Title of article
Structure-based discovery and in-parallel optimization of novelcompetitive inhibitors of thymidylate synthase Original Research Article
Author/Authors
Donatella Tondi، نويسنده , , Ursula Slomczynska، نويسنده , , M. Paola Costi، نويسنده , , D. Martin Watterson، نويسنده , , Stefano Ghelli، نويسنده , , Brian K. Shoichet، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
Pages
13
From page
319
To page
331
Abstract
Abstract
Background:
The substrate sites of enzymes are attractive targets for structurebased inhibitor design. Two difficulties hinder efforts to discover and elaborate new (nonsubstrate-like) inhibitors for these sites. First, novel inhibitors often bind at nonsubstrate sites. Second, a novel scaffold introduces chemistry that is frequently unfamiliar, making synthetic elaboration challenging.
Results:
In an effort to discover and elaborate a novel scaffold for a substrate site, we combined structure-based screening with in-parallel synthetic elaboration. These techniques were used to find new inhibitors that bound to the folate site of Lactobacillus casei thymidylate synthase (LcTS), an enzyme that is a potential target for proliferative diseases, and is highly studied. The available chemicals directory was screened, using a molecular-docking computer program, for molecules that complemented the three-dimensional structure of this site. Five high-ranking compounds were selected for testing. Activity and clocking studies led to a derivative of one of these, dansyltyrosine (Ki 65 μM. Using solid-phase in-parallel techniques 33 derivatives of this lead were synthesized and tested. These analogs are dissimilar to the substrate but bind competitively with it. The most active analog had a Ki of 1.3 μM. The tighter binding inhibitors were also the most specific for LcTS versus related enzymes.
Conclusions:
TS can recognize inhibitors that are dissimilar to, but that bind competitively with, the folate substrate. Combining structure-based discovery with in-parallel synthetic techniques allowed the rapid elaboration of this series of compounds. More automated versions of this approach can be envisaged.
Journal title
Chemistry and Biology
Serial Year
1999
Journal title
Chemistry and Biology
Record number
1158127
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