Ulrich Jordis
Vienna University of Technology
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Featured researches published by Ulrich Jordis.
Molecules | 2006
Petr Knesl; Dirk Röseling; Ulrich Jordis
The synthesis of three substituted 6,7-dihydroxy-4-quinazolineamines: tandutinib (1), erlotinib (2) and gefitinib (3) in improved yields is reported. The intermediates were characterized by NMR and the purities determined by HPLC.
Phytochemistry | 1989
E. W. H. Hayek; Ulrich Jordis; W. Moche; Fritz Sauter
Abstract The literature on the history, identification, determination, isolation and distribution in plants of betulin as well as its technological applications and its pharmacology is reviewed and the chemotaxonomy of the angiosperms in relation to betulin is discussed.
Journal of Molecular Neuroscience | 2010
Alfred Maelicke; Anja Hoeffle-Maas; Juergen Ludwig; Arno Maus; Marek Samochocki; Ulrich Jordis; Andreas K. E. Koepke
Memogain® (Gln-1062) is an inactive pro-drug of galantamine, the latter being a plant alkaloid approved for the treatment of mild to moderate Alzheimer’s disease. Memogain has more than 15-fold higher bioavailability in the brain than the same doses of galantamine. In the brain, Memogain is enzymatically cleaved to galantamine, thereby regaining its pharmacological activity as a cholinergic enhancer. In animal models of drug-induced amnesia, Memogain produced several fold larger cognitive improvement than the same doses of galantamine, without exhibiting any significant levels of gastrointestinal side effects that are typical for the unmodified drug and other inhibitors of cholinesterases, such as donepezil and rivastigmin. In the ferret, dramatically reduced emetic and behavioral responses were observed when Memogain was administered instead of galantamine. Based on these and other preclinical data, Memogain may represent an advantageous drug treatment for Alzheimer’s disease, combining much lesser gastrointestinal side effects and considerably higher potency in enhancing cognition, as compared to presently available drugs.
Tetrahedron Letters | 1998
Laszlo Czollner; Werner Frantsits; Bernhard Küenburg; Ursula Hedenig; Johannes Fröhlich; Ulrich Jordis
A concise, scalable synthesis of (−)-galanthamine, a drug being used for the treatment of Alzheimers disease, is described. The yield of the critical phenolic coupling step was optimized to 45–50%. For the reduction of the aryl bromide, air-activated LiAIH4 was used and racemic narwedine was converted to (−)-narwedine by a second order asymmetric transformation.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2010
Igor Beseda; Laszlo Czollner; Priti Shah; Rupesh Khunt; Rawindra Gaware; Paul Kosma; Christian Stanetty; Maria Carmen Del Ruiz-Ruiz; Hassan Amer; Kurt Mereiter; Thierry Da Cunha; Alex Odermatt; Dirk Classen-Houben; Ulrich Jordis
The effect of glycyrrhetinic acid (GA) and GA-derivatives towards 11beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (11beta-HSD) was investigated. Novel compounds with modifications at positions C-3, C-11 and C-29 of the GA skeleton were prepared. Single crystal X-ray diffraction data of selected substances are reported and discussed.
Heterocycles | 2008
Constantin Rabong; Christian Hametner; Kurt Mereiter; Victor G. Kartsev; Ulrich Jordis
Scope and limitations of the T-reaction with emphasis on using chiral, natural products as starting materials to prepare novel chiral heterocycles is studied and the diastereoselective introduction of newly formed stereocenters is explained via proposed mechanisms.
Tetrahedron | 2002
Alexander Poschalko; Stefan Welzig; Matthias Treu; Sven Nerdinger; Kurt Mereiter; Ulrich Jordis
Abstract The first total synthesis of an unnatural analog of the anti-Alzheimer drug (−)-galanthamine has been accomplished using K3[Fe(CN)]6 in the key step to build up the heterocyclic ring system via an oxidative tandem cyclization.
The Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2009
Dirk Classen-Houben; Daniela Schuster; Thierry Da Cunha; Alex Odermatt; Gerhard Wolber; Ulrich Jordis; Bernhard Kueenburg
Elevated cortisol concentrations have been associated with metabolic diseases such as diabetes type 2 and obesity. 11beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (11beta-HSD) type 1, catalyzing the conversion of inactive 11-ketoglucocorticoids into their active 11beta-hydroxy forms, plays an important role in the regulation of cortisol levels within specific tissues. The selective inhibition of 11beta-HSD1 is currently considered as promising therapeutic strategy for the treatment of metabolic diseases. In recent years, natural compound-derived drug design has gained considerable interest. 18beta-glycyrrhetinic acid (GA), a metabolite of the natural product glycyrrhizin, is not selective and inhibits both 11beta-HSD1 and 11beta-HSD2. Here, we compare the biological activity of 18beta-GA and its diastereomer 18alpha-GA against the two enzymes in lysates of transfected HEK-293 cells and show that 18alpha-GA selectively inhibits 11beta-HSD1 but not 11beta-HSD2. This is in contrast to 18beta-GA, which preferentially inhibits 11beta-HSD2. Using a pharmacophore model based on the crystal structure of the GA-derivative carbenoxolone in complex with human 11beta-HSD1, we provide an explanation for the differences in the activities of 18alpha-GA and 18beta-GA. This model will be used to design novel selective derivatives of GA.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010
Cecilia Bartolucci; Lars A. Haller; Ulrich Jordis; Gregor Fels; Doriano Lamba
N-Piperidinopropyl-galanthamine (2) and N-saccharinohexyl-galanthamine (3) were used to investigate interaction sites along the active site gorge of Torpedo californica actylcholinesterase (TcAChE). The crystal structure of TcAChE-2 solved at 2.3 A showed that the N-piperidinopropyl group in 2 is not stretched along the gorge but is folded over the galanthamine moiety. This result was unexpected because the three carbon alkyl chain is just long enough for the bulky piperidine group to be placed above the bottleneck (Tyr121, Phe330) midway down the gorge. The crystal structure of TcAChE-3 at 2.2 A confirmed that a dual interaction with the sites at the bottom, and at the entrance of the gorge, enhances inhibitory activity: a chain of six carbon atoms has, in this class of derivatives, the correct length for optimal interactions with the peripheral anionic site (PAS).
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2011
Rawindra Gaware; Rupesh Khunt; Laszlo Czollner; Christian Stanetty; Thierry Da Cunha; Denise V. Kratschmar; Alex Odermatt; Paul Kosma; Ulrich Jordis; Dirk Claßen-Houben
Glycyrrhetinic acid, the metabolite of the natural product glycyrrhizin, is a well known nonselective inhibitor of 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (11β-HSD) type 1 and type 2. Whereas inhibition of 11β-HSD1 is currently under consideration for treatment of metabolic diseases, such as obesity and diabetes, 11β-HSD2 inhibitors may find therapeutic applications in chronic inflammatory diseases and certain forms of cancer. Recently, we published a series of hydroxamic acid derivatives of glycyrrhetinic acid showing high selectivity for 11β-HSD2. The most potent and selective compound is active against human 11β-HSD2 in the low nanomolar range with a 350-fold selectivity over human 11β-HSD1. Starting from the lead compounds glycyrrhetinic acid and the hydroxamic acid derivatives, novel triterpene type derivatives were synthesized and analyzed for their biological activity against overexpressed human 11β-HSD1 and 11β-HSD2 in cell lysates. Here we describe novel 29-urea- and 29-hydroxamic acid derivatives of glycyrrhetinic acid as well as derivatives with the Beckman rearrangement of the 3-oxime to a seven-membered ring, and the rearrangement of the C-ring from 11-keto-12-ene to 12-keto-9(11)-ene. The combination of modifications on different positions led to compounds comprising further improved selective inhibition of 11β-HSD2 in the lower nanomolar range with up to 3600-fold selectivity.