Jean-François Bonfanti
Janssen Pharmaceutica
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Featured researches published by Jean-François Bonfanti.
European Respiratory Journal | 2011
W. Olszewska; G. Ispas; C. Schnoeller; D. Sawant; T. Van de Casteele; D. Nauwelaers; B. Van Kerckhove; Dirk Roymans; M. De Meulder; Marie-Claude Rouan; P. Van Remoortere; Jean-François Bonfanti; F. Van Velsen; Anil Koul; Marc Vanstockem; Koen Andries; P. Sowinski; Belinda Wang; Peter J. M. Openshaw; R. Verloes
Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) causes bronchiolitis in young children and common colds in adults. There is no licensed vaccine, and prophylactic treatment with palivizumab is very expensive and limited to high-risk infants. Ribavirin is used as an antiviral treatment in infants and immunosuppressed patients, and its use is limited due to side-effects, toxicity to the recipient and staff, and evidence of marginal clinical efficacy. Therefore, we studied the in vivo kinetics, and the antiviral and protective properties of a novel candidate for RSV disease treatment. The drug is a small molecule (TMC353121) discovered by screening for fusion inhibitory properties against RSV in a cellular infection model. The pharmacokinetics of TMC353121 was studied in BALB/c mice and antiviral effects determined by testing viral loads in lung tissue by quantitative RT-PCR and plaque assay after intranasal RSV infection. At doses of 0.25–10 mg·kg−1, TMC353121 significantly reduced viral load, bronchoalveolar lavage cell accumulation and the severity of lung histopathological change after infection. Treatment remained effective if started within 48 h of infection, but was ineffective thereafter. Therefore, TMC353121 is a novel potent antiviral drug, in vivo reducing RSV replication and inhibiting consequential lung inflammation, with a great potential for further clinical development.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Gabriela Ispas; Anil Koul; Johan Verbeeck; J. Sheehan; Brigitte Sanders-Beer; Dirk Roymans; Koen Andries; Marie-Claude Rouan; Sandra De Jonghe; Jean-François Bonfanti; Marc Vanstockem; Kenneth Alan Simmen; Rene Verloes
Background The study assessed the antiviral activity of TMC353121, a respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) fusion inhibitor, in a preclinical non-human primate challenge model with a viral shedding pattern similar to that seen in humans, following continuous infusion (CI). Methods African green monkeys were administered TMC353121 through CI, in 2 studies. Study 1 evaluated the prophylactic and therapeutic efficacy of TMC353121 at a target plasma level of 50 ng/mL (n=15; Group 1: prophylactic arm [Px50], 0.033 mg/mL TMC353121, flow rate 2.5 mL/kg/h from 24 hours pre-infection to 10 days; Group 2: therapeutic arm [Tx50], 0.033mg/mL TMC353121 from 24 hours postinfection to 8 days; Group 3: control [Vh1] vehicle, 24 hours post-infection to 8 days). Study 2 evaluated the prophylactic efficacy of TMC353121 at target plasma levels of 5 and 500 ng/mL (n=12; Group 1: prophylactic 5 arm [Px5], 0.0033 mg/mL TMC353121, flow rate 2.5 mL/kg/h from 72 hours pre-infection to 14 days; Group 2: prophylactic 500 arm [Px500], 0.33 mg/mL TMC353121; Group 3:control [Vh2] vehicle, 14 days). Bronchoalveolar lavage fluid and plasma were collected every 2 days from day 1 postinfection for pharmacokinetics and safety analysis. Findings TMC353121 showed a dose-dependent antiviral activity, varying from 1log10 reduction of peak viral load to complete inhibition of the RSV replication. Complete inhibition of RSV shedding was observed for a relatively low plasma exposure (0.39 μg/mL) and was associated with a dose-dependent reduction in INFγ, IL6 and MIP1α. TMC353121 administered as CI for 16 days was generally well-tolerated. Conclusion TMC353121 exerted dose-dependent antiviral effect ranging from full inhibition to absence of antiviral activity, in a preclinical model highly permissive for RSV replication. No new safety findings emerged from the study.
Methods of Molecular Biology | 2013
Edwin Yunhao Gong; Jean-François Bonfanti; Tania Ivens; Marijke Van der Auwera; Barbara Van Kerckhove; Guenter Kraus
Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) is a mosquito-borne Alphavirus that has already infected millions of people in recent large-scale epidemics in Africa, the islands of the Indian Ocean, South and Southeast Asia, and northern Italy. The infection is still ongoing in many countries, such as India. Although the fatal rate is approximately 0.1% in the La Réunion outbreak, it causes painful arthritis-like symptoms that can last for months or even years. Currently, neither vaccine nor approved antiviral therapy exists to protect humans from chikungunya infection. Therefore, there is an urgent unmet medical need for the development of antiviral drugs for pre-exposure prophylaxis and/or treatment of chikungunya infections. In this chapter, we describe a fully validated ATP/luminescence assay that is effective for high-throughput screening of CHIKV inhibitors. Protocols for growing CHIKV stocks and generating drug-resistant viral variants for modes of action studies of compounds are also described.
Archive | 2011
Johannes Wilhelmus John F. Thuring; Jean-François Bonfanti
Archive | 2006
Jean-François Bonfanti; Philippe Muller; Jérôme Michel Claude Fortin; Frédéric Marc Maurice Doublet
Archive | 2015
Jean-François Bonfanti; Jérôme Michel Claude Fortin; Philippe Muller; Frédéric Marc Maurice Doublet; Pierre Jean-Marie Bernard Raboisson; Eric Arnoult
Archive | 2012
Jean-François Bonfanti; Frédéric Marc Maurice Doublet; Werner Constant Johan Embrechts; Jérôme Michel Claude Fortin; Gowan David Craig Mc; Philippe Muller; Pierre Jean-Marie Bernard Raboisson
Archive | 2008
Frans Eduard Janssens; Jérôme Emile Georges Guillemont; Francois Maria Sommen; Jean-François Bonfanti
Archive | 2006
Jean-François Bonfanti; Philippe Muller; Jérôme Michel Claude Fortin; Frédéric Marc Maurice Doublet
Archive | 2014
Jean-François Bonfanti; Jérôme Michel Claude Fortin; Philippe Muller; Frédéric Marc Maurice Doublet; Pierre Jean-Marie Bernard Raboisson; Eric Arnoult