RESUMO
Using a function-oriented synthesis strategy, we designed, synthesized, and evaluated the simplest bryostatin 1 analogues reported to date, in which bryostatin's A- and B-rings are replaced by a glutarate linker. These analogues, one without and one with a C26-methyl group, exhibit remarkably different protein kinase C (PKC) isoform affinities. The former exhibited bryostatin-like binding to several PKC isoforms with Ki's < 5 nM, while the latter exhibited PKC affinities that were up to â¼180-fold less potent. The analogue with bryostatin-like PKC affinities also exhibited bryostatin-like PKC translocation kinetics in vitro, indicating rapid cell permeation and engagement of its PKC target. This study exemplifies the power of function-oriented synthesis in reducing structural complexity by activity-informed design, thus enhancing synthetic accessibility, while still maintaining function (biological activity), collectively providing new leads for addressing the growing list of therapeutic indications exhibited by PKC modulators.
Assuntos
Macrolídeos , Proteína Quinase C , Briostatinas/farmacologia , LactonasRESUMO
The ability of HIV to establish a long-lived latent infection within resting CD4+ T cells leads to persistence and episodic resupply of the virus in patients treated with antiretroviral therapy (ART), thereby preventing eradication of the disease. Protein kinase C (PKC) modulators such as bryostatin 1 can activate these latently infected cells, potentially leading to their elimination by virus-mediated cytopathic effects, the host's immune response and/or therapeutic strategies targeting cells actively expressing virus. While research in this area has focused heavily on naturally-occurring PKC modulators, their study has been hampered by their limited and variable availability, and equally significantly by sub-optimal activity and in vivo tolerability. Here we show that a designed, synthetically-accessible analog of bryostatin 1 is better-tolerated in vivo when compared with the naturally-occurring product and potently induces HIV expression from latency in humanized BLT mice, a proven and important model for studying HIV persistence and pathogenesis in vivo. Importantly, this induction of virus expression causes some of the newly HIV-expressing cells to die. Thus, designed, synthetically-accessible, tunable, and efficacious bryostatin analogs can mediate both a "kick" and "kill" response in latently-infected cells and exhibit improved tolerability, therefore showing unique promise as clinical adjuvants for HIV eradication.
Assuntos
Fármacos Anti-HIV/farmacologia , Briostatinas/farmacologia , Linfócitos T CD4-Positivos/virologia , HIV-1/efeitos dos fármacos , Latência Viral/efeitos dos fármacos , Briostatinas/química , Infecções por HIV/tratamento farmacológico , Infecções por HIV/imunologia , HIV-1/isolamento & purificação , Humanos , Ativação Viral/efeitos dos fármacosRESUMO
Bryostatin 1 (henceforth bryostatin) is in clinical trials for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease and for HIV/AIDS eradication. It is also a preclinical lead for cancer immunotherapy and other therapeutic indications. Yet nothing is known about the conformation of bryostatin bound to its protein kinase C (PKC) target in a membrane microenvironment. As a result, efforts to design more efficacious, better tolerated, or more synthetically accessible ligands have been limited to structures that do not include PKC or membrane effects known to influence PKC-ligand binding. This problem extends more generally to many membrane-associated proteins in the human proteome. Here, we use rotational-echo double-resonance (REDOR) solid-state NMR to determine the conformations of PKC modulators bound to the PKCδ-C1b domain in the presence of phospholipid vesicles. The conformationally limited PKC modulator phorbol diacetate (PDAc) is used as an initial test substrate. While unanticipated partitioning of PDAc between an immobilized protein-bound state and a mobile state in the phospholipid assembly was observed, a single conformation in the bound state was identified. In striking contrast, a bryostatin analogue (bryolog) was found to exist exclusively in a protein-bound state, but adopts a distribution of conformations as defined by three independent distance measurements. The detection of multiple PKCδ-C1b-bound bryolog conformers in a functionally relevant phospholipid complex reveals the inherent dynamic nature of cellular systems that is not captured with single-conformation static structures. These results indicate that binding, selectivity, and function of PKC modulators, as well as the design of new modulators, are best addressed using a dynamic multistate model, an analysis potentially applicable to other membrane-associated proteins.
RESUMO
Bryostatin is in clinical trials for Alzheimer's disease, cancer, and HIV/AIDS eradication. It binds to protein kinase C competitively with diacylglycerol, the endogenous protein kinase C regulator, and plant-derived phorbol esters, but each ligand induces different activities. Determination of the structural origin for these differing activities by X-ray analysis has not succeeded due to difficulties in co-crystallizing protein kinase C with relevant ligands. More importantly, static, crystal-lattice bound complexes do not address the influence of the membrane on the structure and dynamics of membrane-associated proteins. To address this general problem, we performed long-timescale (400-500 µs aggregate) all-atom molecular dynamics simulations of protein kinase C-ligand-membrane complexes and observed that different protein kinase C activators differentially position the complex in the membrane due in part to their differing interactions with waters at the membrane inner leaf. These new findings enable new strategies for the design of simpler, more effective protein kinase C analogs and could also prove relevant to other peripheral protein complexes.Natural supplies of bryostatin, a compound in clinical trials for Alzheimer's disease, cancer, and HIV, are scarce. Here, the authors perform molecular dynamics simulations to understand how bryostatin interacts with membrane-bound protein kinase C, offering insights for the design of bryostatin analogs.
Assuntos
Briostatinas/química , Proteínas de Membrana/antagonistas & inibidores , Simulação de Dinâmica Molecular , Proteína Quinase C/antagonistas & inibidores , Inibidores de Proteínas Quinases/química , Água/química , Adjuvantes Imunológicos/química , Adjuvantes Imunológicos/farmacologia , Antineoplásicos/química , Antineoplásicos/farmacologia , Ligação Competitiva , Briostatinas/farmacologia , Membrana Celular/química , Membrana Celular/efeitos dos fármacos , Membrana Celular/enzimologia , Diglicerídeos/química , Diglicerídeos/metabolismo , Humanos , Ligantes , Proteínas de Membrana/química , Proteínas de Membrana/metabolismo , Ésteres de Forbol/química , Ésteres de Forbol/metabolismo , Ésteres de Forbol/farmacologia , Ligação Proteica , Proteína Quinase C/química , Proteína Quinase C/metabolismo , Inibidores de Proteínas Quinases/farmacologia , Termodinâmica , Água/metabolismoRESUMO
Bryostatin 1 is an exceedingly scarce marine-derived natural product that is in clinical development directed at HIV/AIDS eradication, cancer immunotherapy, and the treatment of Alzheimer's disease. Despite this unique portfolio of indications, its availability has been limited and variable, thus impeding research and clinical studies. Here, we report a total synthesis of bryostatin 1 that proceeds in 29 total steps (19 in the longest linear sequence, >80% average yield per step), collectively produces grams of material, and can be scaled to meet clinical needs (~20 grams per year). This practical solution to the bryostatin supply problem also opens broad, facile, and efficient access to derivatives and potentially superior analogs.