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Testing the Substrate-Envelope Hypothesis with Designed Pairs of Compounds

[Image: see text] Acquired resistance to therapeutic agents is a significant barrier to the development of clinically effective treatments for diseases in which evolution occurs on clinical time scales, frequently arising from target mutations. We previously reported a general strategy to design eff...

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Autores principales: Shen, Yang, Altman, Michael D., Ali, Akbar, Nalam, Madhavi N. L., Cao, Hong, Rana, Tariq M., Schiffer, Celia A., Tidor, Bruce
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2013
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3833293/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23952265
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/cb400468c
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author Shen, Yang
Altman, Michael D.
Ali, Akbar
Nalam, Madhavi N. L.
Cao, Hong
Rana, Tariq M.
Schiffer, Celia A.
Tidor, Bruce
author_facet Shen, Yang
Altman, Michael D.
Ali, Akbar
Nalam, Madhavi N. L.
Cao, Hong
Rana, Tariq M.
Schiffer, Celia A.
Tidor, Bruce
author_sort Shen, Yang
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Acquired resistance to therapeutic agents is a significant barrier to the development of clinically effective treatments for diseases in which evolution occurs on clinical time scales, frequently arising from target mutations. We previously reported a general strategy to design effective inhibitors for rapidly mutating enzyme targets, which we demonstrated for HIV-1 protease inhibition [Altman et al. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2008, 130, 6099–6113]. Specifically, we developed a computational inverse design procedure with the added constraint that designed inhibitors bind entirely inside the substrate envelope, a consensus volume occupied by natural substrates. The rationale for the substrate-envelope constraint is that it prevents designed inhibitors from making interactions beyond those required by substrates and thus limits the availability of mutations tolerated by substrates but not by designed inhibitors. The strategy resulted in subnanomolar inhibitors that bind robustly across a clinically derived panel of drug-resistant variants. To further test the substrate-envelope hypothesis, here we have designed, synthesized, and assayed derivatives of our original compounds that are larger and extend outside the substrate envelope. Our designs resulted in pairs of compounds that are very similar to one another, but one respects and one violates the substrate envelope. The envelope-respecting inhibitor demonstrates robust binding across a panel of drug-resistant protease variants, whereas the envelope-violating one binds tightly to wild type but loses affinity to at least one variant. This study provides strong support for the substrate-envelope hypothesis as a design strategy for inhibitors that reduce susceptibility to resistance mutations.
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spelling pubmed-38332932013-11-19 Testing the Substrate-Envelope Hypothesis with Designed Pairs of Compounds Shen, Yang Altman, Michael D. Ali, Akbar Nalam, Madhavi N. L. Cao, Hong Rana, Tariq M. Schiffer, Celia A. Tidor, Bruce ACS Chem Biol [Image: see text] Acquired resistance to therapeutic agents is a significant barrier to the development of clinically effective treatments for diseases in which evolution occurs on clinical time scales, frequently arising from target mutations. We previously reported a general strategy to design effective inhibitors for rapidly mutating enzyme targets, which we demonstrated for HIV-1 protease inhibition [Altman et al. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2008, 130, 6099–6113]. Specifically, we developed a computational inverse design procedure with the added constraint that designed inhibitors bind entirely inside the substrate envelope, a consensus volume occupied by natural substrates. The rationale for the substrate-envelope constraint is that it prevents designed inhibitors from making interactions beyond those required by substrates and thus limits the availability of mutations tolerated by substrates but not by designed inhibitors. The strategy resulted in subnanomolar inhibitors that bind robustly across a clinically derived panel of drug-resistant variants. To further test the substrate-envelope hypothesis, here we have designed, synthesized, and assayed derivatives of our original compounds that are larger and extend outside the substrate envelope. Our designs resulted in pairs of compounds that are very similar to one another, but one respects and one violates the substrate envelope. The envelope-respecting inhibitor demonstrates robust binding across a panel of drug-resistant protease variants, whereas the envelope-violating one binds tightly to wild type but loses affinity to at least one variant. This study provides strong support for the substrate-envelope hypothesis as a design strategy for inhibitors that reduce susceptibility to resistance mutations. American Chemical Society 2013-08-16 2013-11-15 /pmc/articles/PMC3833293/ /pubmed/23952265 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/cb400468c Text en Copyright © 2013 American Chemical Society Terms of Use (http://pubs.acs.org/page/policy/authorchoice_termsofuse.html)
spellingShingle Shen, Yang
Altman, Michael D.
Ali, Akbar
Nalam, Madhavi N. L.
Cao, Hong
Rana, Tariq M.
Schiffer, Celia A.
Tidor, Bruce
Testing the Substrate-Envelope Hypothesis with Designed Pairs of Compounds
title Testing the Substrate-Envelope Hypothesis with Designed Pairs of Compounds
title_full Testing the Substrate-Envelope Hypothesis with Designed Pairs of Compounds
title_fullStr Testing the Substrate-Envelope Hypothesis with Designed Pairs of Compounds
title_full_unstemmed Testing the Substrate-Envelope Hypothesis with Designed Pairs of Compounds
title_short Testing the Substrate-Envelope Hypothesis with Designed Pairs of Compounds
title_sort testing the substrate-envelope hypothesis with designed pairs of compounds
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3833293/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23952265
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/cb400468c
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