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Drug-like molecules with anti-trypanothione synthetase activity identified by high throughput screening

Trypanothione synthetase (TryS) catalyses the synthesis of N(1),N(8)-bis(glutathionyl)spermidine (trypanothione), which is the main low molecular mass thiol supporting several redox functions in trypanosomatids. TryS attracts attention as molecular target for drug development against pathogens causi...

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Autores principales: Benítez, Diego, Franco, Jaime, Sardi, Florencia, Leyva, Alejandro, Durán, Rosario, Choi, Gahee, Yang, Gyongseon, Kim, Taehee, Kim, Namyoul, Heo, Jinyeong, Kim, Kideok, Lee, Honggun, Choi, Inhee, Radu, Constantin, Shum, David, No, Joo Hwan, Comini, Marcelo A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Taylor & Francis 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8942522/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35306933
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14756366.2022.2045590
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author Benítez, Diego
Franco, Jaime
Sardi, Florencia
Leyva, Alejandro
Durán, Rosario
Choi, Gahee
Yang, Gyongseon
Kim, Taehee
Kim, Namyoul
Heo, Jinyeong
Kim, Kideok
Lee, Honggun
Choi, Inhee
Radu, Constantin
Shum, David
No, Joo Hwan
Comini, Marcelo A.
author_facet Benítez, Diego
Franco, Jaime
Sardi, Florencia
Leyva, Alejandro
Durán, Rosario
Choi, Gahee
Yang, Gyongseon
Kim, Taehee
Kim, Namyoul
Heo, Jinyeong
Kim, Kideok
Lee, Honggun
Choi, Inhee
Radu, Constantin
Shum, David
No, Joo Hwan
Comini, Marcelo A.
author_sort Benítez, Diego
collection PubMed
description Trypanothione synthetase (TryS) catalyses the synthesis of N(1),N(8)-bis(glutathionyl)spermidine (trypanothione), which is the main low molecular mass thiol supporting several redox functions in trypanosomatids. TryS attracts attention as molecular target for drug development against pathogens causing severe and fatal diseases in mammals. A drug discovery campaign aimed to identify and characterise new inhibitors of TryS with promising biological activity was conducted. A large compound library (n = 51,624), most of them bearing drug-like properties, was primarily screened against TryS from Trypanosoma brucei (TbTryS). With a true-hit rate of 0.056%, several of the TbTryS hits (IC(50) from 1.2 to 36 µM) also targeted the homologue enzyme from Leishmania infantum and Trypanosoma cruzi (IC(50) values from 2.6 to 40 µM). Calmidazolium chloride and Ebselen stand out for their multi-species anti-TryS activity at low µM concentrations (IC(50) from 2.6 to 13.8 µM). The moieties carboxy piperidine amide and amide methyl thiazole phenyl were identified as novel TbTryS inhibitor scaffolds. Several of the TryS hits presented one-digit µM EC(50) against T. cruzi and L. donovani amastigotes but proved cytotoxic against the human osteosarcoma and macrophage host cells (selectivity index ≤ 3). In contrast, seven hits showed a significantly higher selectivity against T. b. brucei (selectivity index from 11 to 182). Non-invasive redox assays confirmed that Ebselen, a multi-TryS inhibitor, induces an intracellular oxidative milieu in bloodstream T. b. brucei. Kinetic and mass spectrometry analysis revealed that Ebselen is a slow-binding inhibitor that modifies irreversible a highly conserved cysteine residue from the TryS’s synthetase domain. The most potent TbTryS inhibitor (a singleton containing an adamantine moiety) exerted a non-covalent, non-competitive (with any of the substrates) inhibition of the enzyme. These data feed the drug discovery pipeline for trypanosomatids with novel and valuable information on chemical entities with drug potential.
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spelling pubmed-89425222022-03-24 Drug-like molecules with anti-trypanothione synthetase activity identified by high throughput screening Benítez, Diego Franco, Jaime Sardi, Florencia Leyva, Alejandro Durán, Rosario Choi, Gahee Yang, Gyongseon Kim, Taehee Kim, Namyoul Heo, Jinyeong Kim, Kideok Lee, Honggun Choi, Inhee Radu, Constantin Shum, David No, Joo Hwan Comini, Marcelo A. J Enzyme Inhib Med Chem Research Paper Trypanothione synthetase (TryS) catalyses the synthesis of N(1),N(8)-bis(glutathionyl)spermidine (trypanothione), which is the main low molecular mass thiol supporting several redox functions in trypanosomatids. TryS attracts attention as molecular target for drug development against pathogens causing severe and fatal diseases in mammals. A drug discovery campaign aimed to identify and characterise new inhibitors of TryS with promising biological activity was conducted. A large compound library (n = 51,624), most of them bearing drug-like properties, was primarily screened against TryS from Trypanosoma brucei (TbTryS). With a true-hit rate of 0.056%, several of the TbTryS hits (IC(50) from 1.2 to 36 µM) also targeted the homologue enzyme from Leishmania infantum and Trypanosoma cruzi (IC(50) values from 2.6 to 40 µM). Calmidazolium chloride and Ebselen stand out for their multi-species anti-TryS activity at low µM concentrations (IC(50) from 2.6 to 13.8 µM). The moieties carboxy piperidine amide and amide methyl thiazole phenyl were identified as novel TbTryS inhibitor scaffolds. Several of the TryS hits presented one-digit µM EC(50) against T. cruzi and L. donovani amastigotes but proved cytotoxic against the human osteosarcoma and macrophage host cells (selectivity index ≤ 3). In contrast, seven hits showed a significantly higher selectivity against T. b. brucei (selectivity index from 11 to 182). Non-invasive redox assays confirmed that Ebselen, a multi-TryS inhibitor, induces an intracellular oxidative milieu in bloodstream T. b. brucei. Kinetic and mass spectrometry analysis revealed that Ebselen is a slow-binding inhibitor that modifies irreversible a highly conserved cysteine residue from the TryS’s synthetase domain. The most potent TbTryS inhibitor (a singleton containing an adamantine moiety) exerted a non-covalent, non-competitive (with any of the substrates) inhibition of the enzyme. These data feed the drug discovery pipeline for trypanosomatids with novel and valuable information on chemical entities with drug potential. Taylor & Francis 2022-03-21 /pmc/articles/PMC8942522/ /pubmed/35306933 http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14756366.2022.2045590 Text en © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) ), which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Benítez, Diego
Franco, Jaime
Sardi, Florencia
Leyva, Alejandro
Durán, Rosario
Choi, Gahee
Yang, Gyongseon
Kim, Taehee
Kim, Namyoul
Heo, Jinyeong
Kim, Kideok
Lee, Honggun
Choi, Inhee
Radu, Constantin
Shum, David
No, Joo Hwan
Comini, Marcelo A.
Drug-like molecules with anti-trypanothione synthetase activity identified by high throughput screening
title Drug-like molecules with anti-trypanothione synthetase activity identified by high throughput screening
title_full Drug-like molecules with anti-trypanothione synthetase activity identified by high throughput screening
title_fullStr Drug-like molecules with anti-trypanothione synthetase activity identified by high throughput screening
title_full_unstemmed Drug-like molecules with anti-trypanothione synthetase activity identified by high throughput screening
title_short Drug-like molecules with anti-trypanothione synthetase activity identified by high throughput screening
title_sort drug-like molecules with anti-trypanothione synthetase activity identified by high throughput screening
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8942522/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35306933
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14756366.2022.2045590
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