3 research outputs found
Discovery of a Selective Covalent Inhibitor of Lysophospholipase-like 1 (LYPLAL1) as a Tool to Evaluate the Role of this Serine Hydrolase in Metabolism
Lysophospholipase-like
1 (LYPLAL1) is an uncharacterized metabolic
serine hydrolase. Human genome-wide association studies link variants
of the gene encoding this enzyme to fat distribution, waist-to-hip
ratio, and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease. We describe the discovery
of potent and selective covalent small-molecule inhibitors of LYPLAL1
and their use to investigate its role in hepatic metabolism. In hepatocytes,
selective inhibition of LYPLAL1 increased glucose production supporting
the inference that LYPLAL1 is a significant actor in hepatic metabolism.
The results provide an example of how a selective chemical tool can
contribute to evaluating a hypothetical target for therapeutic intervention,
even in the absence of complete biochemical characterization
Chemical and Computational Methods for the Characterization of Covalent Reactive Groups for the Prospective Design of Irreversible Inhibitors
Interest in drugs that covalently
modify their target is driven
by the desire for enhanced efficacy that can result from the silencing
of enzymatic activity until protein resynthesis can occur, along with
the potential for increased selectivity by targeting uniquely positioned
nucleophilic residues in the protein. However, covalent approaches
carry additional risk for toxicities or hypersensitivity reactions
that can result from covalent modification of unintended targets.
Here we describe methods for measuring the reactivity of covalent
reactive groups (CRGs) with a biologically relevant nucleophile, glutathione
(GSH), along with kinetic data for a broad array of electrophiles.
We also describe a computational method for predicting electrophilic
reactivity, which taken together can be applied to the prospective
design of thiol-reactive covalent inhibitors