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Dive into the research topics where Silvio Ofner is active.

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Featured researches published by Silvio Ofner.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Identification of a Novel Series of Orexin Receptor Antagonists with a Distinct Effect on Sleep Architecture for the Treatment of Insomnia

Claudia Betschart; Samuel Hintermann; Dirk Behnke; Simona Cotesta; Markus Fendt; Christine E. Gee; Laura H. Jacobson; Grit Laue; Silvio Ofner; Vinod Chaudhari; Sangamesh Badiger; Chetan Pandit; Juergen Wagner; Daniel Hoyer

Dual orexin receptor (OXR) antagonists (DORAs) such as almorexant, 1 (SB-649868), or suvorexant have shown promise for the treatment of insomnias and sleep disorders in several recent clinical trials in volunteers and primary insomnia patients. The relative contribution of antagonism of OX1R and OX2R for sleep induction is still a matter of debate. We therefore initiated a drug discovery project with the aim of creating both OX2R selective antagonists and DORAs. Here we report that the OX2R selective antagonist 26 induced sleep in mice primarily by increasing NREM sleep, whereas the DORA suvorexant induced sleep largely by increasing REM sleep. Thus, OX2R selective antagonists may also be beneficial for the treatment of insomnia.


Regulatory Peptides | 2000

NKP608: a selective NK-1 receptor antagonist with anxiolytic-like effects in the social interaction and social exploration test in rats.

Annick Vassout; Siem Jacob Veenstra; Kathleen Hauser; Silvio Ofner; Felix Brugger; Walter Schilling; Conrad Gentsch

NKP608 is a non-peptidic derivative of 4-aminopiperidine which acts as a selective, specific and potent antagonist at the neurokinin-1 (NK-1) receptor both in vitro and in vivo. In vitro, the binding of NKP608 to bovine retina was characterized by an IC50 of 2.6+/-0.4 nM, whereas the compounds affinity to other receptor binding sites, including NK-2 and NK-3, was much lower. Species differences in IC(50) values with NKP608 were less pronounced than with previously described NK-1 receptor antagonists, being 13+/-2 and 27+/-2 nM in gerbil midbrain and rat striatum, respectively. In vivo, using the hind foot thumping model in gerbils, NKP608 exhibited a potent NK-1 antagonistic activity following oral administration (ID(50)=0.23 mg/kg; 2 h pretreatment), supporting a central activity of NKP608. The compound had a long duration of action with an ID(50) value of 0. 15 mg/kg p.o. and 0.38 mg/kg p.o. following a pretreatment of 5 and 24 h, respectively. Following a subchronic administration for 7 consecutive days (once daily) there was no evidence for the development of tolerance or accumulation. In the social interaction test performed in a highly illuminated, unfamiliar test arena, NKP608 specifically increased the time the two rats spent in social contact, and there was no concomitant increase in parameters reflecting general activity, i.e. ambulation (number of square entries) or the number of rearings. Active social time was maximally increased at a dose range of 0.01-1 mg/kg p.o. NKP608, the effect being weaker or absent at both lower (0.001 mg/kg p.o.) and higher (10 mg/kg p.o.) doses. A comparable bell-shaped dose-response relation was seen in the social exploration test in rats. In this modified resident/intruder paradigm, maximal increase in social contact of the intruder rat directed towards the resident rat was seen at a similar dose range (0.03-3 mg/kg p.o.) The effects observed following an acute oral administration of NKP608 were comparable to those seen following a treatment with the well-known benzodiazepine, chlordiazepoxide, in both these tests. These findings indicate that NKP608 exhibits an anxiolytic-like effect and that this effect, as concluded from the observed antagonism of the hind foot thumping induced by i.c.v. administration of the NK-1 receptor agonist SPOMe, is centrally mediated. This makes this compound a potentially promising candidate for treating anxiety-related disorders in humans.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 1999

N-Phosphonoalkyl-5-aminomethylquinoxaline-2,3-diones: In vivo active AMPA and NMDA(glycine) antagonists

Yves Auberson; Pierre Acklin; Serge Bischoff; Robert Moretti; Silvio Ofner; Markus Schmutz; Siem Jacob Veenstra

N-Substituted 5-aminomethylquinoxalinediones containing carboxy or phosphonic acids yield potent and selective AMPA and/or NMDA (glycine-binding site) antagonists. Phosphonic acid derivatives are particularly water-soluble and display potent anticonvulsant effects in the electroshock-induced convulsion assay in mice.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

Blocking Metabotropic Glutamate Receptor Subtype 7 (mGlu7) via the Venus Flytrap Domain (VFTD) Inhibits Amygdala Plasticity, Stress, and Anxiety-related Behavior

Christine E. Gee; Daniel Peterlik; Christoph Neuhäuser; Rochdi Bouhelal; Klemens Kaupmann; Grit Laue; Nicole Uschold-Schmidt; Dominik Feuerbach; Kaspar Zimmermann; Silvio Ofner; John F. Cryan; Herman van der Putten; Markus Fendt; Ivo Vranesic; Ralf Glatthar; Peter J. Flor

Background: Behavioral genetics identified mGlu7 as a key regulator of brain emotion circuits. Results: An mGlu7-selective, Venus flytrap domain (VFTD)-directed antagonist inhibits fear, synaptic plasticity, stress, and anxiety in rodents. Conclusion: Pharmacological blockers of mGlu7 may represent promising future anxiolytics and antidepressants in man. Significance: The VFTD region of class C GPCRs provides a promising target for computer-assisted drug design. The metabotropic glutamate receptor subtype 7 (mGlu7) is an important presynaptic regulator of neurotransmission in the mammalian CNS. mGlu7 function has been linked to autism, drug abuse, anxiety, and depression. Despite this, it has been difficult to develop specific blockers of native mGlu7 signaling in relevant brain areas such as amygdala and limbic cortex. Here, we present the mGlu7-selective antagonist 7-hydroxy-3-(4-iodophenoxy)-4H-chromen-4-one (XAP044), which inhibits lateral amygdala long term potentiation (LTP) in brain slices from wild type mice with a half-maximal blockade at 88 nm. There was no effect of XAP044 on LTP of mGlu7-deficient mice, indicating that this pharmacological effect is mGlu7-dependent. Unexpectedly and in contrast to all previous mGlu7-selective drugs, XAP044 does not act via the seven-transmembrane region but rather via a binding pocket localized in mGlu7s extracellular Venus flytrap domain, a region generally known for orthosteric agonist binding. This was shown by chimeric receptor studies in recombinant cell line assays. XAP044 demonstrates good brain exposure and wide spectrum anti-stress and antidepressant- and anxiolytic-like efficacy in rodent behavioral paradigms. XAP044 reduces freezing during acquisition of Pavlovian fear and reduces innate anxiety, which is consistent with the phenotypes of mGlu7-deficient mice, the results of mGlu7 siRNA knockdown studies, and the inhibition of amygdala LTP by XAP044. Thus, we present an mGlu7 antagonist with a novel molecular mode of pharmacological action, providing significant application potential in psychiatry. Modeling the selective interaction between XAP044 and mGlu7s Venus flytrap domain, whose three-dimensional structure is already known, will facilitate future drug development supported by computer-assisted drug design.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Quinazolinedione sulfonamides: A novel class of competitive AMPA receptor antagonists with oral activity

Manuel Koller; Kurt Lingenhoehl; Markus Schmutz; Ivan-Toma Vranesic; Joerg Kallen; Yves Auberson; David Carcache; Henri Mattes; Silvio Ofner; David Orain; Stephan Urwyler

Quinazoline-2,4-diones with a sulfonamide group attached to the N(3) ring atom constitute a novel class of competitive AMPA receptor antagonists. One of the synthesized compounds, 28, shows nanomolar receptor affinity, whereas other examples of the series display oral anticonvulsant activity in animal models.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 1996

SAR of 2-benzyl-4-aminopiperidines: CGP 49823, an orally and centrally active non-peptide NK1 antagonist

Silvio Ofner; Kathleen Hauser; Walter Schilling; Annick Vassout; Siem Jacob Veenstra

Abstract Novel 2-benzyl-4-aminopiperidines have been shown to be potent and selective antagonists at the NK 1 receptor. Some compounds of this series, e.g. CGP 49823 ( 2 ), show CNS activity after oral administration.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 1998

5-Aminomethylquinoxaline-2,3-diones, Part III: Arylamide derivatives as highly potent and selective glycine-site NMDA receptor antagonists.

Pierre Acklin; Hans Allgeier; Yves Auberson; Serge Bischoff; Silvio Ofner; Dirk Sauer; Markus Schmutz

A series of quinoxaline-2,3-diones with very high affinity to the glycine site of the NMDA receptor has been discovered. In contrast to the 7-nitro derivatives, the most potent 7-bromo substituted compounds were highly selective for the glycine site. Although none of the described compounds were active in the electroshock model in mice, 1a displayed significant protection in the quinolinic acid-induced excitotoxicity model in vivo.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

AFQ056/mavoglurant, a novel clinically effective mGluR5 antagonist: identification, SAR and pharmacological characterization.

Ivo Vranesic; Silvio Ofner; Peter J. Flor; Graeme Bilbe; Rochdi Bouhelal; Albert Enz; Sandrine Desrayaud; Kevin H. McAllister; Rainer Kuhn; Fabrizio Gasparini

Here we describe the identification, structure-activity relationship and the initial pharmacological characterization of AFQ056/mavoglurant, a structurally novel, non-competitive mGlu5 receptor antagonist. AFQ056/mavoglurant was identified by chemical derivatization of a lead compound discovered in a HTS campaign. In vitro, AFQ056/mavoglurant had an IC50 of 30 nM in a functional assay with human mGluR5 and was selective over the other mGluR subtypes, iGluRs and a panel of 238 CNS relevant receptors, transporter or enzymes. In vivo, AFQ056/mavoglurant showed an improved pharmacokinetic profile in rat and efficacy in the stress-induced hyperthermia test in mice as compared to the prototypic mGluR5 antagonist MPEP. The efficacy of AFQ056/mavoglurant in humans has been assessed in L-dopa induced dyskinesia in Parkinsons disease and Fragile X syndrome in proof of principle clinical studies.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 1998

5-Aminomethylquinoxaline-2,3-diones. Part II: N-Aryl derivatives as novel NMDA/glycine and AMPA antagonists

Yves Auberson; Pierre Acklin; Hans Allgeier; Michel Biollaz; Serge Bischoff; Silvio Ofner; Siem Jacob Veenstra

Potent antagonists at the glycine-binding site of NMDA receptors, as well as dual antagonists acting also at AMPA receptors have been identified in a series of 5-arylaminomethylquinoxaline-2,3-diones. A study of the structure-activity relationship of these compounds is reported here.


Frontiers in Neuroscience | 2013

Distinct effects of IPSU and suvorexant on mouse sleep architecture

Daniel Hoyer; Thomas Dürst; Markus Fendt; Laura H. Jacobson; Claudia Betschart; Samuel Hintermann; Dirk Behnke; Simona Cotesta; Grit Laue; Silvio Ofner; Eric Legangneux; Christine E. Gee

Dual orexin receptor (OXR) antagonists (DORAs) such as almorexant, SB-649868, suvorexant (MK-4305), and filorexant (MK-6096), have shown promise for the treatment of insomnias and sleep disorders. Whether antagonism of both OX1R and OX2R is necessary for sleep induction has been a matter of some debate. Experiments using knockout mice suggest that it may be sufficient to antagonize only OX2R. The recent identification of an orally bioavailable, brain penetrant OX2R preferring antagonist 2-((1H-Indol-3-yl)methyl)-9-(4-methoxypyrimidin-2-yl)-2,9-diazaspiro[5.5]undecan-1-one (IPSU) has allowed us to test whether selective antagonism of OX2R may also be a viable strategy for induction of sleep. We previously demonstrated that IPSU and suvorexant increase sleep when dosed during the mouse active phase (lights off); IPSU inducing sleep primarily by increasing NREM sleep, suvorexant primarily by increasing REM sleep. Here, our goal was to determine whether suvorexant and IPSU affect sleep architecture independently of overall sleep induction. We therefore tested suvorexant (25 mg/kg) and IPSU (50 mg/kg) in mice during the inactive phase (lights on) when sleep is naturally more prevalent and when orexin levels are normally low. Whereas IPSU was devoid of effects on the time spent in NREM or REM, suvorexant substantially disturbed the sleep architecture by selectively increasing REM during the first 4 h after dosing. At the doses tested, suvorexant significantly decreased wake only during the first hour and IPSU did not affect wake time. These data suggest that OX2R preferring antagonists may have a reduced tendency for perturbing NREM/REM architecture in comparison with DORAs. Whether this effect will prove to be a general feature of OX2R antagonists vs. DORAs remains to be seen.

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