Beat Weidmann
Novartis
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Featured researches published by Beat Weidmann.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2006
Sue Ma; Joanna E. Boerner; Choi-Lai Tiong-Yip; Beat Weidmann; Neil S. Ryder; Michael P. Cooreman; Kai Lin
ABSTRACT Host factors involved in viral replication are potentially attractive antiviral targets that are complementary to specific inhibitors of viral enzymes, since resistant mutations against the latter are likely to emerge during long-term treatment. It has been reported recently that cyclosporine, which binds to a family of cellular proteins, cyclophilins, inhibits hepatitis C virus (HCV) replication in vitro. Here, the activities of various cyclosporine derivatives were evaluated in the HCV replicon system. There was a strong correlation between the anti-HCV activity and cyclophilin-binding affinity of these compounds. Of these, NIM811 has been selected as a therapeutic candidate for HCV infection, since it binds to cyclophilins with higher affinity than cyclosporine but is devoid of the significant immunosuppressive activity associated with cyclosporine. NIM811 induced a concentration-dependent reduction of HCV RNA in the replicon cells with a 50% inhibitory concentration of 0.66 μM at 48 h. Furthermore, a greater than three-log10 viral RNA reduction was achieved after treating the cells with as little as 1 μM of NIM811 for 9 days. In addition, the combination of NIM811 with alpha interferon significantly enhanced anti-HCV activities without causing any increase of cytotoxicity. Taken together, these promising in vitro data warrant clinical investigation of NIM811, an inhibitor of novel mechanism, for the treatment of hepatitis C.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2002
Corinne Hackbarth; Dawn Chen; Jason G. Lewis; Kirk Clark; James B. Mangold; Jeffrey A. Cramer; Peter S. Margolis; Wen Wang; Jim Koehn; Charlotte Wu; S. Lopez; George Withers; Helen Gu; Elina Dunn; Raviraj Kulathila; Shi-Hao Pan; Wilma Porter; Jeff Jacobs; Joaquim Trias; Dinesh V. Patel; Beat Weidmann; Richard J. White; Zhengyu Yuan
ABSTRACT Peptide deformylase (PDF) is a prokaryotic metalloenzyme that is essential for bacterial growth and is a new target for the development of antibacterial agents. All previously reported PDF inhibitors with sufficient antibacterial activity share the structural feature of a 2-substituted alkanoyl at the P1′ site. Using a combination of iterative parallel synthesis and traditional medicinal chemistry, we have identified a new class of PDF inhibitors with N-alkyl urea at the P1′ site. Compounds with MICs of ≤4 μg/ml against gram-positive and gram-negative pathogens, including Staphylococcusaureus, Streptococcuspneumoniae, and Haemophilusinfluenzae, have been identified. The concentrations needed to inhibit 50% of enzyme activity (IC50s) for Escherichiacoli Ni-PDF were ≤0.1 μM, demonstrating the specificity of the inhibitors. In addition, these compounds were very selective for PDF, with IC50s of consistently >200 μM for matrilysin and other mammalian metalloproteases. Structure-activity relationship analysis identified preferred substitutions resulting in improved potency and decreased cytotoxity. One of the compounds (VRC4307) was cocrystallized with PDF, and the enzyme-inhibitor structure was determined at a resolution of 1.7 Å. This structural information indicated that the urea compounds adopt a binding position similar to that previously determined for succinate hydroxamates. Two compounds, VRC4232 and VRC4307, displayed in vivo efficacy in a mouse protection assay, with 50% protective doses of 30.8 and 17.9 mg/kg of body weight, respectively. These N-alkyl urea hydroxamic acids provide a starting point for identifying new PDF inhibitors that can serve as antimicrobial agents.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2004
Dawn Chen; Corinne Hackbarth; Z. J. Ni; Charlotte Wu; Wen Wang; Rakesh K. Jain; Y. He; Kathryn Rene Bracken; Beat Weidmann; Dinesh V. Patel; Joaquim Trias; Richard J. White; Zhengyu Yuan
ABSTRACT Peptide deformylase (PDF), a metallohydrolase essential for bacterial growth, is an attractive target for use in the discovery of novel antibiotics. Focused chelator-based chemical libraries were constructed and screened for inhibition of enzymatic activity, inhibition of Staphylococcus aureus growth, and cytotoxicity. Positive compounds were selected based on the results of all three assays. VRC3375 [N-hydroxy-3-R-butyl-3-(2-S-(tert-butoxycarbonyl)-pyrrolidin-1-ylcarbonyl)propionamide] was identified as having the most favorable properties through an integrated combinatorial and medicinal chemistry effort. This compound is a potent PDF inhibitor with a Ki of 0.24 nM against the Escherichia coli Ni2+ enzyme, possesses activity against gram-positive and gram-negative bacterial pathogens, and has a low cytotoxicity. Mechanistic experiments demonstrate that the compound inhibits bacterial growth through PDF inhibition. Pharmacokinetic studies of this drug in mice indicate that VRC3375 is orally bioavailable and rapidly distributed among various tissues. VRC3375 has in vivo activity against S. aureus in a murine septicemia model, with 50% effective doses of 32, 17, and 21 mg/kg of body weight after dosing by intravenous (i.v.), subcutaneous (s.c.), and oral (p.o.) administration, respectively. In murine single-dose toxicity studies, no adverse effects were observed after dosing with more than 400 mg of VRC3375 per kg by i.v., p.o., or s.c. administration. The in vivo efficacy and low toxicity of VRC3375 suggest the potential for developing this class of compounds to be used in future antibacterial drugs.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2005
Charles R. Dean; Shubha Narayan; Denis M. Daigle; JoAnn Dzink-Fox; Xiaoling Puyang; Kathryn Rene Bracken; Karl Dean; Beat Weidmann; Zhengyu Yuan; Rakesh K. Jain; Neil S. Ryder
ABSTRACT Haemophilus influenzae isolates vary widely in their susceptibilities to the peptide deformylase inhibitor LBM415 (MIC range, 0.06 to 32 μg/ml); however, on average, they are less susceptible than gram-positive organisms, such as Staphylococcus aureus and Streptococcus pneumoniae. Insertional inactivation of the H. influenzae acrB or tolC gene in strain NB65044 (Rd strain KW20) increased susceptibility to LBM415, confirming a role for the AcrAB-TolC pump in determining resistance. Consistent with this, sequencing of a PCR fragment generated with primers flanking the acrRA region from an LBM415-hypersusceptible H. influenzae clinical isolate revealed a genetic deletion of acrA. Inactivation of acrB or tolC in several clinical isolates with atypically reduced susceptibility to LBM415 (MIC of 16 μg/ml or greater) significantly increased susceptibility, confirming that the pump is also a determinant of decreased susceptibility in these clinical isolates. Examination of acrR, encoding the putative repressor of pump gene expression, from several of these strains revealed mutations introducing frameshifts, stop codons, and amino acid changes relative to the published sequence, suggesting that loss of pump repression leads to decreased susceptibility. Supporting this, NB65044 acrR mutants selected by exposure to LBM415 at 8 μg/ml had susceptibilities to LBM415 and other pump substrates comparable to the least sensitive clinical isolates and showed increased expression of pump genes.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2006
Jeanette W. P. Teo; Pamela Thayalan; David Beer; Amelia S. L. Yap; Mahesh Nanjundappa; Xinyi Ngew; Jeyaraj Duraiswamy; Sarah Liung; Véronique Dartois; Mark Schreiber; Samiul Hasan; Michael H. Cynamon; Neil S. Ryder; Xia Yang; Beat Weidmann; Kathryn Rene Bracken; Thomas Dick; Kakoli Mukherjee
ABSTRACT Peptide deformylase (PDF) catalyzes the hydrolytic removal of the N-terminal formyl group from nascent proteins. This is an essential step in bacterial protein synthesis, making PDF an attractive target for antibacterial drug development. Essentiality of the def gene, encoding PDF from Mycobacterium tuberculosis, was demonstrated through genetic knockout experiments with Mycobacterium bovis BCG. PDF from M. tuberculosis strain H37Rv was cloned, expressed, and purified as an N-terminal histidine-tagged recombinant protein in Escherichia coli. A novel class of PDF inhibitors (PDF-I), the N-alkyl urea hydroxamic acids, were synthesized and evaluated for their activities against the M. tuberculosis PDF enzyme as well as their antimycobacterial effects. Several compounds from the new class had 50% inhibitory concentration (IC50) values of <100 nM. Some of the PDF-I displayed antibacterial activity against M. tuberculosis, including MDR strains with MIC90 values of <1 μM. Pharmacokinetic studies of potential leads showed that the compounds were orally bioavailable. Spontaneous resistance towards these inhibitors arose at a frequency of ≤5 × 10−7 in M. bovis BCG. DNA sequence analysis of several spontaneous PDF-I-resistant mutants revealed that half of the mutants had acquired point mutations in their formyl methyltransferase gene (fmt), which formylated Met-tRNA. The results from this study validate M. tuberculosis PDF as a drug target and suggest that this class of compounds have the potential to be developed as novel antimycobacterial agents.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2001
Sompong Wattanasin; Beat Weidmann; Didier Roche; Stewart Myers; Amy Xing; Qin Guo; Michael Lloyd Sabio; Peter von Matt; Ronald Hugo; Susan Maida; Philip Lake; Marla Weetall
The synthesis and identification of a novel series of inhibitors of integrin VLA-4 are described. Their in vitro activity and selectivity against closely related integrins are also presented.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 1999
Peter Ettmayer; John S. Gounarides; Mark A. Jarosinski; Mary-Sue Martin; Jean-Michel Rondeau; Michael Sabio; Sid Topiol; Beat Weidmann; Mauro Zurini; Kenneth W. Bair
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2003
Rakesh K. Jain; A. Sundram; Sara Lopez; G. Neckermann; Charlotte Wu; Corinne Hackbarth; Dawn Chen; Wen Wang; Neil S. Ryder; Beat Weidmann; Dinesh V. Patel; Joaquim Trias; Richard G. White; Zhengyu Yuan
Archive | 2005
Kai Lin; Beat Weidmann
Archive | 2006
Jiri Kovarik; Gebhard Thoma; Beat Weidmann; Timothy Wright; Hans-Günter Zerwes