4.7 Article

Fragment-based design for the development of N-domain-selective angiotensin-1-converting enzyme inhibitors

Journal

CLINICAL SCIENCE
Volume 126, Issue 3-4, Pages 305-313

Publisher

PORTLAND PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.1042/CS20130403

Keywords

angiotensin-1-converting enzyme (ACE); crystal structure; in silico screening; inhibitor design; kinetics; RXP407

Funding

  1. University of Cape Town (U.C.T.)
  2. South African National Research Foundation
  3. Medical Research Council (U.K.) [G1001685]
  4. Wellcome Trust (U.K.) [088464]
  5. MRC [G1001685] Funding Source: UKRI
  6. Medical Research Council [G1001685] Funding Source: researchfish

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ACE (angiotensin-1-converting enzyme) is a zinc metallopeptidase that plays a prominent role in blood pressure regulation and electrolyte homeostasis. ACE consists of two homologous domains that despite similarities of sequence and topology display differences in substrate processing and inhibitor binding. The design of inhibitors that selectively inhibit the N-domain (N-selective) could be useful in treating conditions of tissue injury and fibrosis due to build-up of N-domain-specific substrate Ac-SDKP (N-acetyl-Ser Asp Lys Pro). Using a receptor-based SHOP (scaffold hopping) approach with N-selective inhibitor RXP407, a shortlist of scaffolds that consisted of modified RXP407 backbones with novel chemotypes was generated. These scaffolds were selected on the basis of enhanced predicted interaction energies with N-domain residues that differed from their C-domain counterparts. One scaffold was synthesized and inhibitory binding tested using a fluorogenic ACE assay. A molecule incorporating a tetrazole moiety in the P-2 position (compound 33RE) displayed potent inhibition (K-i=11.21 +/- 0.74 nM) and was 927-fold more selective for the N-domain than the C-domain. A crystal structure of compound 33RE in complex with the N-domain revealed its mode of binding through aromatic stacking with His(388) and a direct hydrogen bond with the hydroxy group of the N-domain specific Tyr(389). This work further elucidates the molecular basis for N-domain-selective inhibition and assists in the design of novel N-selective ACE inhibitors that could be employed in treatment of fibrosis disorders.

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