4.8 Article

On the Mechanism of Dimethylarginine Dimethylaminohydrolase Inactivation by 4-Halopyridines

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 133, Issue 28, Pages 10951-10959

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja2033684

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [GM69754, AI075509, AI071992]
  2. Robert A. Welch Foundation [F-1572, F-1225]
  3. Texas Institute for Drug and Diagnostic Development, Welch Foundation [TI-3D, H-F-0032]
  4. College of Natural Sciences

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Small molecules capable of selective covalent protein modification are of significant interest for the development of biological probes and therapeutics. We recently reported that 2-methyl-4-bromopyridine is a quiescent affinity label for the nitric oxide controlling enzyme dimethylarginine dimethylaminohydrolase (DDAH) (Johnson, C. M.; Linsky, T. W.; Yoon, D. W.; Person, M. D.; Fast, W. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2011, 133, 1553-1562). Discovery of this novel protein modifier raised the possibility that the 4-halopyridine motif may be suitable for wider application. Therefore, the inactivation mechanism of the related compound 2-hydroxymethyl-4-chloropyridine is probed here in more detail. Solution studies support an inactivation mechanism in which the active site Asp66 residue stabilizes the pyridinium form of the inactivator, which has enhanced reactivity toward the active site Cys, resulting in covalent bond formation, loss of the halide, and irreversible inactivation. A 2.18 angstrom resolution X-ray crystal structure of the inactivated complex elucidates the orientation of the inactivator and its covalent attachment to the active site Cys, but the structural model does not show an interaction between the inactivator and Asp66. Molecular modeling is used to investigate inactivator binding, reaction, and also a final pyridinium deprotonation step that accounts for the apparent differences between the solution-based and structural studies with respect to the role of Asp66. This work integrates multiple approaches to elucidate the inactivation mechanism of a novel 4-halopyridine warhead, emphasizing the strategy of using pyridinium formation as a switch to enhance reactivity when bound to the target protein.

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