Domnic Martyres
Boehringer Ingelheim
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Publication
Featured researches published by Domnic Martyres.
Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2007
Dorothea Haasen; Susanne Merk; Peter Seither; Domnic Martyres; Silke Hobbie; Ralf Heilker
High-content screening, typically defined as automated fluorescence microscopy combined with image analysis, is now well established as a means to study test compound effects in cellular disease-modeling systems. In this work, the authors establish several high-content screening assays in the 384-well format to measure the activation of the CC-type chemokine receptors 2B and 3 (CCR2B, CCR3). As a cellular model system, the authors use Chinese hamster ovary cells, stably transfected with 1 of the respective receptors. They characterize receptor stimulation by human monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 for CCR2B and by human eotaxin-1 for CCR3: Receptor internalization and receptor-induced phosphorylation of ERK1/2 (pERK) were quantified using fluorescence imaging and image analysis. The 4 assay formats were robust, displayed little day-to-day variability, and delivered good Z′ statistics for both CCRs. For each of the 2 receptors, the authors evaluated the potency of inhibitory compounds in the internalization format and the pERK assay and compared the results with those from other assays (ligand displacement binding, Ca2+ mobilization, guanosine triphosphate exchange, chemotaxis). Both physiological agonists and test compounds differed significantly with respect to potencies and efficacies in the various profiling assays. The diverse assay formats delivered partially overlapping and partially complementary information, enabling the authors to reduce the probability of test compound—related technology artifacts and to specify the mode of action for individual test compounds. Transfer of the high-content screening format to a fully automated medium-throughput screening platform for CCR3 enabled the profiling of large compound numbers with respect to G protein signaling and possible tolerance-inducing liabilities. (Journal of Biomolecular Screening 2008:40-53)
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015
Jan M. Kriegl; Domnic Martyres; Marc Grundl; Ralf Anderskewitz; Horst Dollinger; Georg Rast; Bernhard Schmid; Peter Seither; Christofer S. Tautermann
Rodent selectivity data of piperidine-4-yl-1H-indoles, a series of CC chemokine receptor-3 (CCR3) antagonists, are presented and discussed as part of an overall optimization effort within this lead compound class. Although attachment of an acidic moiety to the 1-position of the indole led to an overall balanced in vitro profile, in particular reducing inhibition of the hERG channel, potency on the rat and mouse receptor worsened. These findings could be rationalized in the context of a CCR3 homology model.
Archive | 2005
Peter Nickolaus; Christopher Montague J. Meade; Domnic Martyres; Juergen Mack; Birgit Jung; Horst Dollinger; Georg Dahmann
Archive | 2005
Peter Nickolaus; Christopher Montague J. Meade; Domnic Martyres; Juergen Mack; Birgit Jung; Horst Dollinger; Georg Dahmann
Archive | 2005
Horst Dollinger; Juergen Mack; Domnic Martyres; Birgit Jung; Peter Nickolaus
Archive | 2005
Peter Nickolaus; Christopher John Montague Meade; Horst Dollinger; Juergen Mack; Georg Dahmann; Domnic Martyres; Birgit Jung
Tetrahedron | 2003
Amanda C Ferguson; Robert M. Adlington; Domnic Martyres; Peter J. Rutledge; Andrew R. Cowley; Jack E. Baldwin
Archive | 2008
Pascale Pouzet; Ralf Anderskewitz; Horst Dollinger; Dennis Fiegen; Thomas Fox; Rolf Goeggel; Christoph Hoenke; Domnic Martyres; Peter Nickolaus; Klaus Klinder
Archive | 2010
Christoph Hoenke; Birgit Jung; Domnic Martyres; Peter Nickolaus; Pascale Pouzet
Archive | 2012
Ralf Anderskewitz; Domnic Martyres; Thorsten Oost; Wolfgang Rist; Peter Seither