Christian Hesslinger
Nycomed
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Featured researches published by Christian Hesslinger.
Biochemical Society Transactions | 2009
Christian Hesslinger; Andreas Strub; Rainer Boer; Wolf-Rüdiger Ulrich; Martin Lehner; Clemens Braun
Nitric oxide (NO) is a key physiological mediator and disturbed regulation of NO release is associated with the pathophysiology of almost all inflammatory diseases. A multitude of inhibitors of NOSs (nitric oxide synthases) have been developed, initially with low or even no selectivity against the constitutively expressed NOS isoforms, eNOS (endothelial NOS) and nNOS (neuronal NOS). In the meanwhile these efforts yielded potent and highly selective iNOS (inducible NOS) inhibitors. Moreover, iNOS inhibitors have been shown to exert beneficial anti-inflammatory effects in a wide variety of acute and chronic animal models of inflammation. In the present mini-review, we summarize some of our current knowledge of inhibitors of the iNOS isoenzyme, their biochemical properties and efficacy in animal models of pulmonary diseases and in human disease itself. Moreover, the potential benefit of iNOS inhibition in animal models of COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease), such as cigarette smoke-induced pulmonary inflammation, has not been explicitly studied so far. In this context, we demonstrated recently that both a semi-selective iNOS inhibitor {L-NIL [N6-(1-iminoethyl)-L-lysine hydrochloride]} and highly selective iNOS inhibitors (GW274150 and BYK402750) potently diminished inflammation in a cigarette smoke mouse model mimicking certain aspects of human COPD. Therefore, despite the disappointing results from recent asthma trials, iNOS inhibition could still be of therapeutic utility in COPD, a concept which needs to be challenged and validated in human disease.
Molecular Pharmacology | 2005
Andreas Strub; Wolf-Rüdiger Ulrich; Christian Hesslinger; Manfrid Eltze; Thomas Fuchß; Jochen Strassner; Susanne Strand; Martin D. Lehner; Rainer Boer
We have identified imidazopyridine derivatives as a novel class of NO synthase inhibitors with high selectivity for the inducible isoform. 2-[2-(4-Methoxy-pyridin-2-yl)-ethyl]-3H-imidazo[4,5-b]pyridine (BYK191023) showed half-maximal inhibition of crudely purified human inducible (iNOS), neuronal (nNOS), and endothelial (eNOS) NO synthases at 86 nM, 17 μM, and 162 μM, respectively. Inhibition of inducible NO synthase was competitive with l-arginine, pointing to an interaction of BYK191023 with the catalytic center of the enzyme. In radioligand and surface plasmon resonance experiments, BYK191023 exhibited an affinity for iNOS, nNOS, and eNOS of 450 nM, 30 μM, and >500 μM, respectively. Inhibition of cellular nitrate/nitrite synthesis in RAW, rat mesangium, and human embryonic kidney 293 cells after iNOS induction showed 40- to 100-fold higher IC50 values than at the isolated enzyme, in agreement with the much higher l-arginine concentrations in cell culture media and inside intact cells. BYK191023 did not show any toxicity in various rodent and human cell lines up to high micromolar concentrations. The inhibitory potency of BYK191023 was tested in isolated organ models of iNOS (lipopolysaccharide-treated and phenylephrine-precontracted rat aorta; IC50 = 7 μM), eNOS (arecaidine propargyl ester-induced relaxation of phenylephrine-precontracted rat aorta; IC50 > 100 μM), and nNOS (field-stimulated relaxation of phenylephrine-precontracted rabbit corpus cavernosum; IC50 > 100 μM). These data confirm the high selectivity of BYK191023 for iNOS over eNOS and nNOS found at isolated enzymes. In summary, we have identified a new highly selective iNOS inhibitor structurally unrelated to known compounds and l-arginine. BYK191023 is a valuable tool for the investigation of iNOS-mediated effects in vitro and in vivo.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011
Ulrich Grädler; Thomas Fuchß; Wolf-Rüdiger Ulrich; Rainer Boer; Andreas Strub; Christian Hesslinger; Céline Anézo; Kay Diederichs; Andrea Zaliani
Inducible arginine oxidation and subsequent NO production by correspondent synthase (iNOS) are important cellular answers to proinflammatory signals. Prolonged NO production has been proved in higher organisms to cause stroke or septic shock. Several classes of potent NOS inhibitors have been reported, most of them targeting the arginine binding site of the oxygenase domain. Here we disclose the SAR and the rational design of potent and selective iNOS inhibitors which may be useful as anti-inflammatory drugs.
Molecular Pharmacology | 2008
Mauro Tiso; Andreas Strub; Christian Hesslinger; Claire Kenney; Rainer Boer; Dennis J. Stuehr
Imidazopyridine derivates were recently shown to be a novel class of selective and arginine-competitive inhibitors of inducible nitric-oxide synthase (iNOS), and 2-[2-(4-methoxypyridin-2-yl)-ethyl]-3H-imidazo[4,5-b]pyridine (BYK191023) was found to have very high selectivity in enzymatic and cellular models ( Mol Pharmacol69:328-337, 2006 ). Here, we show that BYK191023 irreversibly inactivates murine iNOS in an NADPH- and time-dependent manner, whereas it acts only as a reversible l-arginine-competitive inhibitor in the absence of NADPH or during anaerobic preincubation. Time-dependent irreversible inhibition by BYK191023 could also be demonstrated in intact cells using the RAW macrophage or iNOS-overexpressing human embryonic kidney 293 cell lines. The mechanism of BYK191023 inhibition in the presence of NADPH was studied using spectral, kinetic, chromatographic, and radioligand binding methods. BYK191023-bound iNOS was spectrally indistinguishable from l-arginine-bound iNOS, pointing to an interaction of BYK191023 with the catalytic center of the enzyme. [3H]BYK191023 was recovered quantitatively from irreversibly inactivated iNOS, and no inhibitor metabolite was detected by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Size exclusion chromatography revealed only about 20% iNOS dissociation into monomers. Furthermore, HPLC and spectrophotometric analysis showed that the irreversible inhibition was associated with loss of heme from iNOS and a reduced ability to form the distinctive ferrous heme-CO complex (cytochrome P450). Thus, enzyme inactivation is mainly caused by heme loss, and it occurs in the inhibitor-bound enzyme in the presence of electron flux from NADPH.
Archive | 2006
Christian Hesslinger; Christian Schudt; Degenhard Marx; Clemens Braun
Archive | 2006
Christian Hesslinger; Christian Schudt; Degenhard Marx; Clemens Braun
Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2005
Martin Lehner; Degenhard Marx; Rainer Boer; Andreas Strub; Christian Hesslinger; Manfrid Eltze; Wolf-Rüdiger Ulrich; Frank Schwoebel; Ralph T. Schermuly; Johannes Barsig
Archive | 2006
Thomas Martin; Wolf-Rüdiger Ulrich; Thomas Fuchss; Rainer Boer; Christian Hesslinger; Andreas Strub; Manfrid Eltze; Martin Lehner
Archive | 2006
Thomas Fuchss; Andreas Strub; Wolf-Rüdiger Ulrich; Christian Hesslinger; Martin Lehner; Raimund Külzer; Rainer Boer; Manfrid Eltze
Nitric Oxide | 2008
Christian Hesslinger; Martin Lehner; Andreas Strub; Rainer Boer; Wolf-Ruediger Ulrich; Raimund Kuelzer; Gereon Lauer; Dan Liu; Diane Spicer; Mary Fitzgerald; Lutz Wollin; Andreas Weidenbach