oncology. Preclinical findings suggest that blockade of additional pro-angiogenic kinases, such as fibroblast and platelet-derived growth factor receptors (FGFR and PDGFR), may improve the efficacy of pharmacological cancer treatment. Indolinones substituted in position 6 were identified as selective inhibitors of VEGF-, PDGF-, and FGF-receptor kinases. In particular, 6-methoxycarbonyl-substituted indolinones showed a highly favorable selectivity profile. Optimization identified potent inhibitors of VEGF-related endothelial cell proliferation with additional efficacy on pericyctes and smooth muscle cells. In contrast, no direct inhibition of tumor cell proliferation was observed. Compounds 2 (BIBF 1000) and 3 (BIBF 1120) are orally available and display encouraging efficacy in in vivo tumor models while being well tolerated. The triple angiokinase inhibitor 3 is currently in phase III clinical trials for the treatment of nonsmall cell lung cancer.


Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience | 2003

Inhibition of CDK5 is protective in necrotic and apoptotic paradigms of neuronal cell death and prevents mitochondrial dysfunction

Jochen H. Weishaupt; Lothar Kussmaul; Philipp Grötsch; Armin Heckel; Gundula Rohde; H Romig; Mathias Bähr

Previous studies suggested that pro-apoptotic stimuli may trigger a fatal reactivation of cell cycle elements in postmitotic neurons. Supporting this hypothesis, small molecule inhibitors of cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs), which are known primarily as cell cycle regulators, are neuroprotective. However, available CDK inhibitors cannot discriminate between the different members of the CDK family and inhibit also CDK5, which is not involved in cell cycle control. Testing a new class of CDK inhibitors, we find that inhibitory activity against CDK5, but not cell cycle-relevant CDKs, confers neuroprotection. Moreover, we demonstrate that cleavage of the CDK5 activator protein p35 to p25 is associated with CDK5 overactivation after focal cerebral ischemia, but not in other models used in this study. We find that blocking CDK5 activity, but not caspase inhibition, protects mitochondrial integrity of lesioned neurons. Thus, in our models, CDK5, rather than cell cycle-relevant CDKs, activates neuronal cell death pathways upstream of mitochondrial dysfunction, and inhibition of CDK5 may promote functional long-term rescue of injured neurons. Moreover, we present the first CDK5-selective small molecule inhibitor, lacking unwanted cytostatic effects due to cross-inhibition of mitotic CDKs.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Phenocopy - a strategy to qualify chemical compounds during hit-to-lead and/or lead optimization

Patrick Baum; Ramona Schmid; Carina Ittrich; Werner Rust; Katrin Fundel-Clemens; Susanne Siewert; Martin Baur; Lisa Mara; Lore M. Gruenbaum; Armin Heckel; Roland Eils; Roland E. Kontermann; Gerald Jürgen Roth; Florian Gantner; Andreas Schnapp; John Edward Park; Andreas Weith; Karsten Quast; Detlev Mennerich

A phenocopy is defined as an environmentally induced phenotype of one individual which is identical to the genotype-determined phenotype of another individual. The phenocopy phenomenon has been translated to the drug discovery process as phenotypes produced by the treatment of biological systems with new chemical entities (NCE) may resemble environmentally induced phenotypic modifications. Various new chemical entities exerting inhibition of the kinase activity of Transforming Growth Factor β Receptor I (TGF-βR1) were qualified by high-throughput RNA expression profiling. This chemical genomics approach resulted in a precise time-dependent insight to the TGF-β biology and allowed furthermore a comprehensive analysis of each NCEs off-target effects. The evaluation of off-target effects by the phenocopy approach allows a more accurate and integrated view on optimized compounds, supplementing classical biological evaluation parameters such as potency and selectivity. It has therefore the potential to become a novel method for ranking compounds during various drug discovery phases.


Biochemistry | 2013

Crystal Structure of Glucokinase Regulatory Protein.

Alexander Pautsch; Nadja Stadler; Adelheid Löhle; Wolfgang Rist; Adina Berg; Lucia Glocker; Herbert Nar; Dirk Reinert; Martin Lenter; Armin Heckel; Gisela Schnapp; Stefan Kauschke

Glucokinase (GK) plays a major role in the regulation of blood glucose homeostasis in both the liver and the pancreas. In the liver, GK is controlled by the GK regulatory protein (GKRP). GKRP in turn is activated by fructose 6-phosphate (F6P) and inactivated by fructose 1-phosphate (F1P). Disrupting the GK-GKRP complex increases the activity of GK in the cytosol and is considered an attractive concept for the regulation of blood glucose. We have determined the crystal structure of GKRP in its inactive F1P-bound form. The binding site for F1P is located deeply buried at a domain interface, and H-D exchange experiments confirmed that F1P and F6P compete for this site. The structure of the inactive GKRP-F1P complex provides a starting point for understanding the mechanism of fructose phosphate-dependent GK regulation at an atomic level.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Design, Synthesis and Evaluation of Indolinones as Inhibitors of the Transforming Growth Factor Beta Receptor I (Tgfbri)

Gerald Juergen Roth; Armin Heckel; Trixi Brandl; Matthias Grauert; Stefan Hoerer; Joerg Kley; Gisela Schnapp; Patrick Baum; Detlev Mennerich; Andreas Schnapp; John Edward Park

Inhibition of transforming growth factor β (TGFβ) type I receptor (Alk5) offers a novel approach for the treatment of fibrotic diseases and cancer. Indolinones substituted in position 6 were identified as a new chemotype inhibiting TGFβRI concomitant with a low cross-reactivity among the human kinome. A subset of compounds showed additional inhibition of platelet-derived growth factor receptor alpha (PDGFRα), contributing to an interesting pharmacological profile. In contrast, p38 kinase, which is often inhibited by TGFβRI inhibitors, was not targeted by derivatives based on the indolinone chemotype. Guided by an X-ray structure of lead compound 5 (BIBF0775) soaked into the kinase domain of TGFβRI, optimization furnished potent and selective inhibitors of TGFβRI. Potent inhibition translated well into good inhibition of TGFβRI-mediated phosphorylation of Smad2/3, demonstrating efficacy in a cellular setting. Optimized compounds were extensively profiled on a 232-kinase panel and showed low cross-reactivities within the human kinome.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015

Design, synthesis and evaluation of MCH receptor 1 antagonists—Part II: Optimization of pyridazines toward reduced phospholipidosis and hERG inhibition

Gerald Jürgen Roth; Armin Heckel; Jörg Kley; Thorsten Lehmann; Stephan Georg Müller; Thorsten Oost; Klaus Rudolf; Kirsten Arndt; Ralph Budzinski; Martin Lenter; Ralf Lotz; Marcus Schindler; Leo Thomas; Dirk Stenkamp

Despite recent success there remains a high therapeutic need for the development of drugs targeting diseases associated with the metabolic syndrome. As part of our search for safe and effective MCH-R1 antagonists for the treatment of obesity, a series of 3,6-disubstituted pyridazines was evaluated. During optimization several issues of the initial lead structures had to be resolved, such as selectivity over related GPCRs, inhibition of the hERG channel as well as the potential to induce phospholipidosis. Utilizing property-based design, we could demonstrate that all parameters can significantly be improved by consequently increasing the polarity of the compounds. By this strategy, we succeeded in identifying potent and orally available MCH-R1 antagonists with good selectivity over M1 and 5-HT2A and an improved safety profile with respect to hERG inhibition and phospholipidosis.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015

Design, synthesis and evaluation of MCH receptor 1 antagonists—Part I: Optimization of HTS hits towards an in vivo efficacious tool compound BI 414

Stephan Georg Müller; Armin Heckel; Jörg Kley; Thorsten Lehmann; Philipp Lustenberger; Thorsten Oost; Gerald Jürgen Roth; Klaus Rudolf; Kirsten Arndt; Martin Lenter; Ralf Lotz; Gerd-Michael Maier; Michael Markert; Marcus Schindler; Dirk Stenkamp

Despite recent approvals of anti-obesity drugs there is still a high therapeutic need for alternative options with higher efficacy in humans. As part of our MCH-R1 antagonist program for the treatment of obesity, a series of biphenylacetamide HTS hits was evaluated. Several issues of the initial lead structures had to be resolved, such as potency, selectivity over related GPCRs and P-gp efflux limiting brain exposure in this series. We could demonstrate that all parameters can be significantly improved by structural modifications resulting in BI 414 as a potent and orally available MCH-R1 antagonist tool compound with acceptable in vivo efficacy in an animal model of obesity.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015

Design, synthesis and evaluation of MCH receptor 1 antagonists—Part III: Discovery of pre-clinical development candidate BI 186908

Thorsten Oost; Armin Heckel; Jörg Kley; Thorsten Lehmann; Stephan Georg Müller; Gerald Jürgen Roth; Klaus Rudolf; Kirsten Arndt; Ralph Budzinski; Martin Lenter; Ralf Lotz; Gerd-Michael Maier; Michael Markert; Leo Thomas; Dirk Stenkamp

Although overweight and obesity are highly prevalent conditions, options to treat them are still very limited. As part of our search for safe and effective MCH-R1 antagonists for the treatment of obesity, two series of pyridones and pyridazinones were evaluated. Optimization was aimed at improving DMPK properties by increasing metabolic stability and improving the safety profile by reducing inhibition of the hERG channel and reducing the potential to induce phospholipidosis. Steric shielding of a labile keto moiety with an ortho-methyl group and fine-tuning of the polarity in several parts of the molecule resulted in BI 186908 (11 g), a potent and selective MCH-R1 antagonist with favorable DMPK and CMC properties. Chronic administration of BI 186908 resulted in significant body weight reduction comparable to sibutramine in a 4 week diet-induced obesity model in rats. Based on its favorable safety profile, BI 186908 was advanced to pre-clinical development.

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