Benzoxazoles pevent misfolding: Benzoxazole‐based inhibitors of transthyretin (TTR) amyloid fibril formation are among the most effective found to date. They stabilize TTR against both acid‐mediated misfolding and urea denaturation by raising the activation barrier to tetramer dissociation, the rate‐limiting step for amyloid formation. The figure depicts the cocrystal structure of one of the better benzoxazole inhibitors bound to TTR.
Amyloid fibril formation by the plasma protein transthyretin (TTR), requiring rate-limiting tetramer dissociation and monomer misfolding, is implicated in several human diseases. Amyloidogenesis can be inhibited through native state stabilization, mediated by small molecule binding to TTR's primarily unoccupied thyroid hormone binding sites. New native state stabilizers have been discovered herein by the facile condensation of arylaldehydes with aryloxyamines affording a bisarylaldoxime ether library. Of the library's 95 compounds, 31 were active inhibitors of TTR amyloid formation in vitro. The bisaryloxime ethers selectively stabilize the native tetrameric state of TTR over the dissociative transition state under amyloidogenic conditions, leading to an increase in the dissociation activation barrier. Several bisaryloxime ethers bind selectively to TTR in human blood plasma over the plethora of other plasma proteins, a necessary attribute for efficacy in vivo. While bisarylaldoxime ethers are susceptible to degradation by N-O bond cleavage, this process is slowed by their binding to TTR. Furthermore, the degradation rate of many of the bisarylaldoxime ethers is slow relative to the half-life of plasma TTR. The bisaryloxime ether library provides valuable structure-activity relationship insight for the development of structurally analogous inhibitors with superior stability profiles, should that prove necessary.
The high-temperature requirement A (HtrA) family of serine proteases has been shown to play an important role in the environmental and cellular stress damage control system in Escherichia coli. Mycobacterium tuberculosis ( Mtb) has three putative HtrA-like proteases, HtrA1, HtrA2, and HtrA3. The deletion of htrA2 gives attenuated virulence in a mouse model of TB. Biochemical analysis reveals that HtrA2 can function both as a protease and as a chaperone. The three-dimensional structure of HtrA2 determined at 2.0 A resolution shows that the protease domains form the central core of the trimer and the PDZ domains extend to the periphery. Unlike E. coli DegS and DegP, the protease is naturally active due to the formation of the serine protease-like catalytic triad and its uniquely designed oxyanion hole. Both protease and PDZ binding pockets of each HtrA2 molecule are occupied by autoproteolytic peptide products and reveal clues for a novel autoregulatory mechanism that might have significant importance in HtrA-associated virulence of Mtb.
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