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Katrin Eitel

Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg

Publishes on Receptor Mechanisms and Signaling, Neuropeptides and Animal Physiology, Neuroscience and Neuropharmacology Research. 6 papers and 1.1k citations.

6Publications
1.1kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Structure-guided development of selective M3 muscarinic acetylcholine receptor antagonists
H Liu, Josefa Hofmann, I. Fish et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|2018
Cited by 95Open Access

Drugs that treat chronic obstructive pulmonary disease by antagonizing the M3 muscarinic acetylcholine receptor (M3R) have had a significant effect on health, but can suffer from their lack of selectivity against the M2R subtype, which modulates heart rate. Beginning with the crystal structures of M2R and M3R, we exploited a single amino acid difference in their orthosteric binding pockets using molecular docking and structure-based design. The resulting M3R antagonists had up to 100-fold selectivity over M2R in affinity and over 1,000-fold selectivity in vivo. The crystal structure of the M3R-selective antagonist in complex with M3R corresponded closely to the docking-predicted geometry, providing a template for further optimization.

Structure-Based Design and Discovery of New M<sub>2</sub>Receptor Agonists
I. Fish, Anne Stößel, Katrin Eitel et al.|Journal of Medicinal Chemistry|2017
Cited by 27Open Access

Muscarinic receptor agonists are characterized by apparently strict restraints on their tertiary or quaternary amine and their distance to an ester or related center. On the basis of the active state crystal structure of the muscarinic M2 receptor in complex with iperoxo, we explored potential agonists that lacked the highly conserved functionalities of previously known ligands. Using structure-guided pharmacophore design followed by docking, we found two agonists (compounds 3 and 17), out of 19 docked and synthesized compounds, that fit the receptor well and were predicted to form a hydrogen-bond conserved among known agonists. Structural optimization led to compound 28, which was 4-fold more potent than its parent 3. Fortified by the discovery of this new scaffold, we sought a broader range of chemotypes by docking 2.2 million fragments, which revealed another three micromolar agonists unrelated either to 28 or known muscarinics. Even pockets as tightly defined and as deeply studied as that of the muscarinic reveal opportunities for the structure-based design and the discovery of new chemotypes.