| Literature DB >> 21270126 |
Christopher T Lemke1, Nathalie Goudreau, Songping Zhao, Oliver Hucke, Diane Thibeault, Montse Llinàs-Brunet, Peter W White.
Abstract
Hepatitis C virus infection, a major cause of liver disease worldwide, is curable, but currently approved therapies have suboptimal efficacy. Supplementing these therapies with direct-acting antiviral agents has the potential to considerably improve treatment prospects for hepatitis C virus-infected patients. The critical role played by the viral NS3 protease makes it an attractive target, and despite its shallow, solvent-exposed active site, several potent NS3 protease inhibitors are currently in the clinic. BI 201335, which is progressing through Phase IIb trials, contains a unique C-terminal carboxylic acid that binds noncovalently to the active site and a bromo-quinoline substitution on its proline residue that provides significant potency. In this work we have used stopped flow kinetics, x-ray crystallography, and NMR to characterize these distinctive features. Key findings include: slow association and dissociation rates within a single-step binding mechanism; the critical involvement of water molecules in acid binding; and protein side chain rearrangements, a bromine-oxygen halogen bond, and profound pK(a) changes within the catalytic triad associated with binding of the bromo-quinoline moiety.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21270126 PMCID: PMC3064199 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M110.211417
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157