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Identification of human host cell factors involved in \(Staphylococcus\) \(aureus\) 6850 infection
(2015)
Staphylococcus aureus is both a human commensal and a pathogen. 20%-30% of all individuals are permanently or occasionally carriers of S. aureus without any symptoms. In contrast to this, S. aureus can cause life-threatening diseases e.g. endocarditis, osteomyelitis or sepsis. Here, the increase in antibiotic resistances makes it more and more difficult to treat these infections and hence the number of fatalities rises constantly. Since the pharmaceutical industry has no fundamentally new antibiotics in their pipeline, it is essential to better understand the interplay between S. aureus and the human host cell in order to find new, innovative treatment options.
In this study, a RNA interference based whole genome pool screen was performed to identify human proteins, which play a role during S. aureus infections. Since 1,600 invasion and 2,271 cell death linked factors were enriched at least 2 fold, the big challenge was to filter out the important ones. Here, a STRING pathway analysis proved to be the best option. Subsequently, the identified hits were validated with the help of inhibitors and a second, individualised small interfering RNA-based screen.
In the course of this work two important steps were identified, that are critical for host cell death: the first is bacterial invasion, the second phagosomal escape. The second step is obligatory for intracellular bacterial replication and subsequent host cell death. Invasion in turn is determining for all following events. Accordingly, the effect of the identified factors towards these two crucial steps was determined. Under screening conditions, escape was indirectly measured via intracellular replication. Three inhibitors (JNKII, Methyl-beta-cyclodeytrin, 9-Phenantrol) could be identified for the invasion process. In addition, siRNAs targeted against 16 different genes (including CAPN2, CAPN4 and PIK3CG), could significantly reduce bacterial invasion. Seven siRNAs (FPR2, CAPN4, JUN, LYN, HRAS, AKT1, ITGAM) were able to inhibit intracellular replication significantly. Further studies showed that the IP3 receptor inhibitor 2-APB, the calpain inhibitor calpeptin and the proteasome inhibitor MG-132 are able to prevent phagosomal escape and as a consequence intracellular replication and host cell death.
In this context the role of calpains, calcium, the proteasome and the mitochondrial membrane potential was further investigated in cell culture. Here, an antagonistic behaviour of calpain 1 and 2 during bacterial invasion was observed. Intracellular calcium signalling plays a major role, since its inhibition protects host cells from death. Beside this, the loss of mitochondrial membrane potential is characteristic for S. aureus infection but not responsible for host cell death. The reduction of membrane potential can be significantly diminished by the inhibition of the mitochondrial Na+/Ca2+ exchanger.
All together, this work shows that human host cells massively contribute to different steps in S. aureus infection rather than being simply killed by bacterial pore-forming toxins. Various individual host cell factors were identified, which contribute either to invasion or to phagosomal escape and therefore to S. aureus induced cytotoxicity. Finally, several inhibitors of S. aureus infection were identified. One of them, 2-APB, was already tested in a sepsis mouse model and reduced bacterial load of kidneys.
Thus, this study shows valuable evidence for novel treatment options against S. aureus infections, based on the manipulation of host cell signalling cascades.
Design of novel IL-4 antagonists employing site-specific chemical and biosynthetic glycosylation
(2021)
The cytokines interleukin 4 (IL-4) and IL-13 are important mediators in the humoral immune response and play a crucial role in the pathogenesis of chronic inflammatory diseases, such as asthma, allergies, and atopic dermatitis. Hence, IL-4 and IL-13 are key targets for treatment of such atopic diseases.
For cell signalling IL-4 can use two transmembrane receptor assemblies, the type I receptor consisting of receptors IL-4R and γc, and type II receptor consisting of receptors IL-4R and IL-13R1. The type II receptor is also the functional receptor of IL-13, receptor sharing being the molecular basis for the partially overlapping effects of IL-4 and IL-13. Since both cytokines require the IL-4R receptor for signal transduction, this allows the dual inhibition of both IL-4 and IL-13 by specifically blocking the receptor IL-4R.
This study describes the design and synthesis of novel antagonistic variants of human IL-4. Chemical modification was used to target positions localized in IL-4 binding sites for γc and IL-13R1 but outside of the binding epitope for IL-4R. In contrast to existing studies, which used synthetic chemical compounds like polyethylene glycol for modification of IL-4, we employed glycan molecules as a natural alternative. Since glycosylation can improve important pharmacological parameters of protein therapeutics, such as immunogenicity and serum half-life, the introduced glycan molecules thus would not only confer a steric hindrance based inhibitory effect but simultaneously might improve the pharmacokinetic profile of the IL-4 antagonist.
For chemical conjugation of glycan molecules, IL-4 variants containing additional cysteine residues were produced employing prokaryotic, as well as eukaryotic expression systems. The thiol-groups of the engineered cysteines thereby allow highly specific modification. Different strategies were developed enabling site-directed coupling of amine- or thiol- functionalized monosaccharides to introduced cysteine residues in IL-4. A linker-based coupling procedure and an approach requiring phenylselenyl bromide activation of IL-4 thiol-groups were hampered by several drawbacks, limiting their feasibility. Surprisingly, a third strategy, which involved refolding of IL-4 cysteine variants in the presence of thiol- glycans, readily allowed synthesis of IL-4 glycoconjugates in form of mixed disulphides in milligram amount. This approach, therefore, has the potential for large-scale synthesis of IL-4 antagonists with highly defined glycosylation. Obtaining a homogenous glycoconjugate with exactly defined glycan pattern would allow using the attached glycan structures for fine-tuning of pharmacokinetic properties of the IL-4 antagonist, such as absorption and metabolic stability.
The IL-4 glycoconjugates generated in this work proved to be highly effective antagonists inhibiting IL-4 and/or IL-13 dependent responses in cell-based experiments and in in vitro binding studies. Glycoengineered IL-4 antagonists thus present valuable alternatives to IL-4 inhibitors used for treatment of atopic diseases such as the neutralizing anti-IL-4R antibody Dupilumab.
Theoretical Investigations on the Interactions of Small Compounds with their Molecular Environments
(2015)
In the first part of this work, a combination of theoretical methods for the rational design of covalent inhibitor is presented. Starting from the crystal structure of the covalent complex of a lead compound, quantum mechanical and QM/MM calculations were used to derive the exact geometry of the preceeding non-covalent enzyme inhibitor complex. The geometry of the latter mainly determines the reactivity of the inhibitor against its target enzyme concerning the formation of the covalent bond towards an active site residue. Therefore, this geometry was used as starting point for the optimization of the substitution pattern of the inhibitor such as to increase its binding affinity without loosing its ability to covalently bind to the target protein. The optimization of the chemical structure was supported by using docking procedures, which are best suited to estimate binding affinities that arise from the introduced changes. A screening of the novel substitution patterns resulted in a first generation of model compounds which were further tested for their reactivity against the target. Dynamic simulations on the novel compounds revealed that the orientation that compounds adopt within the active site are such that a covalent interaction with the enzyme is no longer possible. Hence, the chemical structure was further modified, including not only changes in the substituents but also within the core of the molecule. Docking experiments have been conducted to assure sufficiently high binding affinities and to obtain the most favored binding poses. Those have then again been used for dynamic simulations which resulted in structures, for which the bond formation process appeared feasible. A final series of QM/MM calculations considering various protonation states was computed to estimate the reaction energies for the covalent attachment of the inhibitor to the enzyme. The theoretical results indicate a reasonable high inhibition potency of the novel compounds.
The second part concentrates on the environmental influences on the electron density of an inhibitor molecule. Therefore, a vinylsulfone-based model compound was selected for which an experimental crystal structure for the pure compound as well as a theoretically determined enzyme-inhibitor complex have been available. To provide reference data for the larger systems, the conformational space of the isolated molecule was screened for favorable geometries which were later compared to those within the crystal and protein surrounding. The geometry of the crystal structure could readily be taken from the experimental data whereas calculations on the protein complex revealed four potential non-covalent complexes exhibiting different arrangements of the molecule within the active site of the protein as well as two possible protonation states of the catalytic dyad. Hence, all four protein complexes have been compared to the crystal structure of the molecule as well as against the more favorable geometries of the isolated molecule being determined within vacuum or aqueous surrounding. Whereas the molecule itself was found to adopt comparable geometries within all investigated environments, the interactions pattern between the crystal surrounding and the protein differed largely from each other. The favorable formation of dimers within the crystal has a strong stabilizing effect and explains the extraordinarily good quality of the crystal. Within the protein however, repulsive forces have been found between the protein and the inhibitor. The origin of the repulsion could be traced back to effect of on of the substituents to the vinyl scaffold. The difference in the chemical structure in comparison to a well known inhibitor might also explain the experimentally found loss of activity for the model compound in comparison to K11777.
Although the physiological roles of BChE are not yet determined to date, the importance of this enzyme is continuously increasing as it was found to be associated with several disorders like diabetes mellitus type 2, cardiovascular diseases, obesity and especially with Alzheimer’s disease (AD). In consequence, for investigations of BChE’s pathological role in these diseases and to find new medication strategies, the development of selective and potent inhibitors is necessary.
For this purpose, the current work progresses in five chapters on the exploration of the chemical, physical and biochemical properties of tetrahydroquinazoline based carbamates which were previously reported to be selective BChE inhibitors with potency in the low nanomolar range.
1) A Novel Way to Radiolabel Human Butyrylcholinesterase for PET through Irreversible Transfer of the Radiolabeled Moiety:
PET-radiotracers represent an innovative tool to determine the distribution and the expression of a biological target in vivo. BChE lacks to a large degree of such tracers with a few exceptions. In this work, methods were developed to incorporate the radioisotopes 11C and 18F into the carbamate moiety of an tetrahydroquinazoline based inhibitor. In contrast to reversibly acting PET-probes, the described radiotracers were proven by kinetic studies to transfer the radioisotope covalently onto the active site of BChE, thus labeling the enzyme directly and permanently.
2) Discovery of Highly Selective and Nanomolar Carbamate-Based Butyrylcholinesterase Inhibitors by Rational Investigation into Their Inhibition Mode:
To investigate the role of the tetrahydroquinazoline carrier scaffold on BChE inhibition, carbamate based inhibitors were synthesized. These compounds were successively used to perform kinetic investigations to determine their inhibition mode. Based on these data, a plausible binding model was postulated explaining the influence of the tetrahydroquinazoline carrier scaffold for binding at BChE’s active site just before carbamate transfer takes place. Additionally, these compounds feature neuroprotective properties and prevent oxidative stress induced cell death in their carbamate form as well as after the release of the tetrahydroquinazoline carrier scaffold.
3) Dual Addressing of Butyrylcholinesterase by Targeting the Catalytic Active Site (CAS) and the Peripheral Anionic Site (PAS):
Compounds which are dual-targeting the CAS and the PAS of BChE are the most potent and selective BChE inhibitors to date with inhibition values in the picomolar range. In this work, a strategy is described how to turn tetrahydroquinazoline based carbamates into dual binding BChE inhibitors. These inhibitors feature a carbamate moiety which is covalently transferred onto the CAS of BChE, and in addition provide a second pharmacophore connected via a linker to the carbamate moiety which is proposed to target the PAS. Preliminary results reveal a high tolerance of BChE towards different linker lengths without decrease in affinity.
4) Investigation into Selective Debenzylation and Ring Cleavage of Quinazoline based Heterocycles:
The tetrahydroquinazoline system is well investigated in terms of its synthesis and its selective oxidation. To explore the reactivity of this system, a tetracyclic tetrahydroquinazoline was exposed to common reduction agents. These experiments revealed a high sensitivity of the tetrahydroquinazoline core towards several reduction conditions
5) Experimental and Theoretical Investigation into the Stability of Cyclic Aminals:
Tetrahydroquinazolines are known to degrade in acidic media through hydrolysis of their aminal system; but literature is lacking of a systematic investigation into this behavior. Therefore, different tetrahydroquinazolines were synthesized and exposed to phosphate buffered systems with defined pH-values. A clear increase of the hydrolysis rate of the aminal system was determined in dependency of an increasing acidic media. Computational studies predicted and experimental studies proved that hydrolysis takes place in an acidic environment while the condensation of this system is preferred in neutral or basic aqueous media.
The WHO-designated neglected-disease pathogen Chlamydia trachomatis (CT) is a gram-negative bacterium responsible for the most frequently diagnosed sexually transmitted infection worldwide. CT infections can lead to infertility, blindness and reactive arthritis, among others. CT acts as an infectious agent by its ability to evade the immune response of its host, which includes the impairment of the NF-κB mediated inflammatory response and the Mcl1 pro-apoptotic pathway through its deubiquitylating, deneddylating and transacetylating enzyme ChlaDUB1 (Cdu1). Expression of Cdu1 is also connected to host cell Golgi apparatus fragmentation, a key process in CT infections.
Cdu1 may this be an attractive drug target for the treatment of CT infections. However, a lead molecule for the development of novel potent inhibitors has been unknown so far. Sequence alignments and phylogenetic searches allocate Cdu1 in the CE clan of cysteine proteases. The adenovirus protease (adenain) also belongs to this clan and shares a high degree of structural similarity with Cdu1. Taking advantage of topological similarities between the active sites of Cdu1 and adenain, a target-hopping approach on a focused set of adenain inhibitors, developed at Novartis, has been pursued. The thereby identified cyano-pyrimidines represent the first active-site directed covalent reversible inhibitors for Cdu1. High-resolution crystal structures of Cdu1 in complex with the covalently bound cyano-pyrimidines as well as with its substrate ubiquitin have been elucidated. The structural data of this thesis, combined with enzymatic assays and covalent docking studies, provide valuable insights into Cdu1s activity, substrate recognition, active site pocket flexibility and potential hotspots for ligand interaction. Structure-informed drug design permitted the optimization of this cyano-pyrimidine based scaffold towards HJR108, the first molecule of its kind specifically designed to disrupt the function of Cdu1. The structures of potentially more potent and selective Cdu1 inhibitors are herein proposed.
This thesis provides important insights towards our understanding of the structural basis of ubiquitin recognition by Cdu1, and the basis to design highly specific Cdu1 covalent inhibitors.
The SARS virus is the etiological agent of the severe acute respiratory syndrome, a deadly disease that caused more than 700 causalities in 2003. One of its viral proteins, the SARS coronavirus main protease, is considered as a potential drug target and represents an important model system for other coronaviruses. Despite extensive knowledge about this enzyme, it still lacks an effective anti-viral drug. Furthermore, it possesses some unusual features related to its active-site region. This work gives atomistic insights into the SARS coronavirus main protease and tries to reveal mechanistic aspects that control catalysis and inhibition. Thereby, it applies state-of-the-art computational methods to develop models for this enzyme that are capable to reproduce and interpreting the experimental observations. The theoretical investigations are elaborated over four main fields that assess the accuracy of the used methods, and employ them to understand the function of the active-site region, the inhibition mechanism, and the ligand binding. The testing of different quantum chemical methods reveals that their performance depends partly on the employed model. This can be a gas phase description, a continuum solvent model, or a hybrid QM/MM approach. The latter represents the preferred method for the atomistic modeling of biochemical reactions. A benchmarking uncovers some serious problems for semi-empirical methods when applied in proton transfer reactions. To understand substrate cleavage and inhibition of SARS coronavirus main protease, proton transfer reactions between the Cys/His catalytic dyad are calculated. Results show that the switching between neutral and zwitterionic state plays a central role for both mechanisms. It is demonstrated that this electrostatic trigger is remarkably influenced by substrate binding. Whereas the occupation of the active-site by the substrate leads to a fostered zwitterion formation, the inhibitor binding does not mimic this effect for the employed example. The underlying reason is related to the coverage of the active-site by the ligand, which gives new implications for rational improvements of inhibitors. More detailed insights into reversible and irreversible inhibition are derived from in silico screenings for the class of Michael acceptors that follow a conjugated addition reaction. From the comparison of several substitution patterns it becomes obvious that different inhibitor warheads follow different mechanisms. Nevertheless, the initial formation of a zwitterionic catalytic dyad is found as a common precondition for all inhibition reactions. Finally, non-covalent inhibitor binding is investigated for the case of SARS coranavirus main protease in complex with the inhibitor TS174. A novel workflow is developed that includes an interplay between theory and experiment in terms of molecular dynamic simulation, tabu search, and X-ray structure refinement. The results show that inhibitor binding is possible for multiple poses and stereoisomers of TS174.
Aurora B is a mitotic kinase that is essential for cell division. Because it is mutated or overexpressed in a range of cancer types, it has been suggested as a novel therapeutic target. Currently chemical inhibitors against Aurora B are in various phases of clinical trials for treatment of solid tumors and leukemia. Information regarding the molecular requirements for the reported phenotypes of Aurora B inhibition such as cell cycle arrest, activation of the tumor suppressor p53 and its target p21 are not well understood.
In this study, I investigated the requirements for p21 induction after Aurora B inhibition. I found that p38 is phosphorylated and activated when Aurora B is inhibited. Experiments with chemical inhibitors against p38 indicate that p38 is required for p21 induction and cell cycle arrest in response to Aurora B inhibition. p53 induction after impairment of Aurora B function and the recruitment of p53 to its binding site in the p21 gene promoter occur independently of p38 signaling. Instead, I found that p38 is required for the enrichment of the elongating RNA Polymerase II in the coding region of the p21 gene. Furthermore, p38 is required for formation of the full-length p21 mRNA transcript. These data indicate that p38 promotes the transcriptional elongation of p21 gene in response to Aurora B inhibition. In further experiments I could show that the p21 causes cell cycle arrest due to a decrease in E2F-dependent transcription by promoting the dephosphorylation of the retinoblastoma protein.
Using synchronized cells I could show that the induction of p21 in response to Aurora B inhibition requires transition through an aberrant mitosis and does not occur in cells that are arrested in interphase. Interestingly, p38, p53 and p21 are already induced by partial inhibition of Aurora B, which results in aneuploidy but not in cytokinesis failure and in tetraploidy. This supports the notion that activation of p38-p53-p21 signaling correlates with aneuploidy but not with tetraploidy or binucleation. Partial inhibition of Aurora B also leads to increased generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), which are required for the activation of p38, p21 and cell cycle arrest. Based on these observations I propose the following model: Inhibition of Aurora B leads to chromosome missegregation resulting in aneuploidy. This results in increased generation of ROS (reactive oxygen species) possibly through proteotoxic stress caused by an imbalance of protein synthesis in aneuploid cells. ROS triggers the activation of p38, which then stimulates the transcriptional elongation of p21 resulting in cell cycle arrest.
Aneuploidy, proteotoxic stress and oxidative stress are hallmarks of cancer cells. Based on my results reported in this study, I suggest that the combination of Aurora B inhibitors with drugs that specifically target aneuploid cells might be a novel strategy for cancer therapy, as this is a lethal combination for proliferation of cancer cells.
The haloacid dehalogenase (HAD) family of phosphatases is an ancient, ubiquitous group of enzymes, and their emerging role in human health and disease make them attractive targets for detailed analyses.
This thesis comprises the biochemical and structural characterization of chronophin, an HAD-type
phosphatase, which has been shown to act on Ser3-phosphorylated cofiln-1, a key regulator of actin dynamics, and on the Ser/Thr-phosphorylated steroid receptor co-activator 3 (SRC-3). Besides being a specific phosphoprotein phosphatase, chronophin also acts on the small molecule pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP, vitamin B6), implying that chronophin serves as a regulator of a variety important physiological pathways. The analysis of chronophin was performed on different levels, ranging from intrinsic regulatory mechanisms, such as the allosteric regulation via dimerization or the characterization of specificity determinants, to modes of extrinsic modulation, including the association with putative interacting proteins or the generation of chronophin-specific inhibitors.
The association of the previously identified putative chronophin interactors calcium- and integrinbinding protein 1 (CIB1) and calmodulin was investigated using recombinantly expressed and purified proteins. These studies revealed that the interaction of chronophin with CIB1 or calmodulin is mutually exclusive and regulated by calcium. Neither CIB1 nor calmodulin had an effect on the in vitro chronophin phosphatase activity towards PLP or phospho-cofilin-1, but might regulate other functions of this important phosphatase.
The role of chronophin dimerization was studied by generating a constitutively monomeric variant,
which showed reduced PLP hydrolyzing activity. X-ray crystallographic studies revealed that dimerization is essential for the positioning of the substrate specificity loop in chronophin, unraveling a previously unknown mechanism of allosteric regulation through a homophilic interaction. This mechanism potentially applies to other enzymes of the C2a subfamily of HAD-type phosphatases, as all structurally characterized members show a conserved mode of dimerization.
The general determinants of substrate specificity in the C2a subfamily of HAD phosphatases were
investigated by performing domain swapping experiments with chronophin and its paralog AUM and
subsequent biochemical analyses of the hybrid proteins. The X-ray crystallographic structure
determination of the chronophin catalytic domain equipped with the AUM capping domain revealed the first partial structure of AUM. This structural information was then used in subsequent studies that analyzed the divergent substrate specificities of AUM and chronophin in an evolutionary context.
Finally, a set of four chronophin inhibitors were generated based on the structure of PLP and
characterized biochemically, showing moderate inhibitory effects with IC50-values in the micromolar range. These compounds nevertheless constitute valuable tools for future in vitro experiments, such as studies concerning the structure-function relationship of chronophin as a PLP phosphatase. In addition, the crystal structure of one inhibitor bound to chronophin could be solved. These results provide the basis for the further development of competitive chronophin inhibitors with increased specificity and potency.
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.
Mechanistic Insights into the Inhibition of Cathepsin B and Rhodesain with Low-Molecular Inhibitors
(2019)
Cysteine proteases play a crucial role in medical chemistry concerning various fields reaching from more common ailments like cancer and hepatitis to less noted tropical diseases, namely the so-called African Sleeping Sickness (Human Arfican Trypanosomiasis). Detailed knowledge about the catalytic function of these systems is highly desirable for drug research in the respective areas. In this work, the inhibition mechanisms of the two cysteine proteases cathepsin B and rhodesain with respectively one low-molecular inhibitor class were investigated in detail, using computational methods. In order to sufficiently describe macromolecular systems, molecular mechanics based methods (MM) and quantum mechanical based method (QM), as well as hybrid methods (QM/MM) combining those two approaches, were applied.
For Cathespin B, carbamate-based molecules were investigated as potential inhibitors for the cysteine protease. The results indicate, that water-bridged proton-transfer reactions play a crucial role for the inhibition. The energetically most favoured pathway (according to the calculations) includes an elimination reaction following an E1cB mechanism with a subsequent carbamylation of the active site amino acid cysteine.
Nitroalkene derivatives were investigated as inhibitors for rhodesain. The investigation of structurally similar inhibitors showed, that even small steric differences can crucially influence the inhibition potential of the components. Furthermore, the impact of a fluorination of the nitroalkene inhibitors on the inhibition mechanism was investigated. According to experimental data measured from the working group of professor Schirmeister in Mainz, fluorinated nitroalkenes show – in contrast to the unfluorinated compounds – a time dependent inhibition efficiency. The calculations of the systems indicate, that the fluorination impacts the non-covalent interactions of the inhibitors with the enzymatic environment of the enzyme which results in a different inhibition behaviour.
The FDA approval of targeted therapy with BRAFV600E inhibitors like vemurafenib and dabrafenib in 2011 has been the first major breakthrough in the treatment of metastatic melanoma since almost three decades. Despite increased progression free survival and elevated overall survival rates, complete responses are scarce due to resistance development approximately six months after the initial drug treatment. It was previously shown in our group that melanoma cells under vemurafenib pressure in vitro and in vivo exhibit features of drug-induced senescence. It is known that some cell types, which undergo this cell cycle arrest, develop a so-called senescence associated secretome and it has been reported that melanoma cell lines also upregulate the expression of different factors after senescence induction. This work describes the effect of the vemurafenib-induced secretome on cells. Conditioned supernatants of vemurafenib-treated cells increased the viability of naive fibroblast and melanoma cell lines. RNA analysis of donor melanoma cells revealed elevated transcriptional levels of FGF1, MMP2 and CCL2 in the majority of tested cell lines under vemurafenib pressure, and I could confirm the secretion of functional proteins. Similar observations were also done after MEK inhibition as well as in a combined BRAF and MEK inhibitor treatment situation. Interestingly, the transcription of other FGF ligands (FGF7, FGF17) was also elevated after MEK/ERK1/2 inhibition. As FGF receptors are therapeutically relevant, I focused on the analysis of FGFR-dependent processes in response to BRAF inhibition. Recombinant FGF1 increased the survival rate of melanoma cells under vemurafenib pressure, while inhibition of the FGFR pathway diminished the viability of melanoma cells in combination with vemurafenib and blocked the stimulatory effect of vemurafenib conditioned medium. The BRAF inhibitor induced secretome is regulated by active PI3K/AKT signaling, and the joint inhibition of mTor and BRAFV600E led to decreased senescence induction and to a diminished induction of the secretome-associated genes. In parallel, combined inhibition of MEK and PI3K also drastically decreased mRNA levels of the relevant secretome components back to basal levels.
In summary, I could demonstrate that BRAF inhibitor treated melanoma cell lines acquire a specific PI3K/AKT dependent secretome, which is characterized by FGF1, CCL2 and MMP2. This secretome is able to stimulate other cells such as naive melanoma cells and fibroblasts and contributes to a better survival under drug pressure. These data are therapeutically highly relevant, as they imply the usage of novel drug combinations, especially specific FGFR inhibitors, with BRAF inhibitors in the clinic.
Echinococcus multilocularis is the causative agent of alveolar echinococcosis (AE), a life-threatening disease with limited options of chemotherapeutic treatment. Anti-AE chemotherapy is currently based on a single class of drugs, the benzimidazoles. Although acting parasitocidic in vitro, benzimidazoles are merely parasitostatic during in vivo treatment of AE and cause severe site effects. In the case of operable lesions, the resection of parasite tissue needs to be supported by a prolonged chemotherapy. Thus, the current treatment options for AE are inadequate and require alternatives. In the present work, the flatworm signaling pathways were analyzed to establish potential targets for novel therapeutic approaches. I focused on factors that are involved in development and proliferation of E. multilocularis using molecular, biochemical and cell biological methods. Among the analysed factors were three MAP kinases of the parasite, EmMPK1, an Erk-1/2 orthologue, EmMPK2, a p38 orthologue and EmMPK3, an Erk7/8 orthologue. Further, I identified and characterized EmMKK2, a MEK1/2 orthologue of the parasite, which, together with the known kinases EmRaf and EmMPK1, forms an Erk1/2-like MAPK module. Moreover, I was able to demonstrate several influences of host growth factors such as EGF (epidermal growth factor) and insulin on worm signaling mechanisms and larval growth, including the phosphorylation of Elp, an ezrin-radixin-moesin like protein, EmMPK1, EmMPK3 and increased mitotic activity of Echinococcus cells. In addition, several substances were examined for their efficacy against the parasite including (i) general tyrosine kinase inhibitors (PP2, leflunamide), (ii) compounds designed to inhibit the activity of receptor tyrosine kinases, (iii) anti-neoplastic agents (miltefosine, perifosine), (iv) serine/threonine kinase inhibitors that have been designed to block the Erk1/2 MAPK cascade and (v) inhibitors of p38 MAPKs. In these studies, EmMPK2 proved to be a promising drug target for the following reasons. Amino acid sequence analysis disclosed several differences to human p38 MAPKs, which is likely to be the reason for the observed enhanced basal activity of recombinant EmMPK2 towards myelin basic protein in comparison to human recombinant p38 MAPK-α. In addition, the prominent auto-phosphorylation activity of the recombinant EmMPK2 protein together with the absence of an interaction with the Echinococcus MKKs suggest a different mechanism of regulation compared to the human enzyme. EmMPK2 activity could be effectively inhibited in vitro and in cultivated metacestode vesicles by treatment with SB202190 and ML3403, two ATP-competitive pyridinyl imidazole inhibitors of p38 MAPKs, in a concentration-dependent manner. Moreover, both compounds, in particular ML3403, caused parasite vesicle inactivation at concentrations which did not affect cultured mammalian cells. Likewise, during the cultivation of Echinococcus primary cells, the presence of ML3403 prevented the generation of new vesicles. Targeting members of the EGF signaling pathway, particulary of the Erk1/2-like MAPK cascade, with Raf and MEK inhibitors prevented the phosphorylation of EmMPK1 in metacestodes cultivated in vitro. However, although parasite growth was prevented under these conditions, the structural integrity of the metacestode vesicles maintained during long-term cultivation in the presence of the MAPK cascade inhibitors. Similar results were obtained when studying the effects of other drugs mentioned above. Taken together, several targets could be identified that reacted with high sensitivity to the presence of inhibitory substances, but did not cause the parasite’s death with one exception, the pyridinyl imidazoles. Based on the presented data, I suggest pyridinyl imidazoles as a novel class of anti-Echinococcus drugs and imply EmMPK2 as survival signal mediating factor, the inhibition of which could be used for the treatment of AE.
Mammalian phoshoglycolate phosphatase (PGP, also known as AUM) belongs to the ubiquitous HAD superfamily of phosphatases. As several other members of HAD phosphatases, the Mg2+-dependent dephosphorylation is conducted via a nucleophilic attack from a conserved aspartate residue in the catalytic cleft. The protein structure of PGP could not yet be solved entirely. Only a hybrid consisting of the PGP cap and the PDXP core (pyridoxal phosphatase, closest enzyme paralog) was crystallizable so far. PGP is able to efficiently dephosphorylate 2-phosphoglycolate, 2-phospho-L-lactate, 4-phospho-D-erythronate, and glycerol-3-phosphate in vitro which makes them likely physiological substrates. The first three substrates can be derived from metabolic side reactions (during glycolysis) and inhibit key enzymes in glycolysis and pentose phosphate pathway, the latter is situated at the intersection between glycolysis and lipogenesis. 2-phosphoglycolate can also be released in the context of repair of oxidative DNA damage. The activity of purified PGP can be reversibly inhibited by oxidation - physiologically likely in association with epidermal growth factor (EGF) signal transduction. In fact, an association between persistently lacking PGP activity (via downregulation) and the presence of hyperphosphorylated proteins after EGF stimulation has been identified. Reversible oxidation and transient inactivation of PGP may be particularly important for short-term and feedback regulatory mechanisms (as part of the EGF signaling). Furthermore, cellular proliferation in PGP downregulated cells is constantly reduced. Whole-body PGP inactivation in mice is embryonically lethal. Despite the many well-known features and functions, the knowledge about PGP is still incomplete.
In the present work the influence of reactive oxygen species (ROS) on PGP activity in cells und a possible connection between oxidative stress and the proliferation deficit of PGP downregulated cells was investigated. For the experiments, a spermatogonial cell line was used (due to the high PGP expression in testis). PGP activity can be reversibly inhibited in cellular lysates by H2O2 (as a ROS representative). Reversible oxidation could thus indeed be physiologically important. More oxidative DNA damage (by bleomycin) showed no PGP-dependent effects here. EGF stimulation (as an inducer of transient and well-controlled ROS production), low concentrations of menadione (as an oxidant) and N-acetylcysteine (as an antioxidant) were able to approximate the proliferation rate in PGP downregulated cells to that of control cells. The redox regulation of PGP could thus have an influence on cellular proliferation as a feedback mechanism - a mechanism that could not take place in PGP downregulated cells. However, the connections are probably even more complex and cannot be elucidated by a sole examination of the proliferation rate. The present results can thus only be regarded as preliminary experiments.
For a better understanding of the features and functions of PGP, this work then focused on specific regulation of enzyme activity by pharmacologically applicable small molecules. Four potent inhibitors had previously been identified in a screening campaign. In this work, three of these four inhibiting compounds could be further characterized in experiments with highly purified, recombinant murine and human PGP. Compounds #2 and #9 showed competitive inhibition properties with a markedly rising KM value with little or no change in vmax. The results were consistent for all tested protein variants: the murine and the human PGP as well as a PGP/PDXP hybrid protein. Compound #1 was the most potent and interesting PGP-inhibitory molecule: less change in KM and a constant decrease in vmax as well as a lower impact on the PGP/PDXP hybrid hint at a mixed mode of inhibition as a combination of competitive and non-competitive inhibition. The characterization of the potential inhibitors can serve as a basis for further structural analysis and studies on the complex physiological role of PGP.