3 research outputs found
Heterobivalent Inhibitors of Acetyl-CoA Carboxylase: Drug Target Residence Time and Time-Dependent Antibacterial Activity
The relationship between drug–target residence
time and
the post-antibiotic effect (PAE) provides insights into target vulnerability.
To probe the vulnerability of bacterial acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC),
a series of heterobivalent inhibitors were synthesized based on pyridopyrimidine 1 and moiramide B (3) which bind to the biotin
carboxylase and carboxyltransferase ACC active sites, respectively.
The heterobivalent compound 17, which has a linker of
50 Ã…, was a tight binding inhibitor of Escherichia
coli ACC (Kiapp 0.2 nM) and could be displaced from ACC by a combination of both 1 and 3 but not just by 1. In agreement
with the prolonged occupancy of ACC resulting from forced proximity
binding, the heterobivalent inhibitors produced a PAE in E. coli of 1–4 h in contrast to 1 and 3 in combination or alone, indicating that ACC
is a vulnerable target and highlighting the utility of kinetic, time-dependent
effects in the drug mechanism of action
Heterobivalent Inhibitors of Acetyl-CoA Carboxylase: Drug Target Residence Time and Time-Dependent Antibacterial Activity
The relationship between drug–target residence
time and
the post-antibiotic effect (PAE) provides insights into target vulnerability.
To probe the vulnerability of bacterial acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC),
a series of heterobivalent inhibitors were synthesized based on pyridopyrimidine 1 and moiramide B (3) which bind to the biotin
carboxylase and carboxyltransferase ACC active sites, respectively.
The heterobivalent compound 17, which has a linker of
50 Ã…, was a tight binding inhibitor of Escherichia
coli ACC (Kiapp 0.2 nM) and could be displaced from ACC by a combination of both 1 and 3 but not just by 1. In agreement
with the prolonged occupancy of ACC resulting from forced proximity
binding, the heterobivalent inhibitors produced a PAE in E. coli of 1–4 h in contrast to 1 and 3 in combination or alone, indicating that ACC
is a vulnerable target and highlighting the utility of kinetic, time-dependent
effects in the drug mechanism of action
Elucidating the Signal Transduction Mechanism of the Blue-Light-Regulated Photoreceptor YtvA: From Photoactivation to Downstream Regulation
The blue-light photoreceptor
YtvA from Bacillus
subtilis has an N-terminal flavin mononucleotide (FMN)-binding
light-oxygen-voltage (LOV) domain that is fused to a C-terminal sulfate
transporter and anti-σ factor antagonist (STAS) output domain.
To interrogate the signal transduction pathway that leads to photoactivation,
the STAS domain was replaced with a histidine kinase, so that photoexcitation
of the flavin could be directly correlated with biological activity.
N94, a conserved Asn that is hydrogen bonded to the FMN C2O
group, was replaced with Ala, Asp, and Ser residues to explore the
role of this residue in triggering the structural dynamics that activate
the output domain. Femtosecond to millisecond time-resolved multiple
probe spectroscopy coupled with a fluorescence polarization assay
revealed that the loss of the hydrogen bond between N94 and the C2O
group decoupled changes in the protein structure from photoexcitation.
In addition, alterations in N94 also decreased the stability of the
Cys-FMN adduct formed in the light-activated state by up to a factor
of ∼25. Collectively, these studies shed light on the role
of the hydrogen bonding network in the LOV β-scaffold in signal
transduction