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Dive into the research topics where Youssef L. Bennani is active.

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Featured researches published by Youssef L. Bennani.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2004

Pharmacological Properties of ABT-239 [4-(2-{2-[(2R)-2-Methylpyrrolidinyl]ethyl}-benzofuran-5-yl)benzonitrile]: II. Neurophysiological Characterization and Broad Preclinical Efficacy in Cognition and Schizophrenia of a Potent and Selective Histamine H3 Receptor Antagonist

Gerard B. Fox; Timothy A. Esbenshade; Jia Bao Pan; Richard J. Radek; Kathleen M. Krueger; Betty B. Yao; Kaitlin E. Browman; Michael J. Buckley; Michael E. Ballard; Victoria A. Komater; Holly Miner; Min Zhang; Ramin Faghih; Lynne E. Rueter; R. Scott Bitner; Karla U. Drescher; Jill M. Wetter; Kennan C. Marsh; Martine Lemaire; Roger D. Porsolt; Youssef L. Bennani; James P. Sullivan; Marlon D. Cowart; Michael W. Decker; Arthur A. Hancock

Acute pharmacological blockade of central histamine H3 receptors (H3Rs) enhances arousal/attention in rodents. However, there is little information available for other behavioral domains or for repeated administration using selective compounds. ABT-239 [4-(2-{2-[(2R)-2-methylpyrrolidinyl]ethyl}-benzofuran-5-yl)benzonitrile] exemplifies such a selective, nonimidazole H3R antagonist with high affinity for rat (pKi = 8.9) and human (pKi = 9.5) H3Rs. Acute functional blockade of central H3 Rs was demonstrated by blocking the dipsogenia response to the selective H3R agonist (R)-α-methylhistamine in mice. In cognition studies, acquisition of a five-trial, inhibitory avoidance test in rat pups was improved with ABT-239 (0.1–1.0 mg/kg), a 10- to 150-fold gain in potency, with similar efficacy, over previous antagonists such as thioperamide, ciproxifan, A-304121 [(4-(3-(4-((2R)-2-aminopropanoyl)-1-piperazinyl)propoxy)phenyl)(cyclopropyl) methanone], A-317920 [N-((1R)-2-(4-(3-(4-(cyclopropylcarbonyl) phenoxy)propyl)-1-piperazinyl)-1-methyl-2-oxoethyl)-2-furamide], and A-349821 [(4′-(3-((R,R)2,5-dimethyl-pyrrolidin-1-yl)-propoxy)-biphenyl-4-yl)-morpholin-4-yl-methanone]. Efficacy in this model was maintained for 3 to 6 h and following repeated dosing with ABT-239. Social memory was also improved in adult (0.01–0.3 mg/kg) and aged (0.3–1.0 mg/kg) rats. In schizophrenia models, ABT-239 improved gating deficits in DBA/2 mice using prepulse inhibition of startle (1.0–3.0 mg/kg) and N40 (1.0–10.0 mg/kg). Furthermore, ABT-239 (1.0 mg/kg) attenuated methamphetamine-induced hyperactivity in mice. In freely moving rat microdialysis studies, ABT-239 enhanced acetylcholine release (0.1–3.0 mg/kg) in adult rat frontal cortex and hippocampus and enhanced dopamine release in frontal cortex (3.0 mg/kg), but not striatum. In summary, broad efficacy was observed with ABT-239 across animal models such that potential clinical efficacy may extend beyond disorders such as ADHD to include Alzheimers disease and schizophrenia.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2004

Pharmacological Properties of ABT-239: II. Neurophysiological Characterization and Broad Preclinical Efficacy in Cognition and Schizophrenia of a Potent and Selective Histamine H3 Receptor Antagonist

Gerard B. Fox; Timothy A. Esbenshade; Jia Bao Pan; Richard J. Radek; Kathleen M. Krueger; Betty B. Yao; Kaitlin E. Browman; Michael J. Buckley; Michael E. Ballard; Victoria A. Komater; Holly Miner; Min Zhang; Ramin Faghih; Lynne E. Rueter; Robert S. Bitner; Karla U. Drescher; Jill M. Wetter; Kennan C. Marsh; Martine Lemaire; Roger D. Porsolt; Youssef L. Bennani; James P. Sullivan; Marlon D. Cowart; Michael W. Decker; Arthur A. Hancock

Acute pharmacological blockade of central histamine H3 receptors (H3Rs) enhances arousal/attention in rodents. However, there is little information available for other behavioral domains or for repeated administration using selective compounds. ABT-239 [4-(2-{2-[(2R)-2-methylpyrrolidinyl]ethyl}-benzofuran-5-yl)benzonitrile] exemplifies such a selective, nonimidazole H3R antagonist with high affinity for rat (pKi = 8.9) and human (pKi = 9.5) H3Rs. Acute functional blockade of central H3 Rs was demonstrated by blocking the dipsogenia response to the selective H3R agonist (R)-α-methylhistamine in mice. In cognition studies, acquisition of a five-trial, inhibitory avoidance test in rat pups was improved with ABT-239 (0.1–1.0 mg/kg), a 10- to 150-fold gain in potency, with similar efficacy, over previous antagonists such as thioperamide, ciproxifan, A-304121 [(4-(3-(4-((2R)-2-aminopropanoyl)-1-piperazinyl)propoxy)phenyl)(cyclopropyl) methanone], A-317920 [N-((1R)-2-(4-(3-(4-(cyclopropylcarbonyl) phenoxy)propyl)-1-piperazinyl)-1-methyl-2-oxoethyl)-2-furamide], and A-349821 [(4′-(3-((R,R)2,5-dimethyl-pyrrolidin-1-yl)-propoxy)-biphenyl-4-yl)-morpholin-4-yl-methanone]. Efficacy in this model was maintained for 3 to 6 h and following repeated dosing with ABT-239. Social memory was also improved in adult (0.01–0.3 mg/kg) and aged (0.3–1.0 mg/kg) rats. In schizophrenia models, ABT-239 improved gating deficits in DBA/2 mice using prepulse inhibition of startle (1.0–3.0 mg/kg) and N40 (1.0–10.0 mg/kg). Furthermore, ABT-239 (1.0 mg/kg) attenuated methamphetamine-induced hyperactivity in mice. In freely moving rat microdialysis studies, ABT-239 enhanced acetylcholine release (0.1–3.0 mg/kg) in adult rat frontal cortex and hippocampus and enhanced dopamine release in frontal cortex (3.0 mg/kg), but not striatum. In summary, broad efficacy was observed with ABT-239 across animal models such that potential clinical efficacy may extend beyond disorders such as ADHD to include Alzheimers disease and schizophrenia.


Behavioural Brain Research | 2002

Effects of histamine H3 receptor ligands GT-2331 and ciproxifan in a repeated acquisition avoidance response in the spontaneously hypertensive rat pup

Gerard B Fox; Jia Bao Pan; Timothy A. Esbenshade; Youssef L. Bennani; Lawrence Black; Ramin Faghih; Arthur A. Hancock; Michael W. Decker

Histamine H(3) receptor antagonists have been proposed as potentially useful therapeutic agents for the treatment of several disorders including attention deficit, schizophrenia, depression, and Alzheimers disease. We have developed a repeated acquisition version of an inhibitory avoidance task using spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR) pups that we believe provides a reproducible measure of the cognitive and attention deficits often characteristic of these disease states, and evaluated two H(3) receptor antagonists. Male SHR, Wistar (WI) and Wistar Kyoto (WKY) rat pups (20--24 days old) were trained to avoid a mild footshock (0.1 mA, 1 s duration), delivered when the pup had transferred from a brightly lit to a darkened compartment. After the first trial, the pup was removed and returned to its home cage. One minute later, the same pup was replaced in the brightly-lit compartment and the training process repeated. A total of five trials were recorded. SHR pups performed significantly more poorly than WI or WKY pups using this training schedule, and SHR pups were used for all subsequent studies. Methylphenidate and ABT-418, both clinically active in attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), were tested to validate the model. Methylphenidate (1 and 3 mg/kg s.c.) and ABT-418 (0.03 mg/kg s.c.) significantly improved SHR pup performance. The H(3) receptor antagonists GT-2331 (1 mg/kg s.c.) and ciproxifan (3 mg/kg s.c.), also significantly, and in a dose-related manner, enhanced performance of the SHR pups. (R)-alpha-methylhistamine (3 mg/kg s.c.) blocked the pro-cognitive effects of ciproxifan, suggesting an H(3) receptor site of action for this compound. This model is useful for evaluating the cognition/attention-enhancing potential of H(3) receptor antagonists.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2002

Aminoalkoxybiphenylnitriles as histamine-3 receptor ligands

Ramin Faghih; Wesley Dwight; Anil Vasudevan; Jurgen Dinges; Scott Eugene Conner; Timothy A. Esbenshade; Youssef L. Bennani; Arthur A. Hancock

Biaryl nitrile amines were prepared and found to have high affinity and selectivity for human and rat histamine H(3) receptors.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2003

Synthesis and SAR of aminoalkoxy-biaryl-4-carboxamides: novel and selective histamine H3 receptor antagonists

Ramin Faghih; Wesley Dwight; Jia Bao Pan; Gerard B. Fox; Kathy M. Krueger; Timothy A. Esbenshade; Jill M. McVey; Kennan C. Marsh; Youssef L. Bennani; Arthur A. Hancock

Novel 4-[(NR1R2-1-yl)]-propoxy-biaryl-4-carboxamides were designed and synthesized. All compounds were tested for affinity at histamine H(3)receptors. Most compounds were highly potent and selective for human and rat H(3) receptors and selected examples such as A-349821 showed functional antagonism of H(3) receptors in vitro and in a mouse dipsogenia model.


Pharmacology, Biochemistry and Behavior | 2002

Differential in vivo effects of H3 receptor ligands in a new mouse dipsogenia model.

Gerard B Fox; Jia Bao Pan; Timothy A. Esbenshade; R. Scott Bitner; Arthur L. Nikkel; Thomas R. Miller; Chae Hee Kang; Youssef L. Bennani; Lawrence Black; Ramin Faghih; Arthur A. Hancock; Michael W. Decker

The selective H(3) receptor agonist (R)-alpha-methylhistamine [(R)-alpha-MeHA] stimulates drinking in the adult rat. In the present study, we investigated the role of the H(3) receptor in mediating this behavior in a new dipsogenia model using the CD-1 mouse. In addition, the putative inverse agonists ciproxifan, thioperamide and clobenpropit; the reported antagonist (1R,2R)-4-[2-(5,5-dimethylhex-1-ynyl)cyclopropyl]imidazole (GT-2331); and the putative neutral antagonist/weak partial agonist proxyfan were evaluated for possible differences in pharmacological activity in this new model. Water intake increased over baseline in a dose-related manner following intraperitoneal administration of 80, 160 or 240 micromol/kg (R)-alpha-MeHA, but this effect was dependent on age (P30<P60<P80=P120). [3H]-N-alpha-methylhistamine binding studies showed no change in H(3) receptor density for the whole mouse brain at these ages. All subsequent studies employed P80 mice dosed with 240 micromol/kg (R)-alpha-MeHA. Ciproxifan (0.001-30 micromol/kg), thioperamide (0.01-10 micromol/kg), clobenpropit (0.1-30 micromol/kg) and GT-2331 (0.03-10 micromol/kg) attenuated drinking dose-dependently, blocking the response completely at the highest doses in each case. In contrast, proxyfan (0.001-10 micromol/kg) only partially attenuated drinking elicited by (R)-alpha-MeHA: coadministration of proxyfan and ciproxifan resulted in an attenuation of ciproxifans effects. This new dipsogenia model provides the first in vivo behavioral evidence for possible pharmacological differences between three putative H(3) receptor inverse agonists, GT-2331 and proxyfan.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2002

Structure–activity relationships of non-imidazole H3 receptor ligands. Part 1

Ramin Faghih; Wesley Dwight; Robert G. Gentles; Kathleen M. Phelan; Timothy A. Esbenshade; Lynne M. Ireland; Thomas R. Miller; Chae-Hee Kang; Gerard B Fox; Sujatha M. Gopalakrishnan; Arthur A. Hancock; Youssef L. Bennani

SAR studies for novel non-imidazole containing H(3) receptor antagonists with high potency and selectivity for rat H(3) receptors are described. A high throughput screening lead, A-923, was further elaborated in a systematic manner to clarify a pharmacophore for this class of aryloxyalkyl piperazine based compounds.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

3-Indolyl sultams as selective CRTh2 antagonists.

L. Nathan Tumey; Michael J. Robarge; Elizabeth Gleason; Jianping Song; Steven M. Murphy; George Mbella Ekema; Chris Doucette; Doug Hanniford; Marc Palmer; Gary Pawlowski; Joel Danzig; Margaret Loftus; Karen Hunady; Bruce Sherf; Robert W. Mays; Alain Stricker-Krongrad; Kurt R. Brunden; Youssef L. Bennani; John J. Harrington

CRTh2 (DP(2)) is a prostaglandin D(2) receptor implicated in the recruitment of eosinophils and basophils within the asthmatic lung. Here we report the discovery of a novel series of 3-indolyl sultam antagonists with low nM affinity for CRTh2. These compounds proved to be selective over the other primary prostaglandin D(2) receptor (DP1) as well as the thromboxane A(2) receptor (TP).


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2002

Structure–Activity relationships of non-imidazole H3 Receptor ligands. Part 2: binding preference for d-Amino acids motifs

Ramin Faghih; Wesley Dwight; Larry Black; Huaqing Liu; Robert G. Gentles; Kathleen M. Phelan; Timothy A. Esbenshade; Lynne M. Ireland; Thomas R. Miller; Chae-Hee Kang; Kathy M. Krueger; Gerard B Fox; Arthur A. Hancock; Youssef L. Bennani

Structure-activity relationship studies on novel non-imidazole, D-amino acid containing ligands of histamine 3 receptors are presented. A-304121 is a D-alanine piperazine amide with high affinity at the rat H(3) receptor.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

The alkaloid conessine and analogues as potent histamine H3 receptor antagonists.

Chen Zhao; Minghua Sun; Youssef L. Bennani; Gopalakrishnan Sm; David G. Witte; Thomas R. Miller; Kathleen M. Krueger; Kaitlin E. Browman; Christine Thiffault; Jill M. Wetter; Kennan C. Marsh; Arthur A. Hancock; Timothy A. Esbenshade; Cowart

The naturally occurring alkaloid, conessine (6), was discovered to bind to histamine H3 receptors in a radioligand-based high-throughput screen. Conessine displayed high affinity at both rat and human H3 receptors (pKi = 7.61 and 8.27) and generally high selectivity against other sites, including histamine receptors H1, H2, and H4. Conessine was found to efficiently penetrate the CNS and reach very high brain concentrations. Although the very slow CNS clearance and strong binding to adrenergic receptors discouraged focus on conessine itself for further development, its potency and novel steroid-based skeleton motivated further chemical investigation. Modification based on introducing diversity at the 3-nitrogen position generated a new series of H3 antagonists with higher in vitro potency, improved target selectivity, and more favorable drug-like properties. One optimized analogue (13c) was examined in detail and was found to be efficacious in animal behavioral model of cognition.

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Gerard B. Fox

University College Dublin

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Kurt R. Brunden

University of Pennsylvania

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