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Dive into the research topics where Iwan de Esch is active.

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Featured researches published by Iwan de Esch.


Neuropharmacology | 2007

CC12, A High Affinity Ligand for 3H-Cimetidine Binding, is an Improgan Antagonist

Lindsay B. Hough; Julia W. Nalwalk; James G. Phillips; Brian Kern; Zhixing Shan; Mark P. Wentland; Iwan de Esch; Elwin Janssen; Travis Barr; Rebecca Stadel

Improgan, a chemical congener of cimetidine, is a highly effective non-opioid analgesic when injected into the CNS. Despite extensive characterization, neither the improgan receptor, nor a pharmacological antagonist of improgan has been previously described. Presently, the specific binding of [(3)H]cimetidine (3HCIM) in brain fractions was used to discover 4(5)-((4-iodobenzyl)thiomethyl)-1H-imidazole, which behaved in vivo as the first improgan antagonist. The synthesis and pharmacological properties of this drug (named CC12) are described herein. In rats, CC12 (50-500nmol, i.c.v.) produced dose-dependent inhibition of improgan (200-400nmol) antinociception on the tail flick and hot plate tests. When given alone to rats, CC12 had no effects on nociceptive latencies, or on other observable behavioral or motor functions. Maximal inhibitory effects of CC12 (500nmol) were fully surmounted with a large i.c.v. dose of improgan (800nmol), demonstrating competitive antagonism. In mice, CC12 (200-400nmol, i.c.v.) behaved as a partial agonist, producing incomplete improgan antagonism, but also limited antinociception when given alone. Radioligand binding, receptor autoradiography, and electrophysiology experiments showed that CC12s antagonist properties are not explained by activity at 25 sites relevant to analgesia, including known receptors for cannabinoids, opioids or histamine. The use of CC12 as an improgan antagonist will facilitate the characterization of improgan analgesia. Furthermore, because CC12 was also found presently to inhibit opioid and cannabinoid antinociception, it is suggested that this drug modifies a biochemical mechanism shared by several classes of analgesics. Elucidation of this mechanism will enhance understanding of the biochemistry of pain relief.


Neuropharmacology | 2006

Antinociceptive activity of chemical congeners of improgan: Optimization of side chain length leads to the discovery of a new, potent, non-opioid analgesic

Lindsay B. Hough; Iwan de Esch; Elwin Janssen; James G. Phillips; Konstantina Svokos; Brian Kern; Jennifer Trachler; Mary E. Abood; Rob Leurs; Julia W. Nalwalk

Improgan is a chemical congener of the H2 antagonist cimetidine which shows the profile of a highly effective analgesic when administered directly into the CNS. Although the improgan receptor is unknown, improgan activates analgesic pathways which are independent of opioids, but may utilize cannabinoid mechanisms. To discover selective, potent, improgan-like drugs, seven compounds chemically related to improgan were synthesized and tested for antinociceptive activity in rats after intracerebroventricular (icv) administration. Among a series of improgan congeners in which the alkyl chain length of improgan ((-CH2)3-) was varied, five compounds showed full agonist antinociceptive activity with potencies greater than that of improgan. VUF5420 (containing (-CH2)4-, EC50 = 86.1 nmol) produced maximal antinociceptive activity after doses which showed no motor impairment or other obvious toxicity, and was 2.3-fold more potent than improgan (EC50 = 199.5 nmol). As found previously with improgan, VUF5420-induced antinociception was unaffected by administration of the opioid antagonist naltrexone, but was inhibited by the CB1 antagonist SR141716A, suggesting a non-opioid, cannabinoid-related analgesic action. However, VUF5420 showed very low affinity (Kd approximately 10 microM) on CB1-receptor activation of 35S-GTPgammaS binding, indicating that this drug does not directly interact with the CB1 receptor in vivo. The present results show that VUF5420 is a high potency, improgan-like, non-opioid analgesic which may indirectly activate cannabinoid pain-relieving mechanisms.


ChemMedChem | 2009

Discovery of a new class of non-imidazole oxazoline-based histamine H(3) receptor (H(3)R) inverse agonists

Sylvain Celanire; Maikel Wijtmans; Bernard Christophe; Philippe Collart; Iwan de Esch; Donald Dassesse; Christel Delaunoy; Frédéric Denonne; Véronique Durieu; Edith Gelens; Michel Gillard; Bénédicte Lallemand; Yves Lamberty; Florence Lebon; Jean-Marie Nicolas; Luc Quere; Erwin Snip; Alain Vanbellinghen; Nathalie Van houtvin; Valérie Verbois; Henk Timmerman; Patrice Talaga; Rob Leurs; Laurent Provins

H3R inverse agonists based on an aminopropoxy‐phenyloxazoline framework constitute highly valuable druglike lead compounds that display efficacy in a mouse model of recognition memory.


European Journal of Pharmacology | 2010

Inhibition of brain [3H]cimetidine binding by improgan-like antinociceptive drugs

Rebecca Stadel; Amanda B. Carpenter; Julia W. Nalwalk; Iwan de Esch; Elwin Janssen; Lindsay B. Hough

[(3)H]cimetidine, a radiolabeled histamine H(2) receptor antagonist, binds with high affinity to an unknown hemoprotein in the brain which is not the histamine H(2) receptor. Improgan, a close chemical congener of cimetidine, is a highly effective pain-relieving drug following CNS administration, yet its mechanism of action remains unknown. To test the hypothesis that the [(3)H]cimetidine-binding site is the improgan antinociceptive target, improgan, cimetidine, and 8 other chemical congeners were studied as potential inhibitors of [(3)H]cimetidine binding in membrane fractions from the rat brain. All compounds produced a concentration-dependent inhibition of [(3)H]cimetidine binding over a 500-fold range of potencies (K(i) values were 14.5 to >8000nM). However, antinociceptive potencies in rats did not significantly correlate with [(3)H]cimetidine-binding affinities (r=0.018, p=0.97, n=10). These results suggest that the [(3)H]cimetidine-binding site is not the analgesic target for improgan-like drugs.


Archive | 2015

CHAPTER 9:Exploring Fragment Screening and Optimization Strategies Using Acetylcholine-Binding Protein

Ewald Edink; Gerdien E. de Kloe; Iwan de Esch

From a niche area of research that was mainly applied by technology focused research groups in the private sector, fragment-based drug discovery (FBDD) has transformed into a rewarding drug-discovery technology that is applied by almost every major pharmaceutical company. Next to biotech and big pharma, the methodology has also attracted considerable interest from academic research groups that have endorsed fragment-based approaches as a sound scientific approach and an attractive low-cost alternative to high-throughput screening, that enables efficient discovery pathways to novel lead and tool compounds. This chapter describes several studies that were performed in our academic research laboratories and in the labs of our collaborators in which acetylcholine-binding protein (AChBP), a homolog to the ligand-binding domain of Cys-loop receptors, has been used as a robust target to investigate the various aspects of fragment-based approaches, including fragment screening technologies and fragment optimization strategies. Timely concepts such as the combination of structural, kinetic and thermodynamic characterization of ligand-induced conformational changes will be described using this particular target. These studies demonstrate how the fragment-based methodology can be used to increase our understanding of the molecular aspects of ligands and fragments binding to protein binding sites.


Archive | 2016

3D-E-Chem-Vm: Cheminformatics Toolbox In A Freely Available Virtual Machine

Márton Vass; Stefan Verhoeven; Ross McGuire; Albert J. Kooistra; Lars Ridder; Tina Ritschel; Iwan de Esch; Rob Leurs; Gerrit Vriend; Chris de Graaf


KNIME Spring Summit 2016 | 2016

3-D-eChem VM: Cheminformatics Research Infrastructure in a Downloadable Virtual Machine

Stefan Verhoeven; Iwan de Esch; Gerrrit Vriend; Márton Vass; Scott J. Lusher; Tina Ritschel; Chris de Graaf; Ross McGuire; Rob Leurs


Archive | 2013

Nanofractionation Spotter Technology High-Resolution Bioactivity Profiling of Mixtures toward the Acetylcholine Binding Protein Using a

Hubertus Irth; Wilfried Niessen; Jeroen Kool; Ferry Heus; Henk Lingeman; August B. Smit; Rob Leurs; Ewald Edink; Iwan de Esch


Archive | 2009

RESEARCH PAPER Pharmacological characterization of the new histamine H4 receptor agonist VUF 8430

Herman D. Lim; Maristella Adami; Elena Guaita; Thomas Werfel; Rogier A. Smits; Iwan de Esch; Remko A. Bakker; Ralf Gutzmer; Gabriella Coruzzi; Rob Leurs


Archive | 2008

histamine H 4 receptor is responsible for the difference in agonist binding between human and mouse H4 receptors Ψ

Herman D. Lim; Aldo Jongejan; Remko A. Bakker; Eric Haaksma; Iwan de Esch; Rob Leurs

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Rob Leurs

University of Amsterdam

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Ewald Edink

VU University Amsterdam

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