Literature DB >> 11013302

Inhibition of cholesteryl ester transfer protein by substituted dithiobisnicotinic acid dimethyl ester: involvement Of a critical cysteine.

H R Hope1, D Heuvelman, K Duffin, C Smith, J Zablocki, R Schilling, S Hegde, L Lee, B Witherbee, M Baganoff, C Bruce, A R Tall, E Krul, K Glenn, D T Connolly.   

Abstract

SC-71952, a substituted analog of dithiobisnicotinic acid dimethyl ester, was identified as a potent inhibitor of cholesteryl ester transfer protein (CETP). When tested in an in vitro assay, the concentration of SC-71952 required for half-maximal inhibition was 1 microm. The potency of SC-71952 was enhanced 200-fold by preincubation of the inhibitor with CETP, and was decreased 50-fold by treatment with dithiothreitol. Analogs of SC-71952 that did not contain a disulfide linkage were less potent, did not display time dependency, and were not affected by dithiothreitol treatment. Kinetic and biochemical characterization of the inhibitory process of CETP by SC-71952 suggested that the inhibitor initially binds rapidly and reversibly to a hydrophobic site on CETP. With time, the bound inhibitor irreversibly inactivates CETP, presumably by reacting with one of the free cysteines of CETP. Liquid chromatography/mass spectroscopy (LC/MS) analyses of tryptic digests of untreated or SC-71952-inactivated CETP was used to identify which cysteine(s) were potentially involved in the time-dependent, irreversible component of inactivation by the inhibitor. One disulfide bond, Cys143-Cys184, was unaffected by treatment with the inhibitor. Inactivation of CETP by SC-71952 correlated with a progressive decrease in the abundance of free Cys-13 and Cys-333. Conversion of Cys-13 to alanine had no effect on the rapid reversible component of inactivation by SC-71952. However, it abolished the time-dependent enhancement in potency seen with the inhibitor when using wild-type CETP. These data indicate that Cys-13 is critical for the irreversible inactivation of CETP by SC-71952 and provides support for the structural model that places Cys-13 near the neutral lipid-binding site of CETP.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 11013302

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Lipid Res        ISSN: 0022-2275            Impact factor:   5.922


  7 in total

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  7 in total

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