Publications by authors named "Muckenschnabel I"

The impact of storage conditions on compound stability and compound solubility has been debated intensely over the past 5 years. At Novartis, the authors decided to opt for a storage concept that can be considered controversial because they are using a DMSO/water (90/10) mixture as standard solvent. To assess the effect of water in DMSO stocks on compound stability, the authors monitored the purity of a subset of 1404 compounds from ongoing medicinal chemistry projects over several months.

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The quality of the compound library is a critical success factor in every high-throughput screening campaign. Screening solutions have to be prepared with a high level of process control to ensure the correct identity and initial concentration of each compound. However, even under optimized storage conditions, a certain level of degradation in solution cannot be avoided.

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A high-throughput screening methodology tailored to the discovery of ligands for known and orphan proteins is presented. With this method, labeling of neither target protein nor screened compounds is required, as the ligands are affinity selected by incubation of the protein with mixtures of compounds in aqueous binding buffer. Unbound small-molecular-weight compounds are removed from the target protein:ligand complex by rapid size-exclusion chromatography in the 96-well format.

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Infection of leaves of Arabidopsis thaliana with conidial suspensions of the necrotrophic pathogen Botrytis cinerea resulted in a large decrease in the level of ascorbic acid and increases in intensity of a single-peak free radical and Fe(III) (g=4.27) signals in electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra. These changes were not confined to the spreading lesions or associated areas of chlorosis, but extended to other apparently healthy tissues in the infected leaves.

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Free radical adducts of the spin trap alpha-(4-pyridyl-1-oxide)-N-tert-butylnitrone have been observed by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy in detached fruits of Capsicum annuum investigated 5 days after infection with Botrytis cinerea. The spectra of these adducts were at a maximum within the soft rot lesion, but they could also be detected at distances up to 50 mm from the edge of the lesion in samples following main vascular bundles. At distances greater than 40 mm, the spectrum of the ascorbate radical was also seen, and at greater distances from the lesion it was the only radical detected.

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The fungal metabolite botrydial was detected for the first time in ripe fruits of sweet pepper (Capsicum annuum) wound-inoculated with conidial suspensions of Botrytis cinerea and also in leaves of Phaseolus vulgaris and Arabidopsis thaliana inoculated without wounding. This phytotoxin was produced in soft rot regions of the infection. In C.

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The role of active oxygen species has been studied in spreading soft-rot lesions caused by the necrotrophic fungal pathogen Botrytis cinerea Pers.:Fr. in leaves of four genotypes of French bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.

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A combination of electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy and analytical chemistry has been used to study the changes in free radical content, transition metal ion status and lipid peroxidation following inoculation of fruits of sweet pepper (Capsicum annuum) with Botrytis cinerea. EPR detected a high concentration of an unidentified free radical associated with the spreading lesion that extends into the surrounding, healthy tissues. In addition, the EPR-detectable iron(III) was highest at the centre of the lesion, again displaying a gradient out into the surrounding tissues.

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The Morgan-Elson reaction, a method for the determination of hyaluronidase activity, was optimized for the quantitation of the enzyme in biological material. Based on HPLC and spectrometric (UV-Vis, LC-MS) studies, the structure of the red-colored product (mesomeric forms of N3-protonated 3-acetylimino-2-(4-dimethylaminophenyl)methylidene-5-(1,2-++ +dihydroxyethyl)furane) formed by condensation of chromogen III with p-dimethylaminobenzaldehyde is proposed. Activities corresponding to > or = 0.

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Preclinical and clinical observations suggest that the administration of hyaluronidase (Hyase) shortly before that of chemotherapy increases the access and, thus, the effectiveness of anticancer drugs in tumors. To examine this hypotheses as well as the selectivity of such a therapeutic approach potentially beneficial in isolated limb perfusion, the Hyase-induced distribution of melphalan was measured in tumor-bearing nude mice with respect to the mode of drug administration using RP-18 ion-pair high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) with fluorimetric detection. Melphalan alone (50 micromol/kg) or a combination of melphalan (50 micro mol/kg) and Hyase (100,000 IU/kg) was injected either i.

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