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Dive into the research topics where Claus Ehrhardt is active.

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Featured researches published by Claus Ehrhardt.


Trends in Pharmacological Sciences | 1993

Synthetic low-molecular weight thrombin inhibitors: molecular design and pharmacological profile

Carlo Tapparelli; Rainer Metternich; Claus Ehrhardt; Nigel S. Cook

Thrombin is a multifunctional protein: in addition to its role in coagulation, thrombin has important biological effects on platelets, endothelial and smooth muscle cells, leukocytes, the heart and neurones. A detailed understanding of the structure of thrombin, of related serine proteases and of enzyme-inhibitor complexes has aided in the discovery of potent and selective new inhibitor molecules. Some of these novel thrombin inhibitors are active when administered orally and have shown remarkable efficacy as antithrombotic agents in animal models, offering a greater therapeutic potential than presently available drugs. This potential extends also to non-thrombotic indications where thrombin may be involved, namely inflammation, cancer and neurodegenerative diseases. The recent identification of specific thrombin receptors on different cells provides an alternative strategy for inhibiting thrombins cellular actions, without necessarily compromising its role in haemostasis. In this review, Carlo Tapparelli and colleagues present a comprehensive update of these recent developments in the field of thrombin biology and pharmacology suggesting a new era of therapeutic drugs is on the horizon.


Proteins | 1999

Exhaustive docking of molecular fragments with electrostatic solvation

Nicolas Majeux; Marco Scarsi; Joannis Apostolakis; Claus Ehrhardt; Amedeo Caflisch

A new method is presented for docking molecular fragments to a rigid protein with evaluation of the binding energy. Polar fragments are docked with at least one hydrogen bond with the protein while apolar fragments are positioned in the hydrophobic pockets. The electrostatic contribution to the binding energy, which consists of screened intermolecular energy and protein and fragment desolvation terms, is evaluated efficiently by a numerical approach based on the continuum dielectric approximation. The latter is also used to predetermine the hydrophobic pockets of the protein by rolling a low dielectric sphere over the protein surface and calculating the electrostatic desolvation of the protein and van der Waals interaction energy. The method was implemented in the program SEED (solvation energy for exhaustive docking). The SEED continuum electrostatic approach has been successfully validated by a comparison with finite difference solutions of the Poisson equation for more than 2,500 complexes of small molecules with thrombin and the monomer of HIV‐1 aspartic proteinase. The fragments docked by SEED in the active site of thrombin reproduce the structural features of the interaction patterns between known inhibitors and thrombin. Moreover, the combinatorial connection of these fragments yields a number of compounds that are very similar to potent inhibitors of thrombin. Proteins 1999;37:88–105.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009

Discovery of 3-(1H-indol-3-yl)-4-[2-(4-methylpiperazin-1-yl)quinazolin-4-yl]pyrrole-2,5-dione (AEB071), a potent and selective inhibitor of protein kinase C isotypes

Jürgen Wagner; Peter von Matt; Richard Sedrani; Rainer Albert; Nigel Graham Cooke; Claus Ehrhardt; Martin Geiser; Gabriele Rummel; Wilhelm Stark; André Strauss; Sandra W. Cowan-Jacob; Christian Beerli; Gisbert Weckbecker; Jean-Pierre Evenou; Gerhard Zenke; Sylvain Cottens

A series of novel maleimide-based inhibitors of protein kinase C (PKC) were designed, synthesized, and evaluated. AEB071 (1) was found to be a potent, selective inhibitor of classical and novel PKC isotypes. 1 is a highly efficient immunomodulator, acting via inhibition of early T cell activation. The binding mode of maleimides to PKCs, proposed by molecular modeling, was confirmed by X-ray analysis of 1 bound in the active site of PKCalpha.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2003

1,4-Diazepane-2,5-diones as novel inhibitors of LFA-1

Sompong Wattanasin; Joerg Kallen; Stewart Myers; A. Qin Guo; Michael Lloyd Sabio; Claus Ehrhardt; Rainer Albert; Ulrich Hommel; Gisbert Weckbecker; Karl Welzenbach; Gabriele Weitz-Schmidt

1,4-Diazepane-2,5-diones (2) are found to be a new class of potent LFA-1 inhibitors. The synthesis, structure, and biological evaluation of these 1,4-diazepine-2,5-diones and related derivatives are described.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 1999

Design, synthesis and biological evaluation of selective boron-containing thrombin inhibitors

Anette Wienand; Claus Ehrhardt; Rainer Metternich; Carlo Tapparelli

Based on the structural comparison of the S-1 pocket in different trypsin-like serine proteases, a series of Boc-D-trimethylsilylalanine-proline-boro-X pinanediol derivatives, with boro-X being different amino boronic acids, have been synthesised as inhibitors of thrombin. The influence of hydrogen donor/acceptor properties of different residues in the P-1 side chain of these inhibitors on the selectivity profile has been investigated. This study confirmed the structure-based working hypothesis: The hydrophobic/hydrophilic character of amino acid residues 190 and 213 in the neighbourhood of Asp 189 in the S-1 pocket of thrombin (Ala/Val), trypsin (Ser/Val) and plasmin (Ser/Thr) define the specificity for the interaction with different P-1 residues of the inhibitors. Many of the synthesised compounds demonstrate potent antithrombin activity with Boc-D-trimethylsilylalanine-proline-boro-methoxypropylglycine++ + pinanediol (9) being the most selective thrombin inhibitor of this series.


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.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2000

Selective boron-containing thrombin inhibitors--X-ray analysis reveals surprising binding mode.

Anette Von Matt; Claus Ehrhardt; Peter Burkhard; Rainer Metternich; Malcolm D. Walkinshaw; Carlo Tapparelli

Based on the structural comparison of the S1 pocket in different trypsin-like serine proteases, a series of Boc-D-trimethylsilylalanine-proline-boro-X pinanediol derivatives, with boro-X being different amino boronic acids, have been synthesized as inhibitors of thrombin. Among the novel compounds, a number of derivatives were synthesized which appeared to have side-chain variants too big to fit into the S1 pocket. Nevertheless, these compounds inhibited thrombin in the nM range. The X-ray structure of one of these inhibitors bound to the active side of thrombin reveals that a new binding mode is responsible for these surprising results.


Journal of Computational Chemistry | 2005

Absolute free energies of binding of peptide analogs to the HIV‐1 protease from molecular dynamics simulations

Christian Bartels; Armin Widmer; Claus Ehrhardt

The constants of binding of five peptide analogs to the active site of the HIV‐1 aspartic‐protease are calculated based on a novel sampling scheme that is efficient and does not introduce any approximations in addition to the energy function used to describe the system. The results agree with experiments. The squared correlation coefficient of the calculated vs. the measured values is 0.79. The sampling scheme consists of a series of molecular dynamics integrations with biases. The biases are selected based on an estimate of the probability density function of the system in a way to explore the conformational space and to reduce the statistical error in the calculated binding constants. The molecular dynamics integrations are done with a vacuum potential using a short cutoff scheme. To estimate the probability density of the simulated system, the results of the molecular dynamics integrations are combined using an extension of the weighted histogram analysis method (C. Bartels, Chem. Phys. Letters 331 (2000) 446–454). The probability density of the solvated ligand–protein system is obtained by applying a correction for the use of the short cutoffs in the simulations and by taking into account solvation with an electrostatic term and a hydrophobic term. The electrostatic part of the solvation is determined by finite difference Poisson–Boltzmann calculations; the hydrophobic part of the solvation is set proportional to the solvent accessible surface area. Setting the hydrophobic surface tension parameter equal to 8 mol−1 K−1 A−2, absolute binding constants are in the μM to nM range. This is in agreement with experiments. The standard errors determined from eight repeated binding constant determinations are a factor of 14 to 411. A single determination of a binding constant is done with 499700 steps of molecular dynamics integration and 4500 finite difference Poisson–Boltzmann calculations. The simulations can be analyzed with respect to conformational changes of the active site of the HIV‐1 protease or the ligands upon binding and provide information that complements experiments and can be used in the drug development process.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015

trans-3,4-Disubstituted pyrrolidines as inhibitors of the human aspartyl protease renin. Part II: prime site exploration using an oxygen linker.

Edwige Liliane Jeanne Lorthiois; Frederic Cumin; Claus Ehrhardt; Takatoshi Kosaka; Holger Sellner; Nils Ostermann; Eric Francotte; Trixie Wagner; Jürgen Maibaum

Recently, we reported on the discovery of (3S,4S)-disubstituted pyrrolidines (e.g., 2) as inhibitors of the human aspartyl protease renin. In our effort to further expand the scope of this novel class of direct renin inhibitors, a new sub-series was designed in which the prime site substituents are linked to the pyrrolidine core by a (3S)-amino functional group. In particular, analogs bearing the corresponding sulfonamide spacer (50, 51 and 54a) demonstrated a pronounced increase in in vitro potency compared to compound 2.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2006

Peptide inhibitors of dengue virus NS3 protease. Part 2: SAR study of tetrapeptide aldehyde inhibitors.

Zheng Yin; Sejal J. Patel; Wei-Ling Wang; Wai-Ling Chan; K.R. Ranga Rao; Gang Wang; Xinyi Ngew; Viral Patel; David Beer; John E. Knox; Ngai Ling Ma; Claus Ehrhardt; Siew Pheng Lim; Subhash G. Vasudevan; Thomas H. Keller

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