Title: Domainselective ACE inhibitors caught in the act
1Domain-selective ACE inhibitors caught in the act
2Hypertension
- It is estimated that 1 in 4 adult South Africans
suffers from hypertension a leading cause of
cardiac disease - Hypertension and cardiac disease are major causes
of premature death worldwide - 1950s Angiotensin discovered
- peptide in bloodstream of hypertensive patients
that induced increase in blood pressure in test
animals - Two forms inactive AngI (10aa) and active AngII
(8aa) - AngI converted to AngII by angiotensin-converting
enzyme (ACE) - Today, ACE inhibitors are widely used to treat
cardiac disease
3Blood pressure regulation RAS and KKS
- F.A. Sayed-Tabatabaei, et al Circ. Res.
2006981123-1133
4ACE introduction
- zinc metalloprotease
- C-terminal dipeptidase
- expressed in many mammalian tissues, especially
kidneys and lung endothelia - Membrane bound shed into bloodstream
- Glycoprotein
- Two homologous domains (55)
- 2 active sites
- different specificities
- different Cl-dependence
- Testis isoform ? C domain
5ACE inhibitors
Figure from Acharya et al, 2003
6Novel domain-selective inhibitors
Nchinda et al, 2006
7Crystallisable ACE construct
Gordon et al, 2003
- Structure essentially identical to minimally
glycosylated wild-type tACE (lacking res 1-36)
8tACE-G13 glycosylation mutant
9Aims of my work
- Obtain co-crystals of tACE-G13 with novel
domain-specific inhibitors - Collect good diffraction data
- Solve the phasing using molecular replacement
- Build structure models of tACE-G13 bound to
inhibitors
10Co-crystallisation
- 4?l hanging drop at 16C
- protein stock purified tACE-G13 in 5mM HEPES
- inhibitor in excess (1.5 1000-fold)
- 500m?l Als oil over reservoir
- Streak-seeding
11Data collection
BM14 ESRF Grenoble, France
Data processing HKL2000 Refinement CNS Model
building O
12inhibitor N-ACE-84 density in the active site
2.1A resolution
13Precautions against model bias
- Use composite omit maps generated with simulated
annealing rather than simple 2Fobs-Fcalc maps - Refine selected areas while fixing others
- Reset and refine B-factors cautiously
- Use same Rfree reflection set that was used to
solve the MR model.
14Domain-selectivity in the S2 pocket
N-ACE-84 C-selective Ki N 196 ?M Ki C 0.8 ?M
4.23A
4.59A
N-ACE-86 not selective Ki N 23.7 ?M Ki C
84.3 ?M
15Reaction mechanism
proton shuttle
16(No Transcript)
17Conclusions
- Gem-diol tetrahedral reaction intermediate
visualised - Binding of P2 backbone to beta 4 suggests
strand-strand interaction with longer peptide - Domain-selectivity is due to the P2 Trp residue
- bulkier, charged or polar residues hinder binding
of N-84 to the N-domain - smaller or more hydrophobic residues in the
C-domain mean enhanced binding of N-84 - N-86 is non-selective because its smaller P2
group doesnt fill the S2 pocket - There is more space in the S2 pocket (GOL
molecule) so inhibitors could be enlarged for
greater selectivity
18Ongoing work
- Crystal structures of another two domain-specific
inhibitors derived from lisinopril - Epitope mapping of an antibody to the N-domain of
ACE that has an inhibitory effect at high
concentrations - Other crystallisation trials ACE2, sACE
19ACE functions
- Classical ACE causes vasoconstriction
- ACE inhibitors are widely used to treat cardiac
disease - Some more recent discoveries
- role in cell growth and differentiation (Ac-SDKP
substrate) - ACE degrades amyloid beta peptide in vitro
- Cleavage of luteinising hormone-releasing hormone
- signalling by ACE
- inhibitor-induced phosphorylation of cytoplasmic
tail by CK2 and JNK accumulation in nucleus - Possible cleavage release of GPI-anchored
proteins
20ACE Structure