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Dive into the research topics where David Banner is active.

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Featured researches published by David Banner.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

β-Secretase (BACE1) Inhibitors with High in Vivo Efficacy Suitable for Clinical Evaluation in Alzheimer’s Disease

Hans Hilpert; Wolfgang Guba; Thomas Johannes Woltering; Wolfgang Wostl; Emmanuel Pinard; Harald Mauser; Alexander V. Mayweg; Mark Rogers-Evans; Roland Humm; Daniela Krummenacher; Thorsten Muser; Christian Schnider; Helmut Jacobsen; Laurence Ozmen; Alessandra Bergadano; David Banner; Remo Hochstrasser; Andreas Kuglstatter; Pascale David-Pierson; Holger Fischer; Alessandra Polara; Robert Narquizian

An extensive fluorine scan of 1,3-oxazines revealed the power of fluorine(s) to lower the pKa and thereby dramatically change the pharmacological profile of this class of BACE1 inhibitors. The CF3 substituted oxazine 89, a potent and highly brain penetrant BACE1 inhibitor, was able to reduce significantly CSF Aβ40 and 42 in rats at oral doses as low as 1 mg/kg. The effect was long lasting, showing a significant reduction of Aβ40 and 42 even after 24 h. In contrast to 89, compound 1b lacking the CF3 group was virtually inactive in vivo.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

The diaphanous inhibitory domain/diaphanous autoregulatory domain interaction is able to mediate heterodimerization between mDia1 and mDia2.

Sarah J. Copeland; Brenda J. Green; Sarah Burchat; Giuseppe A. Papalia; David Banner; John W. Copeland

Formins are multidomain proteins that regulate numerous cytoskeleton-dependent cellular processes. These effects are mediated by the presence of two regions of homology, formin homology 1 and FH2. The diaphanous-related formins (DRFs) are distinguished by the presence of interacting N- and C-terminal regulatory domains. The GTPase binding domain and diaphanous inhibitory domain (DID) are found in the N terminus and bind to the diaphanous autoregulatory domain (DAD) found in the C terminus. Adjacent to the DID is an N-terminal dimerization motif (DD) and coiled-coil region (CC). The N terminus of Dia1 is also proposed to contain a Rho-independent membrane-targeting motif. We undertook an extensive structure/function analysis of the mDia1 N terminus to further our understanding of its role in vivo. We show here that both DID and DD are required for efficient autoinhibition in the context of full-length mDia1 and that the DD of mDia1 and mDia2, like formin homology 2, mediates homo- but not heterodimerization with other DRF family members. In contrast, our results suggest that the DID/DAD interaction mediates heterodimerization of full-length mDia1 and mDia2 and that the auto-inhibited conformation of DRFs is oligomeric. In addition, we also show that the DD/CC region is required for the Rho-independent membrane targeting of the isolated N terminus.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Guinea pig chymase is leucine-specific: a novel example of functional plasticity in the chymase/granzyme family of serine peptidases.

George H. Caughey; Jeremy Beauchamp; Daniel Schlatter; Wilfred W. Raymond; Neil N. Trivedi; David Banner; Harald Mauser; Jürgen Fingerle

To explore guinea pigs as models of chymase biology, we cloned and expressed the guinea pig ortholog of human chymase. In contrast to rats and mice, guinea pigs appear to express just one chymase, which belongs to the α clade, like primate chymases and mouse mast cell protease-5. The guinea pig enzyme autolyzes at Leu residues in the loop where human chymase autolyzes at Phe. In addition, guinea pig α-chymase selects P1 Leu in a combinatorial peptide library and cleaves Ala-Ala-Pro-Leu-4-nitroanilide but has negligible activity toward substrates with P1 Phe and does not cleave angiotensin I. This contrasts with human chymase, which cleaves after Phe or Tyr, prefers P1 Phe in peptidyl 4-nitroanilides, and avidly hydrolyzes angiotensin I at Phe8 to generate bioactive angiotensin II. The guinea pig enzyme also is inactivated more effectively by α1-antichymotrypsin, which features P1 Leu in the reactive loop. Unlike mouse, rat, and hamster α-chymases, guinea pig chymase lacks elastase-like preference for P1 Val or Ala. Partially humanized A216G guinea pig chymase acquires human-like P1 Phe- and angiotensin-cleaving capacity. Molecular models suggest that the wild type active site is crowded by the Ala216 side chain, which potentially blocks access by bulky P1 aromatic residues. On the other hand, the guinea pig pocket is deeper than in Val-selective chymases, explaining the preference for the longer aliphatic side chain of Leu. These findings are evidence that chymase-like peptidase specificity is sensitive to small changes in structure and provide the first example of a vertebrate Leu-selective peptidase.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Identification of Potent and Selective Cathepsin S Inhibitors Containing Different Central Cyclic Scaffolds

Hans Hilpert; Harald Mauser; Roland Humm; Lilli Anselm; Holger Kuehne; Guido Hartmann; Sabine Gruener; David Banner; Joerg Benz; Bernard Gsell; Andreas Kuglstatter; Martine Stihle; Ralf Thoma; Ruben Alvarez Sanchez; Hans Iding; Beat Wirz; Wolfgang Haap

Starting from the weakly active dual CatS/K inhibitor 5, structure-based design supported by X-ray analysis led to the discovery of the potent and selective (>50,000-fold vs CatK) cyclopentane derivative 22 by exploiting specific ligand-receptor interactions in the S2 pocket of CatS. Changing the central cyclopentane scaffold to the analogous pyrrolidine derivative 57 decreased the enzyme as well as the cell-based activity significantly by 24- and 69-fold, respectively. The most promising scaffold identified was the readily accessible proline derivative (e.g., 79). This compound, with an appealing ligand efficiency (LE) of 0.47, included additional structural modifications binding in the S1 and S3 pockets of CatS, leading to favorable in vitro and in vivo properties. Compound 79 reduced IL-2 production in a transgenic DO10.11 mouse model of antigen presentation in a dose-dependent manner with an ED50 of 5 mg/kg.


Archive | 2010

3-amino-5-phenyl-5,6-dihydro-2h-[1,4]oxazine derivatives

Matteo Andreini; David Banner; Wolfgang Guba; Hans Hilpert; Harald Mauser; Alexander V. Mayweg; Robert Narquizian; Eoin Power; Mark Rogers-Evans; Massimiliano Travagli; Michela Valacchi; Thomas Johannes Woltering; Wolfgang Wostl


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005

A Selective, Slow Binding Inhibitor of Factor VIIa Binds to a Nonstandard Active Site Conformation and Attenuates Thrombus Formation in Vivo

Alan G. Olivero; Charles Eigenbrot; Richard Goldsmith; Kirk Robarge; Dean R. Artis; John A. Flygare; Thomas E. Rawson; Daniel P. Sutherlin; Saloumeh Kadkhodayan; Maureen Beresini; Linda O. Elliott; Geralyn G. DeGuzman; David Banner; Mark Ultsch; Ulla M. Marzec; Stephen R. Hanson; Canio J. Refino; Stuart Bunting; Daniel Kirchhofer


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998

Coagulation Factor VII Gln100 → Arg AMINO ACID SUBSTITUTION AT THE EPIDERMAL GROWTH FACTOR 2-PROTEASE DOMAIN INTERFACE RESULTS IN SEVERELY REDUCED TISSUE FACTOR BINDING AND PROCOAGULANT FUNCTION

Geoffrey Kemball-Cook; Daniel J. D. Johnson; Osamu Takamiya; David Banner; John H. McVey; Edward G. D. Tuddenham


Archive | 2010

3-AMINO-5-PHENYL-5,6-DIHYDRO-2H-[1,4]OXAZINES

Matteo Andreini; David Banner; Wolfgang Guba; Hans Hilpert; Harald Mauser; Alexander V. Mayweg; Robert Narquizian; Eoin Power; Mark Roger-Evans; Massimiliano Travagli; Michela Valacchi; Thomas Johannes Woltering; Wolfgang Wostl


Archive | 2011

1,4,5,6-tetrahydro-pyrimidin-2-ylamine compounds

David Banner; Emanuele Gabellieri; Wolfgang Guba; Hans Hilpert; Benoit Hornsperger; Roland Humm; Harald Mauser; Alexander V. Mayweg; Robert Narquizian; Emmanuel Pinard; Mark Rogers-Evans; Thomas Johannes Woltering; Wolfgang Wostl


Archive | 2010

Proline derivatives as cathepsin inhibitors

Sanchez Ruben Alvarez; David Banner; Simona M. Ceccarelli; Uwe Grether; Wolfgang Haap; Peter Hartman; Guido Hartmann; Hans Hilpert; Holger Kuehne; Harald Mauser; Jean-Marc Plancher

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