| Literature DB >> 22988346 |
Jan Víteček1, Antonín Lojek, Giuseppe Valacchi, Lukáš Kubala.
Abstract
In the past three decades, nitric oxide has been well established as an important bioactive molecule implicated in regulation of cardiovascular, nervous, and immune systems. Therefore, it is not surprising that much effort has been made to find specific inhibitors of nitric oxide synthases (NOS), the enzymes responsible for production of nitric oxide. Among the many NOS inhibitors developed to date, inhibitors based on derivatives and analogues of arginine are of special interest, as this category includes a relatively high number of compounds with good potential for experimental as well as clinical application. Though this group of inhibitors covers early nonspecific compounds, modern drug design strategies such as biochemical screening and computer-aided drug design have provided NOS-isoform-specific inhibitors. With an emphasis on major advances in this field, a comprehensive list of inhibitors based on their structural characteristics is discussed in this paper. We provide a summary of their biochemical properties as well as their observed effects both in vitro and in vivo. Furthermore, we focus in particular on their pharmacology and use in recent clinical studies. The potential of newly designed specific NOS inhibitors developed by means of modern drug development strategies is highlighted.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22988346 PMCID: PMC3441039 DOI: 10.1155/2012/318087
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mediators Inflamm ISSN: 0962-9351 Impact factor: 4.711
Figure 1(a) Scheme of the two-step oxygenation of arginine catalysed by NO synthase. (b) Scheme of the mature NOS dimer: Each subunit contains tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) and heme near the active site of the oxygenase domain (grey). The reductase domain (white) houses the NADPH-binding site as well as two-electron transfer cofactors (flavine adenine dinucleotide FAD and flavine mononucleotide FMN). The zinc bound at the interface mediates dimerisation. Calmodulin (CAM) binding regulates the activity.
List of the most important arginine-based inhibitors.
|
|
Inhibition mechanism: C: competitive, U: uncompetitive, IR: irreversible, RBI: reaction-based inhibitor; Inhibition constants: K : inhibitor affinity constant (competitive inhibition), IC50: concentration at which 50% inhibition is achieved under specific conditions, K : half maximal rate of enzyme inactivation, k: rate constant of enzyme inactivation, nd: data not available in the referred literature; enzyme origin: hhuman, mmurine, rrat, b bovine, *K values were obtained by recalculation using data in [59]. The extent of the inhibition can be estimated in the case of competitive inhibitors using the equation Inhibition (%) = 100(I/(I + K (1 + (Arg/K )))) I: inhibitor concentration, Arg: arginine concentration, K : Michaelis constant of the enzyme. K ranges (μmol/L): iNOSh 2.2–22, eNOSh 0.9–4.4, nNOSh 1.5–6.0, iNOSm 2.3–14, eNOSm 1.7–3.6, nNOSm 1.3-1.4, eNOSb 3.0–5.0, nNOSb 2.0–3.3, iNOSr 19–32, nNOSr 1.5–14 [59, 79, 89, 92–97].
Figure 2Summary of the use of current methods of inhibitor design among arginine-based NOS inhibitors. For a description of individual approaches see the chapter “Current methods of inhibitor design among arginine-based NOS inhibitors”. The width of arrows indicates the proportion in total number of arginine-based inhibitors. Only compounds for which quantitative data on the inhibition of at least one NOS isoform have been published were considered for this summary.