Peter Jacobus Johannes Antonius Buijnsters
Janssen Pharmaceutica
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Hotspot
Dive into the research topics where Peter Jacobus Johannes Antonius Buijnsters is active.
Publication
Featured researches published by Peter Jacobus Johannes Antonius Buijnsters.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013
José-Ignacio Andrés; Peter Jacobus Johannes Antonius Buijnsters; Meri De Angelis; Xavier Langlois; Frederik Rombouts; Andrés A. Trabanco; Greet Vanhoof
The synthesis, preliminary evaluation and structure-activity relationship (SAR) of a series of 1-aryl-4-methyl[1,2,4]triazolo[4,3-a]quinoxalines as dual phosphodiesterase 2/phosphodiesterase 10 (PDE2/PDE10) inhibitors are described. From this investigation compound 31 was identified, showing good combined potency, acceptable brain uptake and high selectivity for both PDE2 and PDE10 enzymes. Compound 31 was subjected to a microdosing experiment in rats, showing preferential distribution in brain areas where both PDE2 and PDE10 are highly expressed. These promising results may drive the further development of highly potent combined PDE2/PDE10 inhibitors, or even of selective inhibitors of PDE2 and/or PDE10.
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015
Frederik Rombouts; Gary Tresadern; Peter Jacobus Johannes Antonius Buijnsters; Xavier Langlois; Fulgencio Tovar; Thomas B. Steinbrecher; Greet Vanhoof; Marijke Somers; José-Ignacio Andrés; Andrés A. Trabanco
A novel series of pyrido[4,3-e][1,2,4]triazolo[4,3-a]pyrazines is reported as potent PDE2/PDE10 inhibitors with drug-like properties. Selectivity for PDE2 was obtained by introducing a linear, lipophilic moiety on the meta-position of the phenyl ring pending from the triazole. The SAR and protein flexibility were explored with free energy perturbation calculations. Rat pharmacokinetic data and in vivo receptor occupancy data are given for two representative compounds 6 and 12.
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2014
Peter Jacobus Johannes Antonius Buijnsters; Meri De Angelis; Xavier Langlois; Frederik Rombouts; Gary Tresadern; Alison Ritchie; Andrés A. Trabanco; Greet Vanhoof; Yves Emiel Maria Van Roosbroeck; José-Ignacio Andrés
Structure-guided design led to the identification of the novel, potent, and selective phosphodiesterase 2 (PDE2) inhibitor 12. Compound 12 demonstrated a >210-fold selectivity versus PDE10 and PDE11 and was inactive against all other PDE family members up to 10 μM. In vivo evaluation of 12 provided evidence that it is able to engage the target and to increase cGMP levels in relevant brain regions. Hence, 12 is a valuable tool compound for the better understanding of the role of PDE2 in cognitive impairment and other central nervous system related disorders.
Expert Opinion on Therapeutic Patents | 2016
Andrés A. Trabanco; Peter Jacobus Johannes Antonius Buijnsters; Frederik Rombouts
ABSTRACT Introduction: The cyclic nucleotides cAMP and cGMP are ubiquitous intracellular second messengers regulating a large variety of biological processes. The intracellular concentration of these biologically relevant molecules is modulated by the activity of phosphodiesterases (PDEs), a class of enzymes that is grouped in 11 families. The expression of PDEs is tissue- and cell-specific allowing spatiotemporal integration of multiple signaling cascades. PDE2A is a dual substrate enzyme and is expressed in both the periphery and in the central nervous system, however its expression is highest in the brain, where it is mainly localized in the cortex, hippocampus, and striatum. This suggests that this enzyme may regulate intraneuronal cGMP and cAMP levels in brain areas involved in emotion, perception, concentration, learning and memory. Areas covered: This review covers the patent applications published between January 2010 and February 2016 on phosphodiesterase 2A inhibitors. Expert opinion: Recent publications in the literature and in filed patent applications demonstrate the interest of pharmaceutical companies for PDE2A. This has increased the insights of its possible therapeutic role but the few clinical trials were terminated. Based on the ongoing interest in the field it is likely that new clinical trials can be expected and will unravel the therapeutic potential of PDE2A inhibition.
Chemistry & Biology | 2018
Jaak Simm; Günter Klambauer; Adam Arany; Marvin Steijaert; Jörg Kurt Wegner; Emmanuel Gustin; Vladimir Chupakhin; Yolanda T. Chong; Jorge Vialard; Peter Jacobus Johannes Antonius Buijnsters; Ingrid Velter; Alexander Vapirev; Shantanu Singh; Anne E. Carpenter; Roel Wuyts; Sepp Hochreiter; Yves Moreau; Hugo Ceulemans
In both academia and the pharmaceutical industry, large-scale assays for drug discovery are expensive and often impractical, particularly for the increasingly important physiologically relevant model systems that require primary cells, organoids, whole organisms, or expensive or rare reagents. We hypothesized that data from a single high-throughput imaging assay can be repurposed to predict the biological activity of compounds in other assays, even those targeting alternate pathways or biological processes. Indeed, quantitative information extracted from a three-channel microscopy-based screen for glucocorticoid receptor translocation was able to predict assay-specific biological activity in two ongoing drug discovery projects. In these projects, repurposing increased hit rates by 50- to 250-fold over that of the initial project assays while increasing the chemical structure diversity of the hits. Our results suggest that data from high-content screens are a rich source of information that can be used to predict and replace customized biological assays.
bioRxiv | 2017
Jaak Simm; Guenter Klambauer; Adam Arany; Marvin Steijaert; Joerg Kurt Wegner; Emmanuel Gustin; Vladimir Chupakhin; Yolanda T. Chong; Jorge Vialard; Peter Jacobus Johannes Antonius Buijnsters; Ingrid Velter; Alexander Vapirev; Shantanu Singh; Anne E. Carpenter; Roel Wuyts; Sepp Hochreiter; Yves Moreau; Hugo Ceulemans
We repurpose a High-Throughput (cell) Imaging (HTI) screen of a glucocorticoid receptor assay to predict target protein activity in multiple other seemingly unrelated assays. In two ongoing drug discovery projects, our repurposing approach increased hit rates by 60- to 250-fold over that of the primary project assays while increasing the chemical structure diversity of the hits. Our results suggest that data from available HTI screens are a rich source of information that can be reused to empower drug discovery efforts.
Archive | 2002
Eddy Jean Edgard Freyne; Peter Jacobus Johannes Antonius Buijnsters; Marc Willems; Werner Constant Johan Embrechts; Christopher John Love; Paul A. J. Janssen; Paulus Joannes Lewi; Jan Heeres; Marc René De Jonge; Lucien Maria Henricus Koymans; Hendrik Maarten Vinkers; Koen Jeanne Alfons Van Aken; Gaston Stanislas Marcella Diels
Archive | 2004
Eddy Jean Edgard Freyne; Christopher John Love; Ludwig Paul Cooymans; Nele Vandermaesen; Peter Jacobus Johannes Antonius Buijnsters; Marc Willems; Werner Constant Johan Embrechts
Archive | 2002
Eddy Jean Edgard Freyne; Peter Jacobus Johannes Antonius Buijnsters; Marc Willems; Werner Constant Johan Embrechts; Jean Fernand Armand Lacrampe; Paul A. J. Janssen; Herwig Josephus Margareta Janssen; Paul Peter Maria Janssen; Graziella Maria Constantina Janssen; Jasmine Josee Werner Janssen; Maroussia Godelieve Frank Janssen; Theodora Joanna Francisca Arts; Paulus Joannes Lewi; Jan Heeres; Marc René De Jonge; Lucien Maria Henricus Koymans; Frederik Frans Desiré Daeyaert; Rony Nuydens; Marc Mercken
Langmuir | 2001
Peter Jacobus Johannes Antonius Buijnsters; Jack J. J. M. Donners; Susan Hill; Brigid R. Heywood; Roeland J. M. Nolte; Binne Zwanenburg; Nico A. J. M. Sommerdijk