| Literature DB >> 24412070 |
Robert J Ardecky1, Ekaterina V Bobkova1, Tina Kiffer-Moreira1, Brock Brown1, Santhi Ganji1, Jiwen Zou1, Ian Pass1, Sonoko Narisawa1, Flávia Godoy Iano1, Craig Rosenstein1, Anton Cheltsov1, Justin Rascon1, Michael Hedrick1, Carlton Gasior1, Anita Forster1, Shenghua Shi1, Russell Dahl1, Stefan Vasile2, Ying Su1, Eduard Sergienko1, Thomas D Y Chung1, Jonathan Kaunitz2, Marc F Hoylaerts3, Anthony B Pinkerton1, José Luis Millán1.
Abstract
Alkaline phosphatase (AP) isozymes are present in a wide range of species from bacteria to man and are capable of dephosphorylation and transphosphorylation of a wide spectrum of substrates in vitro. In humans, four AP isozymes have been identified-one tissue-nonspecific (TNAP) and three tissue-specific-named according to the tissue of their predominant expression: intestinal (IAP), placental (PLAP) and germ cell (GCAP) APs. Modulation of activity of the different AP isozymes may have therapeutic implications in distinct diseases and cellular processes. For instance, changes in the level of IAP activity can affect gut mucosa tolerance to microbial invasion due to the ability of IAP to detoxify bacterial endotoxins, alter the absorption of fatty acids and affect ectopurinergic regulation of duodenal bicarbonate secretion. To identify isozyme selective modulators of the human and mouse IAPs, we developed a series of murine duodenal IAP (Akp3-encoded dIAP isozyme), human IAP (hIAP), PLAP, and TNAP assays. High throughput screening and subsequent SAR efforts generated a potent inhibitor of dIAP, ML260, with specificity for the Akp3-, compared to the Akp5- and Akp6-encoded mouse isozymes.Entities:
Keywords: Alkaline phosphatase; Enzymes; Inflammatory bowel disease; Inhibitors; Intestinal alkaline phosphatase
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24412070 PMCID: PMC3943210 DOI: 10.1016/j.bmcl.2013.12.043
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioorg Med Chem Lett ISSN: 0960-894X Impact factor: 2.823