Journal
METALLOMICS
Volume 10, Issue 7, Pages 1003-1015Publisher
ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c8mt00111a
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Funding
- Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development of the Republic of Serbia [172023]
- Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development of the Republic of Serbia
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The present paper deals with investigation of the interaction between selected simple structure Au(iii) ([AuCl4](-), [AuCl2(dmso)(2)](+), [AuCl2(bipy)](+)) and Pt(ii) ([PtCl2(dmso)(2)]) complexes with Na/K-ATPase as the target enzyme, using an experimental and theoretical approach. Reaction stoichiometries and binding constants for these enzyme/complex systems were determined, while kinetic measurements were used in order to reveal the type of inhibition. Based on the results obtained by quantum mechanical calculations (electrostatic surface potential (ESP), volume and surface of the complexes) the nature of the investigated complexes was characterized. By using the solvent accessible surface area (SASA) applied on specific inhibitory sites (ion channel and intracellular domains) the nature of these sites was described. Docking studies were used to determine the theoretical probability of the non-covalent metal binding site positions. Inhibition studies implied that all the investigated complexes decreased the activity of the enzyme while the kinetic analysis indicated an uncompetitive mode of inhibition for the selected complexes. Docking results suggested that the main inhibitory site of all these complexes is located in the ion translocation pathway on the extracellular side in the E2P enzyme conformation, similar to the case of cardiac glycosides, specific Na/K-ATPase inhibitors. Also, based on our knowledge, the hydrolyzed forms of [AuCl4](-) and [PtCl2(dmso)(2)] complexes were investigated for the first time by theoretical calculations in this paper. Thereby, a new inhibitory site situated between the M2 and M4 helices was revealed. Binding in this site induces conformational changes in the enzyme domains and perturbs the E1-E2P conformational equilibrium, causing enzyme inhibition.
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