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Sterol methyltransferase a target for anti-amoeba therapy: towards transition state analog and suicide substrate drug design

Ergosterol biosynthesis pathways essential to pathogenic protozoa growth and absent from the human host offer new chokepoint targets. Here, we present characterization and cell-based interference of Acanthamoeba spp sterol 24-/28-methylases (SMTs) that catalyze the committed step in C(28)- and C(29)...

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Autores principales: Kidane, Medhanie E., Vanderloop, Boden H., Zhou, Wenxu, Thomas, Crista D., Ramos, Emilio, Singha, Ujjal, Chaudhuri, Minu, Nes, W. David
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5711494/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29042405
http://dx.doi.org/10.1194/jlr.M079418
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author Kidane, Medhanie E.
Vanderloop, Boden H.
Zhou, Wenxu
Thomas, Crista D.
Ramos, Emilio
Singha, Ujjal
Chaudhuri, Minu
Nes, W. David
author_facet Kidane, Medhanie E.
Vanderloop, Boden H.
Zhou, Wenxu
Thomas, Crista D.
Ramos, Emilio
Singha, Ujjal
Chaudhuri, Minu
Nes, W. David
author_sort Kidane, Medhanie E.
collection PubMed
description Ergosterol biosynthesis pathways essential to pathogenic protozoa growth and absent from the human host offer new chokepoint targets. Here, we present characterization and cell-based interference of Acanthamoeba spp sterol 24-/28-methylases (SMTs) that catalyze the committed step in C(28)- and C(29)-sterol synthesis. Intriguingly, our kinetic analyses suggest that 24-SMT prefers plant cycloartenol whereas 28-SMT prefers 24(28)-methylene lophenol in similar fashion to the substrate preferences of land plant SMT1 and SMT2. Transition state analog-24(R,S),25-epiminolanosterol (EL) and suicide substrate 26,27-dehydrolanosterol (DHL) differentially inhibited trophozoite growth with IC(50) values of 7 nM and 6 µM, respectively, and EL yielded 20-fold higher activity than reference drug voriconazole. Against either SMT assayed with native substrate, EL exhibited tight binding ∼K(i) 9 nM. Alternatively, DHL is methylated at C26 by 24-SMT that thereby, generates intermediates that complex and inactivate the enzyme, whereas DHL is not productively bound to 28-SMT. Steroidal inhibitors had no effect on human epithelial kidney cell growth or cholesterol biosynthesis at minimum amoebicidal concentrations. We hypothesize the selective inhibition of Acanthamoeba by steroidal inhibitors representing distinct chemotypes may be an efficient strategy for the development of promising compounds to combat amoeba diseases.
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spelling pubmed-57114942017-12-04 Sterol methyltransferase a target for anti-amoeba therapy: towards transition state analog and suicide substrate drug design Kidane, Medhanie E. Vanderloop, Boden H. Zhou, Wenxu Thomas, Crista D. Ramos, Emilio Singha, Ujjal Chaudhuri, Minu Nes, W. David J Lipid Res Research Articles Ergosterol biosynthesis pathways essential to pathogenic protozoa growth and absent from the human host offer new chokepoint targets. Here, we present characterization and cell-based interference of Acanthamoeba spp sterol 24-/28-methylases (SMTs) that catalyze the committed step in C(28)- and C(29)-sterol synthesis. Intriguingly, our kinetic analyses suggest that 24-SMT prefers plant cycloartenol whereas 28-SMT prefers 24(28)-methylene lophenol in similar fashion to the substrate preferences of land plant SMT1 and SMT2. Transition state analog-24(R,S),25-epiminolanosterol (EL) and suicide substrate 26,27-dehydrolanosterol (DHL) differentially inhibited trophozoite growth with IC(50) values of 7 nM and 6 µM, respectively, and EL yielded 20-fold higher activity than reference drug voriconazole. Against either SMT assayed with native substrate, EL exhibited tight binding ∼K(i) 9 nM. Alternatively, DHL is methylated at C26 by 24-SMT that thereby, generates intermediates that complex and inactivate the enzyme, whereas DHL is not productively bound to 28-SMT. Steroidal inhibitors had no effect on human epithelial kidney cell growth or cholesterol biosynthesis at minimum amoebicidal concentrations. We hypothesize the selective inhibition of Acanthamoeba by steroidal inhibitors representing distinct chemotypes may be an efficient strategy for the development of promising compounds to combat amoeba diseases. The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2017-12 2017-10-17 /pmc/articles/PMC5711494/ /pubmed/29042405 http://dx.doi.org/10.1194/jlr.M079418 Text en Copyright © 2017 by the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Author’s Choice—Final version free via Creative Commons CC-BY license.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Kidane, Medhanie E.
Vanderloop, Boden H.
Zhou, Wenxu
Thomas, Crista D.
Ramos, Emilio
Singha, Ujjal
Chaudhuri, Minu
Nes, W. David
Sterol methyltransferase a target for anti-amoeba therapy: towards transition state analog and suicide substrate drug design
title Sterol methyltransferase a target for anti-amoeba therapy: towards transition state analog and suicide substrate drug design
title_full Sterol methyltransferase a target for anti-amoeba therapy: towards transition state analog and suicide substrate drug design
title_fullStr Sterol methyltransferase a target for anti-amoeba therapy: towards transition state analog and suicide substrate drug design
title_full_unstemmed Sterol methyltransferase a target for anti-amoeba therapy: towards transition state analog and suicide substrate drug design
title_short Sterol methyltransferase a target for anti-amoeba therapy: towards transition state analog and suicide substrate drug design
title_sort sterol methyltransferase a target for anti-amoeba therapy: towards transition state analog and suicide substrate drug design
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5711494/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29042405
http://dx.doi.org/10.1194/jlr.M079418
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