@phdthesis{Eltschkner2020, author = {Eltschkner, Sandra}, title = {Targeting the Bacterial Fatty-Acid Synthesis Pathway: Towards the Development of Slow-Onset Inhibitors and the Characterisation of Protein-Protein Interactions}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-15664}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-156643}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2020}, abstract = {A continuous arms race between the development of novel antibiotics and the evolution of corresponding resistance mechanisms in bacteria has been observed, since antibiotic agents like arsphenamines (e.g. Salvarsan, developed by Paul Ehrlich [1]), sulphonamides (e.g. Prontosil, Gerhard Domagk [2]) and penicillin (Alexander Fleming [3]) were first applied to effectively cure bacterial infections in the early 20th century. The rapid emergence of resistances in contrast to the currently lagging discovery of antibiotics displays a severe threat to human health. Some serious infectious diseases, such as tuberculosis or melioidosis, which were either thought to be an issue only in Third-World countries in case of tuberculosis, or regionally restricted with respect to melioidosis, are now on the rise to expand to other areas. In contrast, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is already present in clinical setups all over the world and causes severe infections in immunocompromised patients. Thus, there is an urgent need for new and effective antimicrobial agents, which impair vital functions of the pathogen's metabolism. One central metabolic pathway is represented by the bacterial fatty-acid synthesis pathway (FAS II), which is essential for the synthesis of long and branched-chain fatty acids, as well as mycolic acids. These substances play a major role as modulating components of the properties of the most important protective barrier - the cell envelope. The integrity of the bacterial cell wall and the associated membrane(s) is crucial for cell growth and for protection against physical strain, intrusion of antibiotic agents and regulation of uptake of ions and other small molecules. Thus, this central pathway represents a promising target for antibiotic action against pathogens to combat infectious diseases. The last and rate-limiting step is catalysed by the trans-2-enoyl-ACP reductase (ENR) FabI or InhA (in mycobacteria), which has been demonstrated to be a valuable target for drug design and can be addressed, amongst others, by diphenyl ether (DPE) compounds, derived from triclosan (TCL) - the first one of this class which was discovered to bind to ENR enzymes [4, 5]. Based on this scaffold, inhibitors containing different combinations of substituents at crucial positions, as well as a novel type of substituent at position five were investigated regarding their binding behaviour towards the Burkholderia pseudomallei and Mycobacterium tuberculosis ENR enzymes bpFabI and InhA, respectively, by structural, kinetic and in-vivo experiments. Generally, substitution patterns modulate the association and dissociation velocities of the different ENR inhibitors in the context of the two-step slow-onset binding mechanism, which is observed for both enzymes. These alterations in the rapidity of complex formation and decomposition have a crucial impact on the residence time of a compound and hence, on the pharmacokinetic properties of potential drug candidates. For example, the substituents at the 2'-position of the DPE scaffold influence the ground- and transition state stability during the binding process to bpFabI, whereas 4'-substituents primarily alter the transition state [6]. The novel triazole group attached to the 5-position of the scaffold, targeting the hydrophobic part of the substrate-binding pocket in InhA, significantly enhances the energy barrier of the transition state of inhibitor binding [7] and decelerates the association- as well as the dissociation processes. Combinations with different substituents at the 2'-position can enhance or diminish this effect, e.g. by ground-state stabilisation, which will result in an increased residence time of the respective inhibitor on InhA. Further structural investigations carried out in this work, confirm the proposed binding mode of a customised saFabI inhibitor [8], carrying a pyridone moiety on the DPE scaffold to expand interactions with the protein environment. Structural and preliminary kinetic data confirm the binding of the same inhibitor to InhA in a related fashion. Comparisons with structures of the ENR inhibitor AFN-1252 [9] bound to ENR enzymes from other organisms, addressing a similar region as the pyridone-moiety of the DPE inhibitor, suggest that also the DPE inhibitor bears the potential to display binding to homologues of saFabI and InhA and may be optimised accordingly. Both of the newly investigated substituents, the pyridone moiety at the 4'-position as well as the 5-triazole substituent, provide a good starting point to modify the DPE scaffold also towards improved kinetic properties against ENR enzymes other than the herein studied and combining both groups on the DPE scaffold may have beneficial effects. The understanding of the underlying binding mechanism is a crucial factor to promote the dedicated design of inhibitors with superior pharmacokinetic characteristics. A second target for a structure-based drug-design approach is the interaction surface between ENR enzymes and the acyl-carrier protein (ACP), which delivers the growing acyl chain to each distinct enzyme of the dissociated FAS-II system and presumably recognises its respective interaction partner via electrostatic contacts. The interface between saACP and saFabI was investigated using different approaches including crosslinking experiments and the design of fusion constructs connecting the ACP and the FabI subunits via a flexible linker region of varying lengths and compositions. The crosslinking studies confirmed a set of residues to be part of the contact interface of a previously proposed complex model [10] and displayed high crosslinking efficiency of saACP to saFabI when mutated to cysteine residues. However, crystals of the complex obtained from either the single components, or of the fusion constructs usually displayed weak diffraction, which supports the assumption that complex formation is highly transient. To obtain ordered crystals for structural characterisation of the complex it is necessary to trap the complex in a fixed state, e.g. by a high-affinity substrate attached to ACP [11], which abolishes rapid complex dissociation. For this purpose, acyl-coupled long-residence time inhibitors might be a valuable tool to elucidate the detailed architecture of the ACP-FabI interface. This may provide a novel basis for the development of inhibitors that specifically target the FAS-II biosynthesis pathway.}, subject = {Fetts{\"a}urestoffwechsel}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Narkhede2018, author = {Narkhede, Yogesh}, title = {In silico structure-based optimisation of pyrrolidine carboxamides as Mycobacterium tuberculosis enoyl-ACP reductase inhibitors}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-152468}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2018}, abstract = {The high infection rates and recent emergence of extremely drug resistant forms of Mycobacterium tuberculosis pose a significant challenge for global health. The NADH- dependent enoyl-ACP-reductase InhA of the type II mycobacterial fatty acid biosynthesis pathway is a well-validated target for inhibiting mycobacterial growth. InhA has been shown to be inhibited by a variety of compound series. Prominent classes of InhA inhibitors from literature include diaryl ethers, pyrrolidine carboxamides and arylamides which can be subjected to further development. Despite the progress in this area, very few compounds are in clinical development phase. The present work involves a detailed computational investigation of the binding modes and structure-based optimisation of pyrrolidine carboxamides as InhA inhibitors. With substituents of widely varying bulkiness, the pyrrolidine carboxamide dataset presented a challenge for prediction of binding mode as well as affinity. Using advanced docking protocols and in-house developed pose selection procedures, the binding modes of 44 compounds were predicted. The poses from docking were used in short molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to ascertain the dominant binding conformations for the bulkier members of the series. Subsequently, an activity-based classification strategy could be developed to circumvent the affinity prediction problems observed with this dataset. The prominent motions of the bound ligand and the active site residues were then ascertained using Essential Dynamics (ED). The information from ED and literature was subsequently used to design a total of 20 compounds that were subjected to extensive in-silico evaluations. Finally, the molecular determinants of rapid-reversible binding of pyrrolidine carboxamides were investigated using long MD simulations.}, subject = {Tuberkelbakterium}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Kesetovic2016, author = {Kesetovic, Diana}, title = {Synthesis and biological testing of potential anti-tuberculosis drugs targeting the β-ketoacyl ACP synthase}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-131301}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2016}, abstract = {With 9.6 million new cases and 1.5 million deaths in 2014, tuberculosis (TB) is alongside with AIDS the most deadly infection.‎ Foremost, the increased prevalence of resistant strains of M. tuberculosis among the TB-infected population represents a serious thread. Hence, in the last decades, novel drug targets have been investigated worldwide. So far a relatively unexplored target is the cell wall enzyme β-ketoacyl-ACP-synthase "KasA", which plays a crucial role in maintaining the membrane impermeability and hence the cell ability to resist to the immune response and drug therapy. KasA is a key enzyme in the fatty acid synthase "FAS-II" elongation cycle, responsible for the extension of the growing acyl chain within the biosynthesis of precursors for the most hydrophobic constituents of the cell wall - mycolic acids. Design of the novel KasA inhibitors, performed in the research group of Prof. Sotriffer by C. Topf and B. Schaefer, was based on the recently published crystal structure of KasA‎ in complex with its known inhibitor thiolactomycin (TLM). Considering the essential ligand-enzyme interactions, a pharmacophore model was built and applied in the virtual screening of a modified ZINC database. Selected hits with the best in silico affinity data have been reported by Topf‎ and Schaefer‎. In this work, two of the obtained hits were synthesized and their structure was systematically varied. First, a virtual screening hit, chromone-2-carboxamide derivative GS-71, was modified in the amide part. Since the most of the products possessed a very low solubility in the aqueous buffer medium used in biological assays, polar groups (nitro, succinamidyl and trimethyl-amino substituent in position 6 of the chromone ring or hydroxyl group on the benzene ring in the amide part have been inserted to the molecule. Further variations yielded diaryl ketones, diaryl ketone bearing a succinamidyl substituent, carboxamide bearing a methylpiperazinyl-4-oxobutanamido group and methyl-malonyl ester amides. Basically, the essential structural features necessary for the ligand-enzyme interactions have been maintained. The latter virtual screening hit, a pyrimidinone derivative VS-8‎ was synthesized and the structure was modified by substitution in positions 2, 4, 5 and 6 of the pyrimidine ring. Due to autofluorescence, detected in most of the products, this model structure was not further varied. Simultaneously, experiments on solubilization of the first chromone-2-carboxamides with cyclodextrins, cyclic oligosacharides known to form water-soluble inclusion complexes, were performed. Although the assessed solubility of the chromone 3b/DIMEB (1:3) mixture exceeded 14-fold the intrinsic one, the achieved 100 µM solubility was still not sufficient to be used as a stock solution in the binding assay. The experiments with cyclodextrin in combination with DMSO were ineffective. Owing to high material costs necessary for the appropriate cyclodextrin amounts, the aim focused on structural modification of the hydrophobic products. Precise structural data have been obtained from the solved crystal structures of three chromone derivatives: the screening hit GS-71 (3b), its trimethylammonium salt (18) and 6-nitro-substituted N-benzyl-N-methyl-chromone-2-carboxamide (9i). The first two compounds are nearly planar with an anti-/trans-rotamer configuration. In the latter structure, the carboxamide bridge is bent out of the chromone plane, showing an anti-rotamer, too. Considering the relatively low partition coefficient of compound 3b (cLogP = 2.32), the compound planarity and correlating tight molecular packing might be the factors significantly affecting its poor solubility. Regarding the biological results of the chromone-based compounds, similar structure-activity correlations could be drawn from the binding assay and the whole cell activity testing on M. tuberculosis. In both cases, the introduction of a nitro group to position 6 of the chromone ring and the presence of a flexible substituent in the amide part showed a positive effect. In the binding study, the nitro group at position 4 on the N-benzyl residue was of advantage, too. The highest enzyme affinity was observed for N-(4-nitrobenzyl)-chromone-2-carboxamide 4c (KD = 34 µM), 6-nitro substituted N-benzyl-chromone-2-carboxamide 9g (KD = 40 µM) and 6‑nitro-substituted N-(4-nitrobenzyl)-chromone-2-carboxamide 9j (KD = 31 µM), which could not be attributed to the fluorescence quenching potential of the nitro group. The assay interference potential of chromones, due to a covalent binding on the enzyme sulfhydryl groups, was found to be negligible at the assay conditions. Moderate in vivo activity was detected for 6‑nitro-substituted N-benzyl-chromone-2-carboxamide 9g and its N-benzyl-N-methyl-, N‑furylmethyl-, N-cyclohexyl- and N-cyclohexylmethyl derivatives 9i, 9d, 9e, 9f, for which MIC values 20 - 40 µM were assessed. Cytotoxicity was increased in the N‑cyclohexylmethyl derivative only. None of the pyrimidine-based compounds showed activity in vivo. The affinity of the model structure, VS-8, surpassed with KD = 97 µM the assessed affinity of TLM (KD = 142 µM). Since for the model chromone compound GS-71 no reliable KasA binding data could be obtained, a newly synthesized chromone derivative 9i was docked into the KasA binding site, in order to derive correlation between the in silico and in vitro assessed affinity. For the 6‑nitro-derivative 9i a moderate in vivo activity on M. tuberculosis was obtained. The in silico predicted pKi values for TLM and 9i were higher than the corresponding in vitro results, maintaining though a similar tendency, i.e., the both affinity values for compound 9i (pKi predicted = 6.64, pKD experimental = 4.02) surpassed those obtained for TLM (pKi predicted = 5.27, pKD experimental = 3.84). Nevertheless, the experimental pKD values are considered preliminary results. The binding assay method has been improved in order to acquire more accurate data. Owing to the method development, limited enzyme batches and solubility issues, only selected compounds could be evaluated. The best hits, together with the compounds active on the whole cells of M. tuberculosis, will be submitted to the kinetic enzyme assay, in order to confirm the TLM-like binding mechanism. Regarding the in vivo testing results, no correlations could be drawn between the predicted membrane permeability values and the experimental data, as for the most active compounds 9e and 9f, a very low permeability was anticipated (0.4 and 0.7 \%, respectively). Further biological tests would be required to investigate the action- or transport mode.}, subject = {Tuberkelbakterium}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Merget2015, author = {Merget, Benjamin}, title = {Computational methods for assessing drug-target residence times in bacterial enoyl-ACP reductases and predicting small-molecule permeability for the \(Mycobacterium\) \(tuberculosis\) cell wall}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-127386}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2015}, abstract = {\textbf{Molecular Determinants of Drug-Target Residence Times of Bacterial Enoyl-ACP Reductases.} Whereas optimization processes of early drug discovery campaigns are often affinity-driven, the drug-target residence time \$t_R\$ should also be considered due to an often strong correlation with \textit{in vivo} efficacy of compounds. However, rational optimization of \$t_R\$ is not straightforward and generally hampered by the lack of structural information about the transition states of ligand association and dissociation. The enoyl-ACP reductase FabI of the fatty acid synthesis (FAS) type II is an important drug-target in antibiotic research. InhA is the FabI enzyme of \textit{Mycobacterium tuberculosis}, which is known to be inhibited by various compound classes. Slow-onset inhibition of InhA is assumed to be associated with the ordering of the most flexible protein region, the substrate binding loop (SBL). Diphenylethers are one class of InhA inhibitors that can promote such SBL ordering, resulting in long drug-target residence times. Although these inhibitors are energetically and kinetically well characterized, it is still unclear how the structural features of a ligand affect \$t_R\$. Using classical molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, recurring conformational families of InhA protein-ligand complexes were detected and structural determinants of drug-target residence time of diphenyl\-ethers with different kinetic profiles were described. This information was used to deduce guidelines for efficacy improvement of InhA inhibitors, including 5'-substitution on the diphenylether B-ring. The validity of this suggestion was then analyzed by means of MD simulations. Moreover, Steered MD (SMD) simulations were employed to analyze ligand dissociation of diphenylethers from the FabI enzyme of \textit{Staphylococcus aureus}. This approach resulted in a very accurate and quantitative linear regression model of the experimental \$ln(t_R)\$ of these inhibitors as a function of the calculated maximum free energy change of induced ligand extraction. This model can be used to predict the residence times of new potential inhibitors from crystal structures or valid docking poses. Since correct structural characterization of the intermediate enzyme-inhibitor state (EI) and the final state (EI*) of two-step slow-onset inhibition is crucial for rational residence time optimization, the current view of the EI and EI* states of InhA was revisited by means of crystal structure analysis, MD and SMD simulations. Overall, the analyses affirmed that the EI* state is a conformation resembling the 2X23 crystal structure (with slow-onset inhibitor \textbf{PT70}), whereas a twist of residues Ile202 and Val203 with a further opened helix \$\alpha 6\$ corresponds to the EI state. Furthermore, MD simulations emphasized the influence of close contacts to symmetry mates in the SBL region on SBL stability, underlined by the observation that an MD simulation of \textbf{PT155} chain A with chain B' of a symmetry mate in close proximity of the SBL region showed significantly more stable loops, than a simulation of the tetrameric assembly. Closing Part I, SMD simulations were employed which allow the delimitation of slow-onset InhA inhibitors from rapid reversible ligands. \textbf{Prediction of \textit{Mycobacterium tuberculosis} Cell Wall Permeability.} The cell wall of \textit{M. tuberculosis} hampers antimycobacterial drug design due to its unique composition, providing intrinsic antibiotic resistance against lipophilic and hydrophilic compounds. To assess the druggability space of this pathogen, a large-scale data mining endeavor was conducted, based on multivariate statistical analysis of differences in the physico-chemical composition of a normally distributed drug-like chemical space and a database of antimycobacterial--and thus very likely permeable--compounds. The approach resulted in the logistic regression model MycPermCheck, which is able to predict the permeability probability of small organic molecules based on their physico-chemical properties. Evaluation of MycPermCheck suggests a high predictive power. The model was implemented as a freely accessible online service and as a local stand-alone command-line version. Methodologies and findings from both parts of this thesis were combined to conduct a virtual screening for antimycobacterial substances. MycPermCheck was employed to screen the chemical permeability space of \textit{M. tuberculosis} from the entire ZINC12 drug-like database. After subsequent filtering steps regarding ADMET properties, InhA was chosen as an exemplary target. Docking to InhA led to a principal hit compound, which was further optimized. The quality of the interaction of selected derivatives with InhA was subsequently evaluated using MD and SMD simulations in terms of protein and ligand stability, as well as maximum free energy change of induced ligand egress. The results of the presented computational experiments suggest that compounds with an indole-3-acethydrazide scaffold might constitute a novel class of InhA inhibitors, worthwhile of further investigation.}, subject = {Computational chemistry}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Aminake2012, author = {Aminake, Makoah Nigel}, title = {Towards malaria combination therapy: Characterization of hybrid molecules for HIV/malaria combination therapy and of thiostrepton as a proteasome-targeting antibiotic with a dual mode of action}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-71841}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2012}, abstract = {Malaria and HIV are among the most important global health problems of our time and together are responsible for approximately 3 million deaths annually. These two diseases overlap in many regions of the world including sub-Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia and South America, leading to a higher risk of co-infection. In this study, we generated and characterized hybrid molecules to target P. falciparum and HIV simultaneously for a potential HIV/malaria combination therapy. Hybrid molecules were synthesized by covalent fusion between azidothymidine (AZT) and dihydroartemisinin (DHA), tetraoxane or chloroquine (CQ); and a small library was generated and tested for antiviral and antimalarial activity. Our data suggest that dihyate is the most potent molecule in vitro, with antiplasmodial activity comparable to that of DHA (IC50 = 26 nM, SI > 3000), a moderate activity against HIV (IC50 = 2.9 µM; SI > 35) and safe to HeLa cells at concentrations used in the assay (CC50 > 100 µM). Pharmacokinetic studies further revealed that dihyate is metabolically unstable and is cleaved following an O-dealkylation once in contact with cytochrome P450 enzymes. The later further explains the uneffectiveness of dihyate against the CQ-sensitive P. berghei N strain in mice when administered by oral route at 20 mg/kg. Here, we report on a first approach to develop antimalarial/anti-HIV hybrid molecules and future optimization efforts will aim at producing second generation hybrid molecules to improve activity against HIV as well as compound bioavailability. With the emergence of resistant parasites against all the counterpart drugs of artemisinin derivatives used in artemisinin based combination therapies (ACTs), the introduction of antibiotics in the treatment of malaria has renewed interest on the identification of antibiotics with potent antimalarial properties. In this study we also investigated the antiplasmodial potential of thiostrepton and derivatives, synthesized using combinations of tail truncation, oxidation, and addition of lipophilic thiols to the terminal dehydroamino acid. We showed that derivatives SS231 and SS234 exhibit a better antiplasmodial activity (IC50 = 1 µM SI > 59 and SI > 77 respectively) than thiostrepton (IC50 = 8.95 µM, SI = 1.7). The antiplasmodial activity of these derivatives was observed at concentrations which are not hemolytic and non-toxic to human cell lines. Thiostrepton and derivatives appeared to exhibit transmission blocking properties when administered at their IC50 or IC90 concentrations and our data also showed that they attenuate proteasome activity of Plasmodium, which resulted in an accumulation of ubiquitinated proteins after incubation with their IC80 concentrations. Our results indicate that the parasite's proteasome could be an attractive target for therapeutic intervention. In this regard, thiostrepton derivatives are promising candidates by dually acting on two independent targets, the proteasome and the apicoplast, with the capacity to eliminate both intraerythrocytic asexual and transmission stages of the parasite. To further support our findings, we evaluated the activity of a new class of antimalarial and proteasome inhibitors namely peptidyl sulfonyl fluorides on gametocyte maturation and analogues AJ34 and AJ38 were able to completely suppress gametocytogenesis at IC50 concentrations (0.23 µM and 0.17 µM respectively) suggesting a strong transmission blocking potential. The proteasome, a major proteolytic complex, responsible for the degradation and re-cycling of non-functional proteins has been studied only indirectly in P. falciparum. In addition, an apparent proteasome-like protein with similarity to bacterial ClpQ/hslV threonine-peptidases was predicted in the parasite. Antibodies were generated against the proteasome subunits alpha type 5 (α5-SU), beta type 5 (β5-SU) and pfhslV in mice and we showed that the proteasome is expressed in both sexual and asexual blood stages of P. falciparum, where they localize in the nucleus and in the cytoplasm. However, expression of PfhslV was only observed in trophozoites and shizonts. The trafficking of the studied proteasome subunits was further investigated by generating parasites expressing GFP tagged proteins. The expression of α5-SU-GFP in transgenic parasite appeared to localize abundantly in the cytoplasm of all blood stages, and no additional information was obtained from this parasite line. In conclusion, our data highlight two new tools towards combination therapy. Hybrid molecules represent promising tools for the cure of co-infected individuals, while very potent antibiotics with a wide scope of activities could be useful in ACTs by eliminating resistant parasites and limiting transmission of both, resistances and disease.}, subject = {Malaria}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Hirschbeck2012, author = {Hirschbeck, Maria Wenefriede}, title = {Structure-based drug design on the enoyl-ACP reductases of Yersinia pestis and Burkholderia pseudomallei}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-70869}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2012}, abstract = {Spreading drug resistances among Gram-negative pathogens and the paucity of new agents on the antibacterial drug market against these tenacious bacteria create a pressing need for the development of new antibiotics. The bacterial fatty acid biosynthesis pathway FAS-II, especially the enoyl-ACP reductase catalyzing the last step of the elongation cycle, is an established drug target against tuberculosis but has not been extensively exploited for drug design against other bacterial pathogens. In this thesis the enoyl-ACP reductases of the Gram-negative biothreat organisms Burkholderia pseudomallei and Yersinia pestis were targeted in a structure-based drug design approach. The structure of the most recently identified enoyl-ACP isoenzyme FabV was characterized by X-ray crystallography and could be determined in three different states. FabV from B. pseudomallei was obtained in the apo-form of the enzyme, whereas FabV from Y. pestis was characterized in a binary complex with the cofactor NADH as well as in a ternary complex with NADH and the triclosan-based 2-pyridone inhibitors PT172 and PT173. Analysis of the FabV structure revealed the typical fold of the short chain dehydrogenase/reductase superfamily with the NADH-binding Rossmann fold and a substrate-binding pocket with a conserved active site geometry compared to the related isoenzyme FabI. Additional structural elements of FabV are located around the active site. The monomeric form of the enzyme is thereby stabilized and the substrate-binding loop is kept in a closed, helical conformation. The ternary complexes of FabV exhibited a similar inhibitor-binding mode as observed for triclosan inhibition in FabI and point to a potential substrate-binding mechanism. B. pseudomallei possesses FabI as an additional enoyl-ACP reductase isoenzyme, which was structurally characterized in the apo form and in ternary complexes with NAD+ and the diphenyl ether inhibitors triclosan, PT02, PT12 or PT404 as well as the 4-pyridone inhibitor PT155. The structural data of the ternary enoyl-ACP reductases complexes of B. pseudomallei and Y. pestis hold the promise for the possibility to develop antibacterials targeting FabV or even both isoenzymes, FabI and FabV, based on the triclosan scaffold.}, subject = {Yersinia}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Sippel2010, author = {Sippel, Martin}, title = {Computational Structure-based Design Approaches: Targeting HIV-1 Integrase and the Macrophage Infectivity Potentiator of Legionella pneumophila}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-51247}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {Die vorliegende Arbeit thematisiert das computergest{\"u}tzte strukturbasierte Design auf dem Gebiet der HIV-1-Integrase und des Macrophage Infectivity Potentiator (MIP) von Legionella pneumophila. Die durchgef{\"u}hrten Studien geben wertvolle Aufschl{\"u}sse {\"u}ber den Wirk-mechanismus einer bekannten Integrase-Inhibitorenklasse and zeigt dar{\"u}ber hinaus einen neuartigen Ansatz zur Integrase-Inhibition auf. Im Falle des MIP-Enzyms konnten zwei niedermolekulare Inhibitoren ermittelt werden. Die Integrase-Studien ergaben wertvolle Informationen im Hinblick auf das Design neuer Inhibitoren. Docking-Experimente konnten die Hypothese weiter untermauern, nach der die Klasse der Diketos{\"a}ure-Inhibitoren nicht als freie Liganden, sondern als Metallion-Komplexe an das aktive Zentrum der Integrase binden. Die Ergebnisse dieser Studie helfen dabei, das Verst{\"a}ndnis {\"u}ber den Wirkmechanismus dieser wichtigen Klasse von Integrase-Inhibitoren weiter zu vertiefen. Um der Entwicklung von Integrase-Inhibitoren einen neuen Impuls zu geben, wurde eine neue Strategie zur Inhibition dargelegt: Anstatt an das aktive Zentrum soll eine neue Inhibitor-Klasse an das Dimerisierungs-Interface eines Integrase-Monomers binden, die katalytisch notwendige Dimerisierung verhindern und somit die enzymatische Aktivit{\"a}t st{\"o}ren. Das Hauptproblem hierbei bestand in den fehlenden Strukturdaten des freien Monomers. Hierzu wurden Molekulardynamik-Simulationen durchgef{\"u}hrt, um n{\"a}here strukturelle Informationen zu erhalten. Momentaufnahmen unterschiedlicher Konformationen dienten als Input-Strukturen f{\"u}r eine Docking-Studie mit dem peptidischen Inhibitor YFLLKL, um dessen Bindemodus aufzukl{\"a}ren. Hierbei zeigte sich, dass dieser Ligand an eine Interface-Konformation bindet, die durch eine Y-f{\"o}rmige Bindestelle charakterisiert ist. Im n{\"a}chsten Schritt sollte diese Protein-Konformation mit kleinen, nicht-peptidischen Molek{\"u}len adressiert werden. Die erste Strategie bestand darin, ein Pharmakophor-Modell zu erstellen, das zur Suche nach Molek{\"u}len mit einer guten Komplementarit{\"a}t zur Y-f{\"o}rmigen Bindetasche geeignet ist. Das folgende virtuelle Screening ergab zehn Verbindungen, die eine gute Komplementarit{\"a}t und g{\"u}nstige hydrophobe Wechselwirkungen aufwiesen. Leider zeigte keine der Verbindungen eine reproduzierbare Aktivit{\"a}t im Integrase-Assay. Hierbei verbleiben jedoch gewisse Zweifel, da in dem Assay die Zugabe von BSA vorgeschrieben war, das m{\"o}glicherweise die hydrophoben Inhibitor-Kandidaten gebunden hat. Die erw{\"a}hnte erste Strategie wurde {\"u}berdacht: In einem zweiten Ansatz galt die Hauptaufmerksamkeit der Abs{\"a}ttigung von wasserstoffbr{\"u}ckenbildenden Resten. Diese waren zuvor von den eher hydrophoben Verbindungen nicht optimal abges{\"a}ttigt worden. Zwei Pharmakophor-Modelle wurden erstellt und in einem virtuellen Screening eingesetzt: Docking-Studien der Hits zeigten jedoch, dass nach wie vor viele wasserstoffbr{\"u}ckenbildende Reste des Proteins nicht vom Liganden abges{\"a}ttigt wurden. Nach abschließender eingehender Betrachtung der Bindemoden der verbliebenen Molek{\"u}le aus dem virtuellen Screening konnten nur acht f{\"u}r weitere Testungen ausgew{\"a}hlt werden (Ergebnisse der experimentellen Testung durch Kooperationspartner stehen noch aus). Diese geringe „Ausbeute" an geeigneten Verbindungen f{\"u}r das Integrase-Dimerisierungsinterface zeigt, wie schwer dieses Target zu adressieren ist: Das Interface weist eine schnell wechselnde Abfolge von basischen, sauren und hydrophoben Resten auf. Im Gegensatz zu anderen Protein-Protein-Interfaces zeigt das Integrase-Interface keine „aufger{\"a}umte" Bindetasche mit klar voneinander getrennten hydrophoben und hydrophilen Bereichen. F{\"u}r das zweite Enzym, MIP, konnten mit Hilfe des strukturbasierten Designs zwei niedermolekulare Inhibitoren gefunden werden. Beide Verbindungen f{\"u}hrten zu einer deutlichen Abnahme der katalytischen Aktivit{\"a}t. Soweit bekannt, sind bisher keinerlei niedermolekulare MIP-Inhibitoren ver{\"o}ffentlicht. Der Vergleich von MIP mit der humanen PPIase FKBP12 zeigte eine gr{\"o}ßtenteils {\"a}hnliche Tasche, die jedoch einen entscheidenden Unterschied aufweist, n{\"a}mlich in der Orientierung des Restes Tyr109. Die detaillierte Betrachtung der Strukturdaten beider Enzyme konnte schließlich eine Erkl{\"a}rung liefern, warum ein ketoacyl-substituiertes Pipecolinderivat nicht an MIP bindet, ein sulfonsubstituiertes Pipecolinderivat hingegen das Enzym inhibiert. Die Erkenntnisse {\"u}ber das Inhibitoren-Design f{\"u}r Legionella-MIP k{\"o}nnen auch auf andere Organismen (z.B. Trypanosomen) {\"u}bertragen werden, bei denen ebenfalls (homologes) MIP ein Pathogenit{\"a}tsfaktor ist.}, subject = {Legionella pneumophila}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Luckner2009, author = {Luckner, Sylvia}, title = {Towards the development of high affinity InhA and KasA inhibitors with activity against drug-resistant strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-43621}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2009}, abstract = {Mycobacterium tuberculosis is the causative agent of tuberculosis and responsible for more than eight million new infections and about two million deaths each year. Novel chemotherapeutics are urgently needed to treat the emerging threat of multi drug resistant and extensively drug resistant strains. Cell wall biosynthesis is a widely used target for chemotherapeutic intervention in bacterial infections. In mycobacteria, the cell wall is comprised of mycolic acids, very long chain fatty acids that provide protection and allow the bacteria to persist in the human macrophage. The type II fatty acid biosynthesis pathway in Mycobacterium tuberculosis synthesizes fatty acids with a length of up to 56 carbon atoms that are the precursors of the critical mycobacterial cell wall components mycolic acids. KasA, the mycobacterial ß-ketoacyl synthase and InhA, the mycobacterial enoyl reductase, are essential enzymes in the fatty acid biosynthesis pathway and validated drug targets. In this work, KasA was expressed in Mycobacterium smegmatis, purified and co-crystallized in complex with the natural thiolactone antibiotic thiolactomycin (TLM). High-resolution crystal structures of KasA and the C171Q KasA variant, which mimics the acyl enzyme intermediate of the enzyme, were solved in absence and presence of bound TLM. The crystal structures reveal how the inhibitor is coordinated by the enzyme and thus specifically pinpoint towards possible modifications to increase the affinity of the compound and develop potent new drugs against tuberculosis. Comparisons between the TLM bound crystal structures explain the preferential binding of TLM to the acylated form of KasA. Furthermore, long polyethylene glycol molecules are bound to KasA that mimic a fatty acid substrate of approximately 40 carbon atoms length. These structures thus provide the first insights into the molecular mechanism of substrate recognition and reveal how a wax-like substance can be accommodated in a cytosolic environment. InhA was purified and co-crystallized in complex with the slow, tight binding inhibitor 2-(o-tolyloxy)-5-hexylphenol (PT70). Two crystal structures of the ternary InhA-NAD+-PT70 were solved and reveal how the inhibitor is bound to the substrate binding pocket. Both structures display an ordered substrate binding loop and corroborate the hypothesis that slow onset inhibition is coupled to loop ordering. Upon loop ordering, the active site entrance is more restricted and the inhibitor is kept inside more tightly. These studies provide additional information on the mechanistic imperatives for slow onset inhibition of enoyl ACP reductases.}, subject = {Tuberkelbakterium}, language = {en} }