| Literature DB >> 10841792 |
D R Bolin1, A L Swain, R Sarabu, S J Berthel, P Gillespie, N J Huby, R Makofske, L Orzechowski, A Perrotta, K Toth, J P Cooper, N Jiang, F Falcioni, R Campbell, D Cox, D Gaizband, C J Belunis, D Vidovic, K Ito, R Crowther, U Kammlott, X Zhang, R Palermo, D Weber, J Guenot, Z Nagy, G L Olson.
Abstract
Molecular features of ligand binding to MHC class II HLA-DR molecules have been elucidated through a combination of peptide structure-activity studies and structure-based drug design, resulting in analogues with nanomolar affinity in binding assays. Stabilization of lead compounds against cathepsin B cleavage by N-methylation of noncritical backbone NH groups or by dipeptide mimetic substitutions has generated analogues that compete effectively against protein antigens in cellular assays, resulting in inhibition of T-cell proliferation. Crystal structures of four ternary complexes of different peptide mimetics with the rheumatoid arthritis-linked MHC DRB10401 and the bacterial superantigen SEB have been obtained. Peptide-sugar hybrids have also been identified using a structure-based design approach in which the sugar residue replaces a dipeptide. These studies illustrate the complementary roles played by phage display library methods, peptide analogue SAR, peptide mimetics substitutions, and structure-based drug design in the discovery of inhibitors of antigen presentation by MHC class II HLA-DR molecules.Entities:
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Year: 2000 PMID: 10841792 DOI: 10.1021/jm000034h
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Chem ISSN: 0022-2623 Impact factor: 7.446