4.6 Article

Development of metal-chelating inhibitors for the Class II fructose 1,6-bisphosphate (FBP) aldolase

Journal

JOURNAL OF INORGANIC BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 112, Issue -, Pages 49-58

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jinorgbio.2012.02.032

Keywords

FBP aldolase; Competitive slow-binding inhibitors

Funding

  1. Ontario Graduate Scholarship
  2. UW President's Graduate Scholarship
  3. UW Provost's/Faculty of Science Graduate Women's Incentive Fund
  4. Natural Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada [18351, 927-2008, 235003]

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It has long been suggested that the essential and ubiquitous enzyme fructose 1,6-bisphosphate (FBP) aldolase could be a good drug target against bacteria and fungi, since lower organisms possess a metal-dependant (Class II) FBP aldolase, as opposed to higher organisms which possess a Schiff-base forming (Class I) FBP aldolase. We have tested the capacity of derivatives of the metal-chelating compound dipicolinic acid (DPA), as well a thiol-containing compound, to inhibit purified recombinant Class II FBP aldolases from Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Bacillus cereus, Bacillus anthracis, and from the Rice Blast causative agent Magnaporthe grisea. The aldolase from M. tuberculosis was the most sensitive to the metal-chelating inhibitors, with an IC50 of 5.2 mu M with 2,3-dimercaptopropanesulfonate (DMPS) and 28 mu M with DPA. DMPS and the synthesized inhibitor 6-(phosphonomethyl)picolinic acid inhibited the enzyme in a time-dependent, competitive fashion, with second order rate constants of 273 and 270 M-1 s(-1) respectively for the binding of these compounds to the M. tuberculosis aldolase's active site in the presence of the substrate FBP (K-M 27.9 mu M). The most potent first generation inhibitors were modeled into the active site of the M. tuberculosis aldolase structure, with results indicating that the metal chelators tested cannot bind the catalytic zinc in a bidentate fashion while it remains in its catalytic location, and that most en:zyme-ligand interactions involve the phosphate binding pocket residues. (C) 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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