Rhodopsin is a visual pigment ubiquitous in multicellular animals. If visual pigments have a common ancient origin, as is believed, then some unicellular organisms might also use a rhodopsin photoreceptor. We show here that the unicellular alga Chlamydomonas does indeed use a rhodopsin photoreceptor. We incorporated analogues of its retinal chromophore into a blind mutant; normal photobehaviour was restored and the colour of maximum sensitivity was shifted in a manner consistent with the nature of the retinal analogue added. The data suggest that 11-cis-retinal is the natural chromophore and that the protein environment of this retinal is similar to that found in bovine rhodopsin, suggesting homology with the rhodopsins of higher organisms. This is the first demonstration of a rhodopsin photoreceptor in an alga or eukaryotic protist and also the first report of behavioural spectral shifts caused by exogenous synthetic retinals in a eukaryote. A survey of the morphology and action spectra of other protists suggests that rhodopsins may be common photoreceptors of chlorophycean, prasinophycean and dinophycean algae. Thus, Chlamydomonas represents a useful new model for studying photoreceptor cells.
SUMMARY Bacterial virulence mechanisms are attractive targets for antibiotic development, because they are required for the pathogenesis of numerous global infectious disease agents. The bacterial secretion systems used to assemble the surface structures that promote adherence and deliver protein virulence effectors to host cells could comprise one such therapeutic target. In this study, we developed and performed a high-throughput screen (HTS) of small molecule libraries and identified a small molecule, a 2-imino-5-arylidene thiazolidinone that blocked secretion and virulence functions of a wide array of animal and plant Gram-negative bacterial pathogens. This compound inhibited type III secretion-dependent functions, with the exception of flagellar motility, and Type II secretion-dependent functions, suggesting that the target of the compound could be an outer membrane component conserved between these two secretion systems. This work provides a proof of concept that compounds with a broad spectrum of activity against Gram-negative bacterial secretion systems could be developed to prevent and treat bacterial diseases.
The X-ray crystallographic structure of the human alpha-thrombin complex with hirulog 3 (a potent, noncleavable hirudin-based peptide of the "hirulog" class containing a beta-homoarginine at the scissile bond), which is isomorphous with that of the hirugen-thrombin crystal structure, was solved at 2.3-A resolution by starting with a model for thrombin derived from the hirugen-thrombin complex and was refined by restrained least squares methods (R = 0.132). Residues of hirulog 3 were well-defined in the electron density, which included most of the pentaglycine linker and the C-terminal helical turn that was disordered in a related structure of thrombin with hirulog 1. The interactions of D-Phe1'-Pro2'-beta-homoArg3' with the active site of thrombin were essentially identical to those of related structures of PPACK- (D-Phe-Pro-Arg chloromethyl ketone) and hirulog 1-thrombin, with the guanidinium function of the arginyl P1 residue forming a hydrogen-bonding ion pair with Asp189 of the S1 site. A noticeable shift in the CA atom of beta-homoArg3' due to the methylene insertion displaces the scissile bond from attack by Ser195, thus imparting proteolytic stability to the beta-homoArg hirulog derivative. Resolution of the pentaglycine spacer, linking N- and C-terminal functional domains into a single oligopeptide bivalent inhibitor, permitted delineation of corresponding S' subsites of thrombin. The position of Gly4' (P1') is stabilized by three hydrogen bonds with His57, Lys60F, and Ser195, while the conformational angles maintained in a strained, nonallowed configuration for non-glycyl amino acids.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
A beta-glucuronide-based linker for attaching cytotoxic agents to monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) was designed and evaluated. We employed the cytotoxic auristatin derivatives MMAE (1a) and MMAF (1b) and doxorubicin propyloxazoline (DPO, 2) to give the beta-glucuronide drug-linkers 9a, 9b, and 17, respectively. Cysteine-quenched derivatives of 9b and 17 were determined to be substrates for E. coli beta-glucuronidase, resulting in facile drug release. The beta-glucuronide MMAF drug-linker 9b was highly stable in rat plasma with an extrapolated half-life of 81 days. Each drug-linker when conjugated to mAbs c1F6 (anti-CD70) and cAC10 (anti-CD30) gave monomeric antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) with as many as eight drugs per mAb and had high levels of immunologically specific cytotoxic activity on cancer cell lines. cAC10-9a displayed pronounced antitumor activity in a subcutaneous Karpas 299 lymphoma tumor model. A single dose treatment led to cures in all animals at the 0.5 mg/kg dose level and above, and the conjugate was well tolerated at 100 mg/kg. In mice with subcutaneous renal cell carcinoma xenografts, the MMAF conjugate c1F6-9b was tolerated at 25 mg/kg and efficacious at 0.75 mg/kg. These results demonstrate that the beta-glucuronide linker system is an effective strategy for targeting cytotoxic agents providing ADCs with high degrees of efficacy at well-tolerated doses.
Deacetylation of uridyldiphospho-3-O-(R-hydroxydecanoyl)-N-acetylglucosamine by LpxC is the first committed step in the Pseudomonas aeruginosa biosynthetic pathway to lipid A; homologous enzymes are found widely among Gram-negative bacteria. As an essential enzyme for which no inhibitors have yet been reported, the P. aeruginosa LpxC represents a highly attractive target for a novel antibacterial drug. We synthesized several focused small-molecule libraries, each composed of a variable aromatic ring, one of four heterocyclic/spacer moieties, and a hydroxamic acid and evaluated the LpxC inhibition of these compounds against purified P. aeruginosa enzyme. To ensure that the in vitro assay would be as physiologically relevant as possible, we synthesized a tritiated form of the specific P. aeruginosa glycolipid substrate and measured directly the enzymatically released acetate. Several of our novel compounds, predominantly those having fluorinated substituents on the aromatic ring and an oxazoline as the heterocyclic moiety, demonstrated in vitro IC(50) values less than 1 microM. We now report the synthesis and in vitro evaluation of these P. aeruginosa LpxC inhibitors.
LpxC [UDP-3-O-(R-3-hydroxymyristoyl)-GlcNAc deacetylase] is a metalloamidase that catalyzes the first) identified a series of synthetic LpxC-inhibitory molecules that were bactericidal for Escherichia coli. These molecules did not inhibit the growth of Pseudomonas aeruginosa and were therefore not developed further as antibacterial drugs. The inactivity of the LpxC inhibitors for P. aeruginosa raised the possibility that LpxC activity might not be essential for all gram-negative bacteria. By placing the lpxC gene of P. aeruginosa under tight control of an arabinose-inducible promoter, we demonstrated the essentiality of LpxC activity for P. aeruginosa. It was found that compound L-161,240, the most potent inhibitor from the previous study, was active against a P. aeruginosa construct in which the endogenous lpxC gene was inactivated and in which LpxC activity was supplied by the lpxC gene from E. coli. Conversely, an E. coli construct in which growth was dependent on the P. aeruginosa lpxC gene was resistant to the compound. The differential activities of L-161,240 against the two bacterial species are thus the result primarily of greater potency toward the E. coli enzyme rather than of differences in the intrinsic resistance of the bacteria toward antibacterial compounds due to permeability or efflux. These data validate P. aeruginosa LpxC as a target for novel antibiotic drugs and should help direct the design of inhibitors against clinically important gram-negative bacteria.Lipopolysaccharide has a critical function in gram-negative bacterial membrane integrity and resistance to host defenses, and therefore, the conserved lipopolysaccharide biosynthetic enzymes are attractive targets for novel antibacterial drugs. A drug targeting enzymes of this biosynthetic pathway would need to be active against Pseudomonas aeruginosa and other nonfermenting gram-negative bacterial species, as well as against Escherichia coli and other enteric bacteria, to be clinically useful. The P. aeruginosa outer membrane is less permeable to small molecules than that of E. coli, and P. aeruginosa has several multidrug efflux pumps. As a result of both of these factors, P. aeruginosa is less susceptible than E. coli to many antibiotics (24). Several laboratories have focused on the metalloenzyme LpxC [UDP-(3-O-acyl)-N-acetylglucosamine deacetylase], since it catalyzes the first committed step in lipid A synthesis (Fig. 1) and has been demonstrated to be essential for the growth of E. coli (3,12,38). P. aeruginosa LpxC is similar in sequence (Fig. 2) and catalyzes the same activity (11). While the essentiality of LpxC activity for P. aeruginosa has not been formally proven, the lpxC gene was not inactivated in a saturating transposon mutagenesis study (15). These data suggest that it might be possible to discover LpxC inhibitors active against both E. coli and P. aeruginosa. However, none of the early LpxC inhibitors, some of which showed antibacterial activity against E. coli and certain other organisms, were able to inhibit growth of...
Antibody drug conjugates (ADCs) have progressed from hypothesis to approved therapeutics in less than 30 years, and the technologies available to modify both the antibodies and the cytotoxic drugs are expanding rapidly. For reasons well reviewed previously, the field is trending strongly toward homogeneous, defined antibody conjugation. In this review we present the antibody and small molecule chemistries that are currently used and being explored to develop specific, homogenous ADCs.
Antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) were prepared consisting of DNA minor groove binder drugs (MGBs) attached to monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) through peptide linkers designed to release drugs inside the lysosomes of target cells. The site of linker attachment on the MGB was at the 5-position on the B-ring, since model studies showed that attachment of an electron-withdrawing group (i.e., acyl, carbamoyl) at this position increased the stability of the molecule. Because of the hydrophobic nature of the MGBs, several measures were required to overcome their tendencies to induce mAb aggregation upon conjugation. This is exemplified in the series of ADCs containing the amino-CBI drug 1. Initial adducts were prepared using the peptide sequence valine-citrulline, attached to a self-immolative para-aminobenzyl carbamate spacer. The resulting ADCs were completely aggregated. Removal of the self-immolative spacer, introduction of a more hydrophilic valine-lysine sequence, and incorporation of a tetraethyleneglycol unit between the mAb and the peptide resulted in conjugates that were nonaggregated, even with as many as eight drugs per mAb. These results were extended to include the hydroxy aza-CBI drug 2, which was linked to the valine-lysine sequence through a para-aminobenzyl ether self-immolative spacer. The resulting mAb conjugates were monomeric and released the hydroxy aza-CBI drug upon treatment with human cathepsin B. In vitro cytotoxicity assays established that the mAb-MGB drug conjugates were highly cytotoxic and effected immunologically specific cell kill at subsaturating doses. The results provide a general strategy for MGB prodrug design and illustrate the importance of linker hydrophilicity in making nonaggregated, active mAb-MGB conjugates.
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