Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) employs multiple strategies to evade host immune responses and persist within macrophages. We have previously shown that the cell envelope-associated Mtb serine hydrolase, Hip1, prevents robust macrophage activation and dampens host pro-inflammatory responses, allowing Mtb to delay immune detection and accelerate disease progression. We now provide key mechanistic insights into the molecular and biochemical basis of Hip1 function. We establish that Hip1 is a serine protease with activity against protein and peptide substrates. Further, we show that the Mtb GroEL2 protein is a direct substrate of Hip1 protease activity. Cleavage of GroEL2 is specifically inhibited by serine protease inhibitors. We mapped the cleavage site within the N-terminus of GroEL2 and confirmed that this site is required for proteolysis of GroEL2 during Mtb growth. Interestingly, we discovered that Hip1-mediated cleavage of GroEL2 converts the protein from a multimeric to a monomeric form. Moreover, ectopic expression of cleaved GroEL2 monomers into the hip1 mutant complemented the hyperinflammatory phenotype of the hip1 mutant and restored wild type levels of cytokine responses in infected macrophages. Our studies point to Hip1-dependent proteolysis as a novel regulatory mechanism that helps Mtb respond rapidly to changing host immune environments during infection. These findings position Hip1 as an attractive target for inhibition for developing immunomodulatory therapeutics against Mtb.
Crystal structures of the serine-carboxyl proteinase from Pseudomonas sp. 101 (PSCP), complexed with a number of inhibitors, have been solved and refined at high- to atomic-level resolution. All of these inhibitors (tyrostatin, pseudo-tyrostatin, AcIPF, AcIAF, and chymostatin, as well as previously studied iodotyrostatin and pseudo-iodotyrostatin) make covalent bonds to the active site Ser287 through their aldehyde moieties, while their side chains occupy subsites S1-S4 of the enzyme. The mode of binding of the inhibitors is almost identical for their P1 and P2 side chains, while significant differences are observed for P3 and P4 (if present). Kinetic parameters for the binding of these nanomolar inhibitors to PSCP have been established and correlated with the observed mode of binding. The preferences of this enzyme for a larger side chain in P2 as well as Tyr or Phe in P1 are explained by the size, shape, and characteristics of the S2 and S1 regions of the protein structure, respectively. Networks of hydrogen bonds involving glutamic and aspartic acids have been analyzed for the atomic-resolution structure of the native enzyme. PSCP contains a calcium-binding site that consists of Asp328, Asp348, three amide carbonyl groups, and a water molecule, in almost perfect octahedral coordination. The presence of Ca(2+) cation is necessary for the activity of the enzyme.
A novel class of phthalimides functionalized with privileged scaffolds was designed, synthesized and evaluated as potential inhibitors of plasmepsin 2 (Ki: 0.99 ± 0.1 μM for 6u) and plasmepsin 4 (Ki: 3.3 ± 0.3 μM for 6t), enzymes found in the digestive vacuole of the plasmodium parasite and considered as crucial drug targets. Three compounds were identified as potential candidates for further development. The listed compounds were also assayed for their antimalarial efficacy against chloroquine (CQ) sensitive strain (3D7) of Plasmodium falciparum. Assay of twenty seven hydroxyethylamine derivatives revealed four (5e, 6j, 6o and 6s) as strongly active, which were further evaluated against CQ resistant strain (7GB) of P. falciparum. Compound 5e possessing the piperidinopiperidine moiety exhibited promising antimalarial activity with an IC50 of 1.16 ± 0.04 μM. Further, compounds 5e, 6j, 6o and 6s exhibited low cytotoxic effect on MCF-7 cell line. Compound 6s possessing C 2 symmetry was identified as the least cytotoxic with significant antimalarial activity (IC50: 1.30 ± 0.03 μM). The combined presence of hydroxyethylamine and cyclic amines (piperazines and piperidines) was observed as crucial for the activity. The current studies suggest that hydroxyethylamine based molecules act as potent antimalarial agent and may be helpful in drug development.
HIV drug resistance continues to emerge; consequently, there is an urgent need to develop next generation antiretroviral therapeutics.1 Here we report on the structural and kinetic effects of an HIV protease drug resistant variant with the double mutations Gly48Thr and Leu89Met (PRG48T/L89M), without the stabilizing mutations Gln7Lys, Leu33Ile, and Leu63Ile. Kinetic analyses reveal that PRG48T/L89M and PRWT share nearly identical Michaelis–Menten parameters; however, PRG48T/L89M exhibits weaker binding for IDV (41-fold), SQV (18-fold), APV (15-fold), and NFV (9-fold) relative to PRWT. A 1.9 Å resolution crystal structure was solved for PRG48T/L89M bound with saquinavir (PRG48T/L89M-SQV) and compared to the crystal structure of PRWT bound with saquinavir (PRWT-SQV). PRG48T/L89M-SQV has an enlarged active site resulting in the loss of a hydrogen bond in the S3 subsite from Gly48 to P3 of SQV, as well as less favorable hydrophobic packing interactions between P1 Phe of SQV and the S1 subsite. PRG48T/L89M-SQV assumes a more open conformation relative to PRWT-SQV, as illustrated by the downward displacement of the fulcrum and elbows and weaker interatomic flap interactions. We also show that the Leu89Met mutation disrupts the hydrophobic sliding mechanism by causing a redistribution of van der Waals interactions in the hydrophobic core in PRG48T/L89M-SQV. Our mechanism for PRG48T/L89M-SQV drug resistance proposes that a defective hydrophobic sliding mechanism results in modified conformational dynamics of the protease. As a consequence, the protease is unable to achieve a fully closed conformation that results in an expanded active site and weaker inhibitor binding.
Synthesis of new 1-aryl-3-substituted propanol derivatives followed by structure-activity relationship, in silico drug-likeness, cytotoxicity, genotoxicity, in silico metabolism, in silico pharmacophore modeling, and in vivo studies led to the identification of compounds 22 and 23 with significant in vitro antiplasmodial activity against drug sensitive (D6 IC50 ≤ 0.19 μM) and multidrug resistant (FCR-3 IC50 ≤ 0.40 μM and C235 IC50 ≤ 0.28 μM) strains of Plasmodium falciparum. Adequate selectivity index and absence of genotoxicity was also observed. Notably, compound 22 displays excellent parasitemia reduction (98 ± 1%), and complete cure with all treated mice surviving through the entire period with no signs of toxicity. One important factor is the agreement between in vitro potency and in vivo studies. Target exploration was performed; this chemotype series exhibits an alternative antimalarial mechanism.
Summary Interactions between the protease (PR) encoded by the xenotropic murine leukemia virus-related virus (XMRV) and a number of potential inhibitors have been investigated by biochemical and structural techniques. It was observed that several inhibitors used clinically against HIV PR exhibit nanomolar or even subnanomolar values of Ki, depending on exact experimental conditions. TL-3, a universal inhibitor of retroviral proteases, as well as some inhibitors originally shown to inhibit plasmepsins were also quite potent, whereas inhibition by pepstatin A was considerably weaker. Crystal structures of the complexes of XMRV PR with TL-3, amprenavir, and pepstatin A were solved at high resolution and compared to the structures of these inhibitors complexed with other retropepsins. Whereas TL-3 and amprenavir bind in a predictable manner spanning the substrate-binding site of the enzyme, two molecules of pepstatin A bind simultaneously in an unprecedented manner, leaving the catalytic water molecule in place.
Human Cathepsin D (hCatD) is an aspartic peptidase with a low pH optimum. X-ray crystal structures have been solved for an active, low pH (pH 5.1) form (CatD lo ) [Baldwin ET, Bhat, T.N., Gulnik, S., Hosur, M.V., Sowder, R.C., Cachau, R.E., Collins, J., Silva, A.M. and Erickson J.W. (1993) Proc. Natl. and an inactive, high pH (pH 7.5) form (CatD hi ) [Lee AY, Gulnik SV, Erickson JW. (1998) Nat Struct Biol 5:866-871]. It has been suggested that ionizable switches involving the carboxylate side chains of E5, E180, and D187 may mediate the reversible interconversion between CatD hi and CatD lo and that Y10 stabilizes CatD hi [Lee AY, Gulnik SV, Erickson JW. (1998) Nat Struct Biol 5:866-871]. To test these hypotheses, we generated single point mutants in "short" recombinant human pseudocathepsin D (srCatD), a model kinetically similar to hCatD [Beyer BM and Dunn BM. (1996) J Biol Chem 271:15590-15596]. E180Q, Y10F, and D187N exhibit significantly higher k cat /K m values (2, 3, and 6-fold, respectively) at pH 3.7 and pH 4.75 compared to srCatD indicating that these residues are important in stabilizing the CatD hi . E5Q exhibits a 2-fold lower k cat /K m compared to srCatD at both pH values indicating the importance of E5 in stabilizing the CatD lo . Accordingly, full time-course "pH-jump" (pH 5.5 to 4.75) studies of substrate hydrolysis indicate that E180Q, D187N, and Y10F have shorter kinetic lag phases that represent the change from CatD hi to CatD lo compared to srCatD and E5Q. Intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence reveals that the variants have a native-like structure over the pH range of our assays. The results indicate that E180 and D187 participate as an electrostatic switch that initiates the conformational change of CatD lo to CatD hi and Y10 stabilizes CatD hi by hydrogen bonding to the catalytic Asp 33. E5 appears to play a less significant role as an ionic switch that stabilizes CatD lo .Cathepsin D (CatD) is a member of the pepsin family of aspartic peptidases. It has an acidic pH optimum (pH 2.8 to 4.0) (1,2) and was originally detected in the endosomal and lysosomal compartments of higher eukaryotes (3). Traditionally, CatD was believed to play an important role in general proteolysis during bulk turnover at acidic pH (4). However, numerous studies showed that CatD plays other important physiological roles (5) some of which may involve restricted proteolysis. These include parathyroid hormone (6) processing, antigen processing (7)(8), and the generation of angiostatin from plasminogen (9). CatD has also been implicated in pathological events including tumor growth and metastasis in breast and colorectal cancer (10)(11)(12)(13)(14). Consequently, CatD is a valuable target for the design of inhibitors. One of the most pronounced structural differences between CatD lo and CatD hi is the relocation of the N-terminal segment (residues 3-7). This segment constitutes the first interdomain β-strand of a 6-stranded β-sheet that forms the base of the molecule in CatD lo . In CatD hi , however, it is rea...
Multidrug resistance to current Food and Drug Administration-approved HIV-1 protease (PR) inhibitors drives the need to understand the fundamental mechanisms of how drug pressure-selected mutations, which are oftentimes natural polymorphisms, elicit their effect on enzyme function and resistance. Here, the impacts of the hinge-region natural polymorphism at residue 35, glutamate to aspartate (E35D), alone and in conjunction with residue 57, arginine to lysine (R57K), are characterized with the goal of understanding how altered salt bridge interactions between the hinge and flap regions are associated with changes in structure, motional dynamics, conformational sampling, kinetic parameters, and inhibitor affinity. The combined results reveal that the single E35D substitution leads to diminished salt bridge interactions between residues 35 and 57 and gives rise to the stabilization of open-like conformational states with overall increased backbone dynamics. In HIV-1 PR constructs where sites 35 and 57 are both mutated (e.g. E35D and R57K), x-ray structures reveal an altered network of interactions that replace the salt bridge thus stabilizing the structural integrity between the flap and hinge regions. Despite the altered conformational sampling and dynamics when the salt bridge is disrupted, enzyme kinetic parameters and inhibition constants are similar to those obtained for subtype B PR. Results demonstrate that these hinge-region natural polymorphisms, which may arise as drug pressure secondary mutations, alter protein dynamics and the conformational landscape, which are important thermodynamic parameters to consider for development of inhibitors that target for non-subtype B PR.
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