| Literature DB >> 19284778 |
Wenjin Yang1, Raymond V Fucini, Bruce T Fahr, Mike Randal, Kenneth E Lind, Melissa B Lam, Wanli Lu, Yafan Lu, Douglas R Cary, Michael J Romanowski, Dennis Colussi, Beth Pietrak, Timothy J Allison, Sanjeev K Munshi, David M Penny, Phuongly Pham, Jian Sun, Anila E Thomas, Jennifer M Wilkinson, Jeffrey W Jacobs, Robert S McDowell, Marcus D Ballinger.
Abstract
BACE-1 (beta-site amyloid precursor protein cleaving enzyme), a prominent target in Alzheimer's disease drug discovery efforts, was surveyed using Tethering technology to discover small molecule fragment ligands that bind to the enzyme active site. Screens of a library of >15000 thiol-containing fragments versus a panel of BACE-1 active site cysteine mutants under redox-controlled conditions revealed several novel amine-containing fragments that could be selectively captured by subsets of the tethering sites. For one such hit class, defined by a central aminobenzylpiperidine (ABP) moiety, X-ray crystal structures of BACE mutant-disulfide conjugates revealed that the fragment bound by engaging both catalytic aspartates with hydrogen bonds. The affinities of ABP fragments were improved by structure-guided chemistry, first for conjugation as thiol-containing fragments and then for stand-alone, noncovalent inhibition of wild-type (WT) BACE-1 activity. Crystallography confirmed that the inhibitors bound in exactly the same mode as the disulfide-conjugated fragments that were originally selected from the screen. The ABP ligands represent a new type of nonpeptidic BACE-1 inhibitor motif that has not been described in the aspartyl protease literature and may serve as a starting point for the development of BACE-1-directed Alzheimer's disease therapeutics.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19284778 DOI: 10.1021/bi900017q
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochemistry ISSN: 0006-2960 Impact factor: 3.162