| Literature DB >> 29892597 |
Alen Albreht1, Irena Vovk1, Janez Mavri2, Jose Marco-Contelles3, Rona R Ramsay4.
Abstract
Successful class="Chemical">propargylamine drugs such as <class="Chemical">span class="Chemical">deprenyl inactivate monoamine oxidase (MAO), a target in multi-faceted approaches to prevent neurodegeneration in the aging population, but the chemical structure and mechanism of the irreversible inhibition are still debated. We characterized the covalent cyanine structure linking the multi-target propargylamine inhibitor ASS234 and the flavin adenine dinucleotide in MAO-A using a combination of ultra-high performance liquid chromatography, spectroscopy, mass spectrometry, and computational methods. The partial double bond character of the cyanine chain gives rise to 4 interconverting geometric isomers of the adduct which were chromatographically separated at low temperatures. The configuration of the cyanine linker governs adduct stability with segments of much higher flexibility and rigidity than previously hypothesized. The findings indicate the importance of intramolecular electrostatic interactions in the MAO binding site and provide key information relevant to incorporation of the propargyl moiety into novel multi-target drugs. Based on the structure, we propose a mechanism of MAO inactivation applicable to all propargylamine inhibitors.Entities:
Keywords: electrostatic interactions; inhibition mechanism; interconversion; isomers; monoamine oxidase; propargylamine; quantum chemical calculations; structure
Year: 2018 PMID: 29892597 PMCID: PMC5985292 DOI: 10.3389/fchem.2018.00169
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Chem ISSN: 2296-2646 Impact factor: 5.221
Figure 1Structure of isoalloxazine ring (1) and ASS234 propargylamine inhibitor (2).
Figure 2ASS234 inhibition of MAO-A. (A) Spectra for MAO-A before and after ASS234 inactivation. (B) and (C) Absorbance changes for the first 40 s and 1000 s, respectively, at 410, 456, and 495 nm after rapid mixing of equal volumes of MAO-A (40 μM) and ASS234 (120 μM) at 30°C in a stopped-flow spectrophotometer.
Figure 3Geometric isomers of the flavin-ASS234 adduct from tryptic/chymotryptic digested MAO-A. (A) UHPLC chromatogram of ASS234-inhibited MAO-A digest acquired at 410 nm (inset—extracted ion chromatogram at m/z 1710). (B) Temperature dependence of the interconversion rate for two geometric isomers. At high temperatures isomers coalesce into a single chromatographic peak. (C) The extracted ion chromatogram at m/z 1710 obtained at −10°C indicates the existence of at least four isomers of the covalent adduct. A low abundant fourth isomer was detected as a shoulder on the major chromatographic peak (inset)—dashed line simulates the expected shape of the major peak without co-elution.
Figure 4Some examples of isomeric structures of the pentapeptide-FAD-ASS234 covalent adduct which can be formed by intramolecular rotations only about C–N bonds (in red). Both positive charge delocalization extremes of the cyanine chain are depicted on the left hand side. The four possible geometric structures are highlighted in the dashed square (intramolecular rotations about cyanine C–C bonds are not considered).
Figure 5Energy profiles of internal rotations in the truncated model of the pentapeptide-FAD-ASS234 adduct. (A) The four dihedral angles are defined in blue (D1), green (D2), red (D3), and orange (D4). (B) Energy profiles of internal rotations around dihedral angles D1, D2, D3, and D4. Relaxed scans were performed on the M062x/6-311+G(d,p) level of theory.
Figure 6A 3D structural representation of energetically most stable geometric adduct structure which has the largest contribution to the overall compound configuration. (A) Free truncated adduct. (B) Adduct inside the active site of MAO A.
Figure 7Proposed mechanism of irreversible MAO inhibition by propargylamines.