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Dive into the research topics where Dieter Dr Haebich is active.

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Featured researches published by Dieter Dr Haebich.


Nature Medicine | 2002

New helicase-primase inhibitors as drug candidates for the treatment of herpes simplex disease

Gerald Kleymann; Rüdiger Fischer; Ulrich Betz; Martin Hendrix; Wolfgang Bender; Udo Schneider; Gabriele Handke; Peter Eckenberg; Guy Hewlett; Veniamin Pevzner; Judith Baumeister; Olaf Weber; Kerstin Henninger; Jörg Keldenich; Axel Jensen; Jörg Kolb; Ute Bach; Andreas Popp; Jutta Mäben; Isabelle Frappa; Dieter Dr Haebich; Oswald Lockhoff; Helga Rübsamen-Waigmann

The vast majority of the world population is infected with at least one member of the human herpesvirus family. Herpes simplex virus (HSV) infections are the cause of cold sores and genital herpes as well as life-threatening or sight-impairing disease mainly in immunocompromized patients, pregnant women and newborns. Since the milestone development in the late 1970s of acyclovir (Zovirax), a nucleosidic inhibitor of the herpes DNA polymerase, no new non-nucleosidic anti-herpes drugs have been introduced. Here we report new inhibitors of the HSV helicase-primase with potent in vitro anti-herpes activity, a novel mechanism of action, a low resistance rate and superior efficacy against HSV in animal models. BAY 57-1293 (N-[5-(aminosulfonyl)-4-methyl-1,3-thiazol-2-yl]-N-methyl-2-[4-(2-pyridinyl)phenyl]acetamide), a well-tolerated member of this class of compounds, significantly reduces time to healing, prevents rebound of disease after cessation of treatment and, most importantly, reduces frequency and severity of recurrent disease. Thus, this class of drugs has significant potential for the treatment of HSV disease in humans, including those resistant to current medications.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2004

New Class of Bacterial Phenylalanyl-tRNA Synthetase Inhibitors with High Potency and Broad-Spectrum Activity

Dieter Beyer; Hein-Peter Kroll; Rainer Endermann; Guido Schiffer; Stephan Siegel; Marcus Bauser; Jens Pohlmann; Michael Brands; Karl Ziegelbauer; Dieter Dr Haebich; Christine Eymann; Heike Brötz-Oesterhelt

ABSTRACT Phenylalanyl (Phe)-tRNA synthetase (Phe-RS) is an essential enzyme which catalyzes the transfer of phenylalanine to the Phe-specific transfer RNA (tRNAPhe), a key step in protein biosynthesis. Phenyl-thiazolylurea-sulfonamides were identified as a novel class of potent inhibitors of bacterial Phe-RS by high-throughput screening and chemical variation of the screening hit. The compounds inhibit Phe-RS of Escherichia coli, Haemophilus influenzae, Streptococcus pneumoniae, and Staphylococcus aureus, with 50% inhibitory concentrations in the nanomolar range. Enzyme kinetic measurements demonstrated that the compounds bind competitively with respect to the natural substrate Phe. All derivatives are highly selective for the bacterial Phe-RS versus the corresponding mammalian cytoplasmic and human mitochondrial enzymes. Phenyl-thiazolylurea-sulfonamides displayed good in vitro activity against Staphylococcus, Streptococcus, Haemophilus, and Moraxella strains, reaching MICs below 1 μg/ml. The antibacterial activity was partly antagonized by increasing concentrations of Phe in the culture broth in accordance with the competitive binding mode. Further evidence that inhibition of tRNAPhe charging is the antibacterial principle of this compound class was obtained by proteome analysis of Bacillus subtilis. Here, the phenyl-thiazolylurea-sulfonamides induced a protein pattern indicative of the stringent response. In addition, an E. coli strain carrying a relA mutation and defective in stringent response was more susceptible than its isogenic relA+ parent strain. In vivo efficacy was investigated in a murine S. aureus sepsis model and a S. pneumoniae sepsis model in rats. Treatment with the phenyl-thiazolylurea-sulfonamides reduced the bacterial titer in various organs by up to 3 log units, supporting the potential value of Phe-RS as a target in antibacterial therapy.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2005

Biological Characterization of Novel Inhibitors of the Gram-Positive DNA Polymerase IIIC Enzyme

Alexander Kuhl; Niels Svenstrup; Christoph Ladel; Michael Otteneder; Annegret Binas; Guido Schiffer; Michael Brands; Thomas Lampe; Karl Ziegelbauer; Helga Rübsamen-Waigmann; Dieter Dr Haebich; Kerstin Ehlert

ABSTRACT Novel N-3-alkylated 6-anilinouracils have been identified as potent and selective inhibitors of bacterial DNA polymerase IIIC, the enzyme essential for the replication of chromosomal DNA in gram-positive bacteria. A nonradioactive assay measuring the enzymatic activity of the DNA polymerase IIIC in gram-positive bacteria has been assembled. The 6-anilinouracils described inhibited the polymerase IIIC enzyme at concentrations in the nanomolar range in this assay and displayed good in vitro activity (according to their MICs) against staphylococci, streptococci, and enterococci. The MICs of the most potent derivatives were about 4 μg/ml for this panel of bacteria. The 50% effective dose of the best compound (6-[(3-ethyl-4-methylphenyl)amino]-3-{[1-(isoxazol-5-ylcarbonyl)piperidin-4-yl]methyl}uracil) was 10 mg/kg of body weight after intravenous application in a staphylococcal sepsis model in mice, from which in vivo pharmacokinetic data were also acquired.


Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy | 2001

Novel non-nucleoside inhibitors of cytomegaloviruses (BAY 38-4766): in vitro and in vivo antiviral activity and mechanism of action

Juergen Reefschlaeger; Wolfgang Bender; Sabine Hallenberger; Olaf Weber; Peter Eckenberg; Siegfried Goldmann; Michael Haerter; Iris Buerger; Joerg Trappe; Janet A. Herrington; Dieter Dr Haebich; Helga Ruebsamen-Waigmann


Archive | 1996

Neue substituierte Oxazolidinone

Bernd Riedl; Dieter Dr Haebich; Andreas Stolle; Martin Ruppelt; Stefan Dr Bartel; Walter Guarnieri; Rainer Endermann; Hein-Peter Kroll


Archive | 2000

Benzoxazolyl- and benzo-thiazolyl-oxazolidinones with antibacterial activity

Dieter Dr Haebich; Bernd Riedl; Martin Ruppelt; Andreas Stolle; Hanno Wild; Rainer Endermann; Klaus Dieter Bremm; Hein-Peter Kroll; Harald Labischinski; Klaus Schaller; Klaus Werling


Archive | 1996

New 5-(acyl-aminomethyl)-3-hetero-aryl-oxazolidinone compounds

Bernd Riedl; Dieter Dr Haebich; Andreas Stolle; Martin Ruppelt; Stefan Dr Bartel; Walter Guarnieri; Rainer Endermann; Hein-Peter Kroll


Archive | 1990

New peptides, procedure for their preparation and their use as a medicament, especially their use as medicament against retroviruses

Klaus-Peter Voges; Dieter Dr Haebich; Jutta Hansen; Arnold Paessens


Archive | 1991

Phosphonate containing hydroxyethylamin- and norstatin-type pseudopeptides.

Dieter Dr Haebich; Jutta Hansen; Arnold Paessens


Archive | 1986

Pyrazinylthiocarbapenems, processes for their preparation, and their use

Dieter Dr Haebich; Wolfgang Hartwig; Alexander Klausener; Karl Georg Metzger; Hans-Joachim Zeiler

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