Reducing the flexibility of type II dehydroquinase for inhibition: A fragment-based approach and molecular dynamics study

TitleReducing the flexibility of type II dehydroquinase for inhibition: A fragment-based approach and molecular dynamics study
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2017
AuthorsPeón A., Robles A., Blanco B., Convertino M., Thompson P., Hawkins A.R, Caflisch A., González-Bello C.
JournalChemMedChem
Volume12
Start Page1512
Issue18
Pagination1512-1524
Date Published2017 Sep 21
Type of ArticleResearch Article
Keywordsantibiotics, Catalytic Domain, Drug Discovery, fragment-based docking, molecular dynamics, shikimic acid pathway
Abstract

A multidisciplinary approach was used to identify and optimize a quinazolinedione-based ligand that would decrease the flexibility of the substrate-covering loop (catalytic loop) of the type II dehydroquinase from Helicobacter pylori. This enzyme, which is essential for the survival of this bacterium, is involved in the biosynthesis of aromatic amino acids. A computer-aided fragment-based protocol (ALTA) was first used to identify the aromatic fragments able to block the interface pocket that separates two neighboring enzyme subunits and is located at the active site entrance. Chemical modification of its non-aromatic moiety through an olefin cross-metathesis and Seebach's self-reproduction of chirality synthetic principle allowed the development of a quinazolinedione derivative that disables the catalytic loop plasticity, which is essential for the enzyme's catalytic cycle. Molecular dynamics simulations revealed that the ligand would force the catalytic loop into an inappropriate arrangement for catalysis by strong interactions with the catalytic tyrosine and by expelling the essential arginine out of the active site.

DOI10.1002/cmdc.201700396
pubindex

0222

Alternate JournalChemMedChem
PubMed ID28791799