Title: Enzyme Inhibition and Inactivation
1Enzyme Inhibition and Inactivation
- Enzyme Inhibitor
- compound that slows or blocks enzyme catalysis
- 33 of the 97 drugs approved worldwide
1998-2000 are enzyme inhibitors - Why inhibit an enzyme?
- Enzyme substrate beneficial (essential), but
depleted - low levels of GABA lead to seizurestherefore
inhibit GABA aminotransferase to prevent
degradation of GABA - Enzyme product harmful
- excess uric acid leads to goutinhibition of
xanthine oxidase prevents conversion of xanthine
to uric acid
2Chemotherapy
- The use of drugs to combat foreign organisms or
aberrant cells. - Enzyme inhibition is a promising approach for the
rational discovery of new leads or drugs. - Ideal enzyme inhibitors should be highly
(totally) specific for target enzyme. - For infectious diseases, enzyme inhibitors should
target enzymes unique to the pathogen, or at
least not essential to the host.
3Drug Resistance
- When a formerly effective drug dose is no longer
effective. - Resistance can be natural or acquired, and arises
by natural selectionreplication of a resistant
strain after drug has killed susceptible strains. - Mutations
- Gene transfer
- Gene amplification
4Mechanisms of Drug Resistance
- Altered drug uptake
- Overproduction of target enzyme
- Altered target enzyme (site of action) structure
- Production of drug-destroying enzyme
- Deletion of prodrug activating enzyme
- Overproduction of target enzyme stubstrate
- New pathway for product formation
- Efflux pumps
5Altered target enzyme
- Minimize by designing a drug has very similar
structure to natural substrate
6Altered site of action vancomycin
7Altered site of action vancomycin
8Antibiotics and Resistance
- Bacteria usually classified by the Gram stain
test - Gram-positive
- Thick cell wall (25 nm) up to 20 layers of
peptidoglycan - Gram-negative
- Thin cell wall (2-3 nm) outer lipid bilayer
attached to peptidoglycan via peptide links
across periplasmic space. - Imprudent and indiscriminant use of antibiotics
over the years has led to increasingly resistant
bacteria several strains of bacteria are now
resistant even to the antibiotics of last resort
(e.g. vancomycin) - Current research focus is on Gram-positive
bacteria
9New Antibiotics
- Linezolid (Zyvox) Pharmacia
- Approved 4/2000
- First member of oxazolidinone class of
antibiotics - Blocks protein synthesis by peventing interaction
of 30S ribosome, mRNA, and formyl methionine
10New Antibiotics
- Gemifloxicin (Factive) SmithKline Beecham
- NDA filed 2000
- Second-generation fluoroquinolone class of
antibiotics - Inhibits topoisomerase II
11New Antibacterial Targets
- Sortase
- Enzyme that attaches surface proteins in
Gram-positive bacteria - Inhibition of sortase prevents surface attachment
of proteins, and bacteria cannot stick to other
cells - Deformylase
- Metalloenzyme that cleaves formyl group from
N-terminus of bacterial proteinsnecessary for
functional proteins - Actinonin is naturally occurring formylase
inhibitor - Efflux pump inhibitors
12Drug Synergism
- Cases where therapeutic effect of two or more
drugs used in combination is greater than the sum
of the effects of the drugs administered
individually - Mechanisms of Synergism
- inhibition of drug-destroying enzyme
- sequential blocking
- inhibition of enzymes in different metabolic
pathways - efflux pump inhibitors
- multiple drugs for same target
13Reversible Enzyme Inhibitors
- Ki koff / kon therefore smaller Ki better
inhibitor - competitive inhibitor
- inhibitor binds at active site blocks substrate
binding - inhibitor may be metabolized
- easier to design
- non-competitive inhibitor
- binds at different (allosteric) site
- changes enzyme conformation to prevent binding or
turnover - difficult to design
14ACE Inhibitors
- Angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) converts
Angiotensin I to Angiotensin II - Angiotensin II
- Vasoconstrictor
- Stimulates release of aldosterone
- Inactivates Bradykinin
- Triple play that increases blood pressure
- Therefore an ACE inhibitor should lower blood
pressure - Leads peptides from pit viper venom
15Renin-angiotensin system
16ACE Inhibitor Development Issues
- ACE is membrane bound and heavily glycosylated,
making isolation and structural characterization
difficult - ACE is inhibited by EDTA, suggesting
metalloenzyme (it has a Zn2 cofactor) - ACE is similar to carboxypeptidase A, whose X-ray
structure had been determined - Knowledge of carboxypeptidase A applied to ACE
problem - Primary structure of ACE not determined until 1988
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18ACE Inhibitors
- Captopril 1st ACE inhibitor marketed
- Side effects included rash and loss of taste
- Enalipril is a prodrug
- Ester group is hydrolyzed in vivo to carboxylate
- Enaliprilat is a slow-tight binding inhibitor and
a transition state analog
19ACE Inhibitors
- Lisinopril is more slowly and less completely
absorbed than enalipril, but has longer action of
duration - Cilazapril is conformationally restricted
- Cilazapril design based on 3D map of ACE active
site from studies of the thiol inhibitors of ACE
20Antihypercholesterolemics
- Heart disease is leading cause of death in the
U.S. - One-half of all deaths attributable to
atherosclerosis the deposition of plaque on
artery walls - Plaque is mostly cholesterol
- One-half of total cholesterol is synthesized in
the liver - Synthesis is gt20 enzymatic steps from acetyl-CoA
- Rate-limiting step is conversion of HMG-CoA to
mevalonic acid, catalyzed by HMG-CoA reductase - Inhibition of HMG-CoA reductase will lower
cholesterol levels
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22Early HMG-CoA Reductase Inhibitors
- Isolated from fungal cultures
- affinity for compactin 7,140 times that of
natural substrate - affinity for lovastatin 16,700 times that of
natural substrate - binding motifs hydroxyglutaryl and large
hydrophobic groups
23HMG-CoA Reductase Inhibitors
- Simvastatin 2.5 times more potent than lovastatin
- Atorvastatin 1997 sales gt 1 billion 2000 sales
5 billion
24Irreversible Enzyme Inhibitors
- Drug molecule (or a portion thereof) becomes
irreversibly (covalently) bound to enzyme - Affinity labeling agent
- Reactive compound similar to natural enzyme
substrate - Reacts with nucleophile in active site
acylation, alkylation - Enzyme selectivity
- Binding specificity
25b-lactam Antibiotics
- Inactivate peptidoglycan transpeptidase, a
bacterial enzyme critical for cell wall synthesis - Bacteria often resistant to b-lactam drugs due to
production or overexpression of b-lactamase to
destroy the drug
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28b-lactamase Inhibitors
- Given in combination with b-lactam antibioticsan
example of drug synergism - Augmentin amoxicillin clavulanate
- Unasyn ampicillin sulbactam
29Pain and NSAIDs
- See Williams, M et al Emerging Molecular
Approaches to Pain Therapy J. Med. Chem. 1999,
42, 1481-1500. - Pain Categories
- Acute
- Chronic
- Cancer pain
- Arthropathic pain
- AIDS pain
- Visceral
- Neuropathic
- NSAID Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drug
30Traditional NSAIDs
31The Role of Cyclooxygenase
- Cyclooxygenase (COX) catalyzes the conversion of
arachidonic acid to prostaglandin H2 (PGH2) - Other enzymes convert PGH2 to a variety of
prostaglandins
32Prostaglandin biosynthesis
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34COX-1 vs. COX-2 Inhibition
- COX-1 is constitutive and necessary for
- Protecting GI tract mucosa, proper kidney
function, platelet aggregation - COX-2 (discovered in 1990) is inducible under
inflammatory conditions and is responsible for - Fever, pain, swelling
- COX-1 and COX-2 are 60 homologous
- Most traditional NSAIDs inhibit both COX-1 and
COX-2 and thus have serious side effects - GI bleeding
- Inhibited platelet aggregation
- Renal toxicity
- Liver toxicity
35Tricyclic COX-2 Inhibitors
36Methansulfonanilide COX-2 Inhibitors