| Literature DB >> 23155486 |
Tamara Basta1, Yap Boum, Julien Briffotaux, Hubert F Becker, Isabelle Lamarre-Jouenne, Jean-Christophe Lambry, Stephane Skouloubris, Ursula Liebl, Marc Graille, Herman van Tilbeurgh, Hannu Myllykallio.
Abstract
Nature has established two mechanistically and structurally unrelated families of thymidylate synthases that produce de novo thymidylate or dTMP, an essential DNA precursor. Representatives of the alternative flavin-dependent thymidylate synthase family, ThyX, are found in a large number of microbial genomes, but are absent in humans. We have exploited the nucleotide binding pocket of ThyX proteins to identify non-substrate-based tight-binding ThyX inhibitors that inhibited growth of genetically modified Escherichia coli cells dependent on thyX in a manner mimicking a genetic knockout of thymidylate synthase. We also solved the crystal structure of a viral ThyX bound to 2-hydroxy-3-(4-methoxybenzyl)-1,4-naphthoquinone at a resolution of 2.6 Å. This inhibitor was found to bind within the conserved active site of the tetrameric ThyX enzyme, at the interface of two monomers, partially overlapping with the dUMP binding pocket. Our studies provide new chemical tools for investigating the ThyX reaction mechanism and establish a novel mechanistic and structural basis for inhibition of thymidylate synthesis. As essential ThyX proteins are found e.g. in Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Helicobacter pylori, our studies have also potential to pave the way towards the development of new anti-microbial compounds.Entities:
Keywords: antimicrobial compounds; inhibitor screen; naphthoquinone; thymidylate synthase ThyX
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23155486 PMCID: PMC3498832 DOI: 10.1098/rsob.120120
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Biol ISSN: 2046-2441 Impact factor: 6.411
Figure 1.Screening process for identification of ThyX inhibitors. (a) The last step in the de novo synthesis of thymidylate is catalysed by two unrelated families of thymidylate synthases, ThyX (top) and ThyA (bottom). (b) Unique stacking interaction of the pyrimidine ring of dUMP (magenta) with the isoalloxazine ring of the FAD cofactor at the active site pocket of T. maritima ThyX. Conserved active-site residues of ThyX proteins are shown. (c) Validation of the ThyX activity assay based upon detection of the NADPH oxidation, followed by decrease of A340. Negative control without enzyme and positive control with PBCV-1 ThyX are shown. Also shown are representative data indicating inhibition of ThyX activity or lack thereof. Inhibition parameters for specific molecules are given in table 1 and the main text. (d) Flow chart describing distinct steps leading to the identification of 2-hydroxy-1,4-naphthoquinones as specific ThyX inhibitors. Selection criteria 1 and 2 are described in the text. The lead compound 2-bromo-5-hydroxy-1,4-naphthoquinone (2E04) was isolated from the fruit of the Malaysian persimmon (Dyospiros maritima Blume); NQ, naphthoquinone.
Hits issued from screening the 1,4-naphthoquinone libraries.
| compound | structure | % inhibition at 20 µM deprotonation | IC50 (µM) NADPH oxidation |
|---|---|---|---|
| PBCV-1 ThyX | |||
| C8-C1 | 78 ± 4 | 4.5 | |
| E11-C1 | 36 ± 5 | 11.0 | |
| H3-C1 | 38 ± 3 | 7 | |
| F3-C1 | 38 ± 7 | 7 | |
| G3-C1 | 22 ± 7 | 10 | |
| B3-C1 | 12 ± 6 | >10 |
Figure 4.Representation of C8-C1 binding in the PBCV-1 ThyX active site. (a) Representation of the C8-C1 inhibitor fitted into the residual Fo – F electron density map contoured at 3σ. (b) Molecular surface of the sequence conservation among ThyX enzymes. Only the ThyX active site is represented in this view. Colouring is from white (poorly conserved) to blue (highly conserved). The C8-C1 inhibitor and FAD ligand are shown as sticks. (c) Comparison of the dUMP (grey sticks) and C8-C1 (yellow ball and sticks) binding modes in the ThyX active site. dUMP has been modelled by superimposing the crystal structure of T. maritima ThyX bound to dUMP onto the current structure (r.m.s.d. = 1.7 Å over 180 Cα) [6]. FAD is shown in sticks. (d) The C8-C1 inhibitor bound at the ThyX active site is shown as ball and sticks. ThyX monomers A and B are coloured beige and orange, respectively. Black dashed lines depict hydrogen bonds. The presence of four copies of the ThyX homotetramer in the crystal asymmetric unit allowed us to establish that in 16 distinct active sites, the inhibitor binds in a very similar way. (e) Crystals of PBCV-1 ThyX obtained in the absence (yellow) or presence (dark orange) of compound C8-C1. The change in colour indicates binding of C8-C1 to the oxidized (yellow) form of the enzyme.
Figure 2.Modality of ThyX inhibition by the molecule C8-C1. (a) Variation of the IC50 as the function of the PBCV-1 ThyX concentration. The linear relationship is indicative of a tight-binding inhibition mechanism. (b) Effect of the dUMP concentration on the IC50 value for the molecule C8-C1. (c) Effect of the NADPH concentration on the IC50 value for the molecule C8-C1 is shown. Data shown are representative of three individual experiments.
Effect of the inhibitor C8-C1 on NADPH oxidation and FAD reduction under anaerobic conditions.
| addition | NADPH oxidation (nmol) | FAD reduction (nmol) |
|---|---|---|
| NADPH | 0 | 0 |
| dUMP + NADPH | 11.3 | 8.9a |
| C8-C1 + NADPH | 0 | 0b |
aMean values from two independent experiments are indicated; mean deviation does not exceed 5% of the mean value. Reactions were started by adding dUMP. NADPH oxidation or FAD reduction was not observed using free FAD in the presence or absence of the inhibitor. The enzyme used was PBCV-1 ThyX.
bBinding of C8-C1 to the oxidized enzyme was indicated by a red-shift of the FAD spectrum (≈10 nm) after addition of inhibitor.
Figure 3.Growth inhibition induced by ThyX inhibitors mimics a genetic knockout of thyX. (a) Growth inhibition of E. coli FE010 (ΔthyA::thyX tdk) and the corresponding wild-type strain MG1655 (thyA+ tdk) in thymidine-deprived medium by the lead compound 2E04. The values reported are means of three individual experiments. Hundred per cent refers to cell viability, measured as CFU, in the absence of inhibitor. Note that addition of thymidine reverses growth inhibition, because the E. coli strains used can bypass thymidylate synthase activity by salvaging extracellular thymidine. (b) Overexpression of thyX reduces growth inhibition by the molecules 2EO4 and C8-C1. The selectivity factor refers to the ratio of CFUs observed for the strain FE010 carrying the plasmid overexpressing PBCV-1 thyX under an IPTG-inducible promoter with or without induction.
X-ray data collection and refinement statistics. Values in parentheses are for highest resolution shell.
| native | |
|---|---|
| resolution (Å) | 35–2.6 (2.75–2.6) |
| space group | P1 |
| cell parameters | |
| total number of reflections | 252 855 |
| total number of unique reflections | 111 996 |
| 6.9 (52.4) | |
| completeness (%) | 92.6 (93.4) |
| 10.7 (1.8) | |
| redundancy | 2.25 |
| resolution (Å) | 35–2.6 |
| 21.1/26.3 | |
| r.m.s.d. bonds (Å) | 0.010 |
| r.m.s.d. angles (°) | 1.19 |
| most favoured (%) | 93.1 |
| allowed (%) | 6.9 |
| disallowed (%) | 0 |
| PDB code | 4FZB |
aRsym = Σ|I − 〈I〉|/ΣiI where I is the ith observation of the reflection h, while 〈I〉 is the mean intensity of reflection h.
bRfactor = Σ||F| − |F||/|F|. Rfree was calculated with a small fraction (5%) of randomly selected reflections.
Figure 5.Predicted docking poses of ThyX inhibitors in the active site of ThyX. (a) The rigid docking pose of the molecule C8-C1 stabilized by stacking interactions with the FAD and the residues indicated below. (b) The docking pose obtained when amino acid residues Gln-75, Gln-188, Arg-90 and Glu-152, at the interface of subunits A and C, were made flexible during docking calculations. Note that conformational flexibility of these residues may play a key role in directing the binding of 2-OH-1,4-NQs at the active site. The picture was prepared using OpenAstexViewer 3.0.