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Dive into the research topics where Doris Hafenbradl is active.

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Featured researches published by Doris Hafenbradl.


RNA | 2008

An RNA molecule that specifically inhibits G-protein-coupled receptor kinase 2 in vitro

Günter Mayer; Bernhard Wulffen; Christian Huber; Jörg Brockmann; Birgit Flicke; Lars Neumann; Doris Hafenbradl; Bert Klebl; Martin J. Lohse; Cornelius Krasel; Michael Blind

G-protein-coupled receptors are desensitized by a two-step process. In a first step, G-protein-coupled receptor kinases (GRKs) phosphorylate agonist-activated receptors that subsequently bind to a second class of proteins, the arrestins. GRKs can be classified into three subfamilies, which have been implicated in various diseases. The physiological role(s) of GRKs have been difficult to study as selective inhibitors are not available. We have used SELEX (systematic evolution of ligands by exponential enrichment) to develop RNA aptamers that potently and selectively inhibit GRK2. This process has yielded an aptamer, C13, which bound to GRK2 with a high affinity and inhibited GRK2-catalyzed rhodopsin phosphorylation with an IC50 of 4.1 nM. Phosphorylation of rhodopsin catalyzed by GRK5 was also inhibited, albeit with 20-fold lower potency (IC50 of 79 nM). Furthermore, C13 reveals significant specificity, since almost no inhibitory activity was detectable testing it against a panel of 14 other kinases. The aptamer is two orders of magnitude more potent than the best GRK2 inhibitors described previously and shows high selectivity for the GRK family of protein kinases.


Current Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

Signalling Inhibitors Against Mycobacterium tuberculosis – Early Days of a New Therapeutic Concept in Tuberculosis

R. Szekely; Zoltán Varga; R. Kiss; Gábor Borbély; Gábor Németh; Péter Bánhegyi; János Pató; Zoltán Greff; Zoltán Horváth; G. Meszaros; Jenö Marosfalvi; D. Eros; Csaba Szántai-Kis; Nóra Breza; S. Garavaglia; S. Perozzi; M. Rizzi; Doris Hafenbradl; Mary Ko; Yossef Av-Gay; Bert Klebl; Laszlo Orfi; György Kéri

Tuberculosis causes nearly two million deaths per year world-wide. In addition multidrug-resistant mycobacterial strains rapidly emerge so novel therapeutic approaches are needed. Recently, several promising mycobacterial target molecules were identified, which are involved in bacterial or host cell signalling e.g. the serine/threonine protein kinases, PknB and PknG, NAD kinase and the NAD synthetase. Here we describe some early efforts in the development of novel signal transduction inhibitory anti-mycobacterial drugs using a multiple target approach, with special emphasis on the kinase inhibitory field. Initially, we are using the Nested Chemical Library (NCL) technology and pharmacophore modelling. A hit-finding library, consisting of approximately 19000 small molecules with a bias for prototypic kinase inhibitors from our NCL library and commercial sources was virtually screened against these validated target molecules. Protein structures for the virtual screening were taken from the published three dimensional crystal structures of the enzymes. The hits from the virtual screening were subsequently tested in enzymatic assay systems. Potent hits were then tested for biological activity in macrophages, infected with mycobacteria. The final goal of this exercise is not only to identify potent anti-mycobacterial substances, but also a common pharmacophore for the mycobacterial target PknG in combination with PknB, NAD kinase and/or NAD synthetase. This common pharmacophore still needs to be a unique pharmacophore for the mycobacterial target proteins over human off-targets. Such a pharmacophore might then drive the optimization of a completely new profile of an antibiotic agent with activity against latent mycobacteria and resistance mycobacterial strains.


Journal of Computer-aided Molecular Design | 2011

A comparative study of fragment screening methods on the p38α kinase: new methods, new insights

Scott Pollack; Kim S. Beyer; Christopher James Lock; Ilka Müller; David Sheppard; Mike Lipkin; David Hardick; Peter Blurton; Philip M. Leonard; Paul A. Hubbard; Daniel Todd; Christine M. Richardson; Thomas Ahrens; Manuel Baader; Doris Hafenbradl; Kate Hilyard; Roland Bürli

The stress-activated kinase p38α was used to evaluate a fragment-based drug discovery approach using the BioFocus fragment library. Compounds were screened by surface plasmon resonance (SPR) on a Biacore™ T100 against p38α and two selectivity targets. A sub-set of our library was the focus of detailed follow-up analyses that included hit confirmation, affinity determination on 24 confirmed, selective hits and competition assays of these hits with respect to a known ATP binding site inhibitor. In addition, functional activity against p38α was assessed in a biochemical assay using a mobility shift platform (LC3000, Caliper LifeSciences). A selection of fragments was also evaluated using fluorescence lifetime (FLEXYTE™) and microscale thermophoresis (Nanotemper) technologies. A good correlation between the data for the different assays was found. Crystal structures were solved for four of the small molecules complexed to p38α. Interestingly, as determined both by X-ray analysis and SPR competition experiments, three of the complexes involved the fragment at the ATP binding site, while the fourth compound bound in a distal site that may offer potential as a novel drug target site. A first round of optimization around the remotely bound fragment has led to the identification of a series of triazole-containing compounds. This approach could form the basis for developing novel and active p38α inhibitors. More broadly, it illustrates the power of combining a range of biophysical and biochemical techniques to the discovery of fragments that facilitate the development of novel modulators of kinase and other drug targets.


Journal of Computer-aided Molecular Design | 2009

Fragment-based lead generation: identification of seed fragments by a highly efficient fragment screening technology

Lars Neumann; Allegra Ritscher; Gerhard Müller; Doris Hafenbradl

For the detection of the precise and unambiguous binding of fragments to a specific binding site on the target protein, we have developed a novel reporter displacement binding assay technology. The application of this technology for the fragment screening as well as the fragment evolution process with a specific modelling based design strategy is demonstrated for inhibitors of the protein kinase p38alpha. In a fragment screening approach seed fragments were identified which were then used to build compounds from the deep-pocket towards the hinge binding area of the protein kinase p38alpha based on a modelling approach. BIRB796 was used as a blueprint for the alignment of the fragments. The fragment evolution of these deep-pocket binding fragments towards the fully optimized inhibitor BIRB796 included the modulation of the residence time as well as the affinity. The goal of our study was to evaluate the robustness and efficiency of our novel fragment screening technology at high fragment concentrations, compare the screening data with biochemical activity data and to demonstrate the evolution of the hit fragments with fast kinetics, into slow kinetic inhibitors in an in silico approach.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2012

Efficient Hit-Finding Approaches for Histone Methyltransferases: The Key Parameters

Thomas Ahrens; Andreas Bergner; David Sheppard; Doris Hafenbradl

For many novel epigenetics targets the chemical ligand space and structural information were limited until recently and are still largely unknown for some targets. Hit-finding campaigns are therefore dependent on large and chemically diverse libraries. In the specific case of the histone methyltransferase G9a, the authors have been able to apply an efficient process of intelligent selection of compounds for primary screening, rather than screening the full diverse deck of 900 000 compounds to identify hit compounds. A number of different virtual screening methods have been applied for the compound selection, and the results have been analyzed in the context of their individual success rates. For the primary screening of 2112 compounds, a FlashPlate assay format and full-length histone H3.1 substrate were employed. Validation of hit compounds was performed using the orthogonal fluorescence lifetime technology. Rated by purity and IC50 value, 18 compounds (0.9% of compound screening deck) were finally considered validated primary G9a hits. The hit-finding approach has led to novel chemotypes being identified, which can facilitate hit-to-lead projects. This study demonstrates the power of virtual screening technologies for novel, therapeutically relevant epigenetics protein targets.


Immunology Letters | 2008

A novel drug discovery concept for tuberculosis: inhibition of bacterial and host cell signalling

Rita Székely; Frigyes Wáczek; István Szabadkai; Gábor Németh; D. Eros; Bálint Szokol; János Pató; Doris Hafenbradl; Jacqueline Satchell; Brigitte Saint-Joanis; Stewart T. Cole; Laszlo Orfi; Bert Klebl; György Kéri


Current Signal Transduction Therapy | 2006

Signal transduction therapy with rationally designed kinase inhibitors

György Kéri; Laszlo Orfi; D. Eros; Csaba Szántai-Kis; Zoltán Horváth; Frigyes Wáczek; Jenö Marosfalvi; István Szabadkai; János Pató; Zoltán Greff; Doris Hafenbradl; Henrik Daub; Gerhard Müller; Bert Klebl; Axel Ullrich


Archive | 2004

Heterobicyclic compounds as pharmaceutically active agents

Anil Koul; Bert Klebl; Gerhard Müller; Andrea Missio; Wilfried Schwab; Doris Hafenbradl; Lars Neumann; Marc-Nicola Sommer; Stefan Müller; Edmund Hoppe; Achim Freisleben; Alexander Backes; Christian Hartung; Beatrice Felber; Birgit Zech; Ola Engkvist; György Kéri; Laszlo Orfi; Péter Bánhegyi; Zoltán Greff; Zoltán Horváth; Zoltán Varga; Péter Markó; János Pató; István Szabadkai; Zsolt Székelyhidi; Frigyes Wáczek


Assay and Drug Development Technologies | 2005

Drug discovery in the kinase inhibitory field using the Nested Chemical Library technology.

György Kéri; Zsolt Székelyhidi; Péter Bánhegyi; Zoltán Varga; Csaba Szántai-Kis; Doris Hafenbradl; Bert Klebl; Gerhard Müller; Axel Ullrich; D. Eros; Zoltán Horváth; Zoltán Greff; Jenö Marosfalvi; János Pató; István Szabadkai; Ildikó Szilágyi; Zsolt Szegedi; István Varga; Frigyes Wáczek; Laszlo Orfi


Archive | 2004

Pyrazine Derivatives As Effective Compounds Against Infectious Diseases

Jan Eike Eikhoff; Mark Richard Ashton; Stephen Martin Courtney; Christopher John Yarnold; Maurizio Varrone; Pui Leng Loke; Thomas Herget; Wilfried Schwab; Doris Hafenbradl

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Bert Klebl

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Zoltán Greff

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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János Pató

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Laszlo Orfi

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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