| Literature DB >> 29338454 |
Andrea Calcaterra1, Valentina Iovine1, Bruno Botta1, Deborah Quaglio1, Ilaria D'Acquarica1, Alessia Ciogli1, Antonia Iazzetti1, Romina Alfonsi2, Ludovica Lospinoso Severini2, Paola Infante3, Lucia Di Marcotullio2,4, Mattia Mori3, Francesca Ghirga3.
Abstract
This work aims at elucidating the mechanism and kinetics of hydrolysis of GANT61, the first and most-widely used inhibitor of the Hedgehog (Hh) signalling pathway that targets Glioma-associated oncogene homologue (Gli) proteins, and at confirming the chemical nature of its bioactive form. GANT61 is poorly stable under physiological conditions and rapidly hydrolyses into an aldehyde species (GANT61-A), which is devoid of the biological activity against Hh signalling, and a diamine derivative (GANT61-D), which has shown inhibition of Gli-mediated transcription. Here, we combined chemical synthesis, NMR spectroscopy, analytical studies, molecular modelling and functional cell assays to characterise the GANT61 hydrolysis pathway. Our results show that GANT61-D is the bioactive form of GANT61 in NIH3T3 Shh-Light II cells and SuFu-/- mouse embryonic fibroblasts, and clarify the structural requirements for GANT61-D binding to Gli1. This study paves the way to the design of GANT61 derivatives with improved potency and chemical stability.Entities:
Keywords: GANT61; Gli inhibitor; Hedgehog pathway; bioactive form; chemical stability
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29338454 PMCID: PMC6009951 DOI: 10.1080/14756366.2017.1419221
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Enzyme Inhib Med Chem ISSN: 1475-6366 Impact factor: 5.051
Figure 1.Chemical structures of two Gli antagonists GANT58 and GANT61 discovered in 2007 by Lauth et al. and GANT61 hydrolysis products GANT61-D and GANT61-A.
Scheme 1.Synthetic pathway to obtain both GANT61-D and GANT61.
Figure 2.GANT61 hydrolysis in EtOH-d6/PBS-d(D2O) 50:50 v/v at 37 °C monitored by 1H NMR spectroscopy. (A) Time evolution of the 1H NMR spectrum in the aliphatic signals region (2–4.2 ppm); peaks corresponding to the monitored proton of GANT61 and GANT61-D are labelled. (B) Evolution of the normalised areas of the selected 1H NMR signals for GANT61 and GANT61-D monitored up to 48 h incubation.
Figure 3.HPLC-UV chromatograms acquired during the time showing the disappearance of GANT61 and the formation of GANT61-D. Sample: GANT61 in CH3CN/100 mM NH4OAc (pH 4.5) = 95/5 (v/v) (1 mg/ml), column: Acclaim HILIC-10, 3 μm (150 × 4.6 mm I.D.), mobile phase: CH3CN/100 mM NH4OAc (pH 4.5) = 95/5 (v/v), flow-rate: 1.0 ml/min, detection: UV at 254 nm. (A) t = 0 min; (B) t = 30 min; (C) t = 24 h. The ESI-MS (pos.) spectrum of GANT61-D is included in the box for unequivocal identification.
Figure 4.Chemical stability of GANT61 monitored by HPLC as a function of time. The acetonitrile (ACN) solution has been plotted on the left as a control.
Figure 5.Predicted binding mode of GANT61-D in its three different protonation states: neutral (cyan sticks), mono-protonated (magenta sticks) and di-protonated (yellow sticks). The Gli1ZF crystallographic structure is showed as (A) cartoon and grey transparent surface and (B) surface coloured according to the electrostatic potential calculated by APBS. Red = negatively charged surface; blue = positively charged surface. The positively charged DNA docking site on Gli1ZF is highlighted.
Theoretical affinity of GANT61-D to Gli1ZF.
| Protonation form of GANT61-D | ΔG binding MM-GBSA (kcal/mol) | XSCORE (p |
|---|---|---|
| Neutral | −25.982 ± 0.008 | 4.50 |
| Mono-protonated | −28.217 ± 0.006 | 4.60 |
| Di-protonated | −31.972 ± 0.002 | 4.65 |
Figure 6.(A) Luciferase reporter assay in NIH3T3 Shh-Light II cells, which shows the dose-dependent inhibition of Hh signalling by GANT61 and GANT61-D after 48 h of treatment. (B) SuFu−/− MEFs were treated for 24 h with GANT61 or GANT61-D (10 μM) or DMSO as a control. Gli1 mRNA levels were determined by qRT-PCR normalised to β2-microglobulin and HPRT expression.