Daniel Hunziker
Hoffmann-La Roche
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Publication
Featured researches published by Daniel Hunziker.
Nature | 2004
Jonathan L. Vennerstrom; Sarah Arbe-Barnes; Reto Brun; Susan A. Charman; Francis Chi Keung Chiu; Jacques Chollet; Yuxiang Dong; Arnulf Dorn; Daniel Hunziker; Hugues Matile; Kylie Anne McIntosh; Maniyan Padmanilayam; Josefina Santo Tomas; Christian Scheurer; Bernard Scorneaux; Yuanqing Tang; Heinrich Urwyler; Sergio Wittlin; William N. Charman
The discovery of artemisinin more than 30 years ago provided a completely new antimalarial structural prototype; that is, a molecule with a pharmacophoric peroxide bond in a unique 1,2,4-trioxane heterocycle. Available evidence suggests that artemisinin and related peroxidic antimalarial drugs exert their parasiticidal activity subsequent to reductive activation by haem, released as a result of haemoglobin digestion by the malaria-causing parasite. This irreversible redox reaction produces carbon-centred free radicals, leading to alkylation of haem and proteins (enzymes), one of which—the sarcoplasmic-endoplasmic reticulum ATPase PfATP6 (ref. 7)—may be critical to parasite survival. Notably, there is no evidence of drug resistance to any member of the artemisinin family of drugs. The chemotherapy of malaria has benefited greatly from the semi-synthetic artemisinins artemether and artesunate as they rapidly reduce parasite burden, have good therapeutic indices and provide for successful treatment outcomes. However, as a drug class, the artemisinins suffer from chemical (semi-synthetic availability, purity and cost), biopharmaceutical (poor bioavailability and limiting pharmacokinetics) and treatment (non-compliance with long treatment regimens and recrudescence) issues that limit their therapeutic potential. Here we describe how a synthetic peroxide antimalarial drug development candidate was identified in a collaborative drug discovery project.
Current Topics in Medicinal Chemistry | 2005
Daniel Hunziker; Michael Hennig; Jens-Uwe Peters
Prevalence of type 2 diabetes has increased dramatically in the last decades. Current medicines are not yet capable to efficiently prevent or reverse progression of the disease and its associated comorbidities. As a consequence, there is a great need for novel antidiabetic drugs. Treatments of type 2 diabetes that are based on enhanced and sustained action of insulinotropic incretin hormones such as GLP-1 have received much attention in the past years. Treatment strategies include administration of: 1) GLP-1 analogues that are resistant to degradation by the serine protease DPP-IV, and 2) small molecule DPP-IV inhibitors that are able to provide sustained action of endogenous GLP-1, again by preventing its degradation. This review summarizes recent research results for the second approach. It briefly touches upon the advantages that treatment of type 2 diabetes with DPP-IV inhibitors may offer over current medications. In the main section, several important structural classes of DPP-IV inhibitors are described and compared based on literature data. Specific attention is given to the analysis of several X-ray structures of enzyme-inhibitor co-crystals. Finally, as clinical data are steadily emerging for some of the most advanced development candidates, the last section of this review is providing a brief overview of some efficacy data from recent clinical studies with DPP-IV inhibitors.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010
Markus Boehringer; Holger Fischer; Michael Hennig; Daniel Hunziker; Joerg Huwyler; Bernd Kuhn; Bernd Michael Loeffler; Thomas Luebbers; Patrizio Mattei; Robert Narquizian; Elena Sebokova; Urs Sprecher; Hans Peter Wessel
Synthesis and SAR are described for a structurally distinct class of DPP-IV inhibitors based on aminobenzo[a]quinolizines bearing (hetero-)aromatic substituents in the S1 specificity pocket. The m-(fluoromethyl)-phenyl derivative (S,S,S)-2g possesses the best fit in the S1 pocket. However, (S,S,S)-2i, bearing a more hydrophilic 5-methyl-pyridin-2-yl residue as substituent for the S1 pocket, displays excellent in vivo activity and superior drug-like properties.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008
Lin Zhou; André Alker; Armin Ruf; Xiaofang Wang; Francis Chi Keung Chiu; Julia Morizzi; Susan A. Charman; William N. Charman; Christian Scheurer; Sergio Wittlin; Yuxiang Dong; Daniel Hunziker; Jonathan L. Vennerstrom
The antimalarial synthetic ozonide OZ277 (RBx11160) was hydroxylated by human liver microsomes at the distal bridgehead carbon atoms of the spiroadamantane substructure to form two carbinol metabolites devoid of antimalarial activity.
Chimia | 2015
Werner Neidhart; Jean Ackermann; Kurt Amrein; Daniel Hunziker; Bernd Kuhn; Hans Peter Märki; Matthias Nettekoven; Armin Ruf; Tanja Schulz-Gasch; Alexander V. Mayweg
Medicinal chemistry has been transformed by major technological and conceptual innovations over the last three decades: structural biology and bioinformatics, structure and property based molecular design, the concepts of multidimensional optimization (MDO), in silico and experimental high-throughput molecular property analysis. The novel technologies advanced gradually and in synergy with biology and Roche has been at the forefront. Applications in drug discovery programs towards new medicines in cardiovascular and metabolic diseases are highlighted to show impact and advancement: the early discovery of endothelin antagonists for endothelial dysfunction (Bosentan), 11-beta hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (11β-HSD1) inhibitors for dysregulated cellular glucocorticoid tonus (type 2 diabetes and metabolic syndrome) and non-covalent hormone sensitive lipase (HSL) inhibitors to study the scope of direct inhibition of lipolysis in the conceptual frame of lipotoxicity and type 2 diabetes.Medicinal chemistry has been transformed by major technological and conceptual innovations over the last three decades: structural biology and bioinformatics, structure and property based molecular design, the concepts of multidimensional optimization (MDO), in silico and experimental high-throughput molecular property analysis. The novel technologies advanced gradually and in synergy with biology and Roche has been at the forefront. Applications in drug discovery programs towards new medicines in cardiovascular and metabolic diseases are highlighted to show impact and advancement: the early discovery of endothelin antagonists for endothelial dysfunction (Bosentan), 11-beta hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (11β-HSD1) inhibitors for dysregulated cellular glucocorticoid tonus (type 2 diabetes and metabolic syndrome) and non-covalent hormone sensitive lipase (HSL) inhibitors to study the scope of direct inhibition of lipolysis in the conceptual frame of lipotoxicity and type 2 diabetes.
Archive | 2005
Markus Boehringer; Daniel Hunziker; Holger Kuehne; Bernd Michael Loeffler; Ramakanth Sarabu; Hans Peter Wessel
Archive | 2002
Markus Boehringer; Daniel Hunziker; Holger Kuehne; Bernd Michael Loeffler; Ramakanth Sarabu; Hans Peter Wessel
Archive | 2005
Markus Boehringer; Daniel Hunziker; Bernd Kuhn; Bernd Michael Loeffler; Thomas Luebbers; Fabienne Ricklin
Archive | 2007
Jean Ackermann; Kurt Amrein; Daniel Hunziker; Bernd Kuhn; Alexander V. Mayweg; Werner Neidhart; Tadakatsu Takahashi
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2004
Daniel Hunziker; Pierre-C Wyss; Peter Angehrn; Aranka Mueller; Hans-Peter Marty; Remy Halm; Laurenz Kellenberger; Veronique Bitsch; Wolf Arnold; Andreas Stämpfli; Anne Schmitt-Hoffmann; Denis Cousot