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1.
Nat Chem Biol ; 11(9): 691-6, 2015 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26214255

ABSTRACT

The complex plant flavonol glycoside montbretin A is a potent (Ki = 8 nM) and specific inhibitor of human pancreatic α-amylase with potential as a therapeutic for diabetes and obesity. Controlled degradation studies on montbretin A, coupled with inhibition analyses, identified an essential high-affinity core structure comprising the myricetin and caffeic acid moieties linked via a disaccharide. X-ray structural analyses of the montbretin A-human α-amylase complex confirmed the importance of this core structure and revealed a novel mode of glycosidase inhibition wherein internal π-stacking interactions between the myricetin and caffeic acid organize their ring hydroxyls for optimal hydrogen bonding to the α-amylase catalytic residues D197 and E233. This novel inhibitory motif can be reproduced in a greatly simplified analog, offering potential for new strategies for glycosidase inhibition and therapeutic development.


Subject(s)
Drug Design , Enzyme Inhibitors/chemistry , Flavonols/chemistry , Glycosides/chemistry , alpha-Amylases/chemistry , Binding Sites , Caffeic Acids/chemistry , Carbohydrate Sequence , Enzyme Inhibitors/chemical synthesis , Flavones/chemistry , Flavonoids/chemistry , Gene Expression , Humans , Hydrogen Bonding , Hydrolysis , Ligands , Models, Molecular , Molecular Sequence Data , Pichia/genetics , Pichia/metabolism , Protein Binding , Recombinant Proteins/chemistry , Recombinant Proteins/genetics , Trisaccharides/chemistry , alpha-Amylases/antagonists & inhibitors , alpha-Amylases/genetics
2.
Biochemistry ; 48(45): 10752-64, 2009 Nov 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19803533

ABSTRACT

While covalent catalytic intermediates of retaining alpha-transglycosylases have been structurally characterized previously, no such information for a hydrolytic alpha-amylase has been obtained. This study presents a new "in situ" enzymatic elongation methodology that, for the first time, has allowed the isolation and structural characterization of a catalytically competent covalent glycosyl-enzyme intermediate with human pancreatic alpha-amylase. This has been achieved by the use of a 5-fluoro-beta-l-idosyl fluoride "warhead" in conjunction with either alpha-maltotriosyl fluoride or 4'-O-methyl-alpha-maltosyl fluoride as elongation agents. This generates an oligosaccharyl-5-fluoroglycosyl fluoride that then reacts with the free enzyme. The resultant covalent intermediates are extremely stable, with hydrolytic half-lives on the order of 240 h for the trisaccharide complex. In the presence of maltose, however, they undergo turnover via transglycosylation according to a half-life of less than 1 h. Structural studies of intermediate complexes unambiguously show the covalent attachment of a 5-fluoro-alpha-l-idosyl moiety in the chair conformation to the side chain of the catalytic nucleophile D197. The elongated portions of the intermediate complexes are found to bind in the high-affinity -2 and -3 binding subsites, forming extensive hydrogen-bonding interactions. Comparative structural analyses with the related noncovalent complex formed by acarbose highlight the structural rigidity of the enzyme surface during catalysis and the key role that substrate conformational flexibility must play in this process. Taken together, the structural data provide atomic details of several key catalytic steps. The scope of this elongation approach to probe the active sites and catalytic mechanisms of alpha-amylases is further demonstrated through preliminary experiments with porcine pancreatic alpha-amylase.


Subject(s)
Enzyme Inhibitors/pharmacology , Pancreas/enzymology , alpha-Amylases/chemistry , Animals , Biocatalysis , Carbohydrate Sequence , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid , Hydrogen Bonding , Kinetics , Mass Spectrometry , Molecular Sequence Data , Swine , alpha-Amylases/antagonists & inhibitors
3.
ACS Cent Sci ; 2(3): 154-161, 2016 Mar 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27066537

ABSTRACT

Selective inhibitors of human pancreatic α-amylase (HPA) are an effective means of controlling blood sugar levels in the management of diabetes. A high-throughput screen of marine natural product extracts led to the identification of a potent (Ki = 10 pM) peptidic HPA inhibitor, helianthamide, from the Caribbean sea anemone Stichodactyla helianthus. Active helianthamide was produced in Escherichia coli via secretion as a barnase fusion protein. X-ray crystallographic analysis of the complex of helianthamide with porcine pancreatic α-amylase revealed that helianthamide adopts a ß-defensin fold and binds into and across the amylase active site, utilizing a contiguous YIYH inhibitory motif. Helianthamide represents the first of a novel class of glycosidase inhibitors and provides an unusual example of functional malleability of the ß-defensin fold, which is rarely seen outside of its traditional role in antimicrobial peptides.

4.
J Med Chem ; 55(22): 10177-86, 2012 Nov 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23050660

ABSTRACT

The increasing prevalence of diabetes has accelerated the search for new drugs derived from natural sources. To define the functional features of two such families of compounds, the flavonols and the ethyl caffeates, we have determined the high-resolution structures of representative inhibitors in complex with human pancreatic α-amylase. Myricetin binds at the active site and interacts directly with the catalytic residues despite its bulky planar nature. Notably, it reduces the normal conformational flexibility of the adjacent substrate binding cleft. In contrast, bound ethyl caffeate acts by disordering precisely those polypeptide chain segments that make up the active site binding cleft. It also operates from binding sites far removed from the active site, a property not observed in any other class of human α-amylase inhibitor studied to date. Given the current inadequacy of drugs directed at diabetes, the use of optimized flavonols and ethyl caffeates may present an alternative therapeutic route.


Subject(s)
Caffeic Acids/metabolism , Flavonoids/metabolism , Hypoglycemic Agents/metabolism , Pancreatic alpha-Amylases/chemistry , Pancreatic alpha-Amylases/metabolism , Binding Sites , Caffeic Acids/chemistry , Catalysis , Catalytic Domain , Crystallography, X-Ray , Flavonoids/chemistry , Humans , Hydrogen Bonding , Models, Molecular , Protein Conformation
5.
Biochemistry ; 47(11): 3332-44, 2008 Mar 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18284212

ABSTRACT

A mechanistic study of the essential allosteric activation of human pancreatic alpha-amylase by chloride ion has been conducted by exploring a wide range of anion substitutions through kinetic and structural experiments. Surprisingly, kinetic studies indicate that the majority of these alternative anions can induce some level of enzymatic activity despite very different atomic geometries, sizes, and polyatomic natures. These data and subsequent structural studies attest to the remarkable plasticity of the chloride binding site, even though earlier structural studies of wild-type human pancreatic alpha-amylase suggested this site would likely be restricted to chloride binding. Notably, no apparent relationship is observed between anion binding affinity and relative activity, emphasizing the complexity of the relationship between chloride binding parameters and the activation mechanism that facilitates catalysis. Of the anions studied, particularly intriguing in terms of observed trends in substrate kinetics and their novel atomic compositions were the nitrite, nitrate, and azide anions, the latter of which was found to enhance the relative activity of human pancreatic alpha-amylase by nearly 5-fold. Structural studies have provided considerable insight into the nature of the interactions formed in the chloride binding site by the nitrite and nitrate anions. To probe the role such interactions play in allosteric activation, further structural analyses were conducted in the presence of acarbose, which served as a sensitive reporter molecule of the catalytic ability of these modified enzymes to carry out its expected rearrangement by human pancreatic alpha-amylase. These studies show that the largest anion of this group, nitrate, can comfortably fit in the chloride binding pocket, making all the necessary hydrogen bonds. Further, this anion has nearly the same ability to activate human pancreatic alpha-amylase and leads to the production of the same acarbose product. In contrast, while nitrite considerably boosts the relative activity of human pancreatic alpha-amylase, its presence leads to changes in the electrostatic environment and active site conformations that substantially modify catalytic parameters and produce a novel acarbose rearrangement product. In particular, nitrite-substituted human pancreatic alpha-amylase demonstrates the unique ability to cleave acarbose into its acarviosine and maltose parts and carry out a previously unseen product elongation. In a completely unexpected turn of events, structural studies show that in azide-bound human pancreatic alpha-amylase, the normally resident chloride ion is retained in its binding site and an azide anion is found bound in an embedded side pocket in the substrate binding cleft. These results clearly indicate that azide enzymatic activation occurs via a mechanism distinct from that of the nitrite and nitrate anions.


Subject(s)
Chlorides/physiology , alpha-Amylases/metabolism , Allosteric Regulation/genetics , Asparagine/genetics , Azides/metabolism , Catalysis , Chlorides/chemistry , Crystallography, X-Ray , Enzyme Activation/genetics , Humans , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Nitrates/metabolism , Nitrites/metabolism , Pichia/enzymology , Pichia/genetics , Protein Binding/genetics , Recombinant Proteins/chemistry , Recombinant Proteins/genetics , Serine/genetics , Static Electricity , Substrate Specificity/genetics , alpha-Amylases/chemistry , alpha-Amylases/genetics
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