| Literature DB >> 32380782 |
Helena Laronha1,2, Inês Carpinteiro1, Jaime Portugal3, Ana Azul1, Mário Polido1, Krasimira T Petrova2, Madalena Salema-Oom1,2, Jorge Caldeira1,2.
Abstract
Matrix metalloproteinases are enzymes that degrade the extracellular matrix. They have different substrates but similar structural organization. Matrix metalloproteinases are involved in many physiological and pathological processes and there is a need to develop inhibitors for these enzymes in order to modulate the degradation of the extracellular matrix (ECM). There exist two classes of inhibitors: endogenous and synthetics. The development of synthetic inhibitors remains a great challenge due to the low selectivity and specificity, side effects in clinical trials, and instability. An extensive review of currently reported synthetic inhibitors and description of their properties is presented.Entities:
Keywords: TIMP; matrix metalloproteinases; synthetic inhibitors
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32380782 PMCID: PMC7277161 DOI: 10.3390/biom10050717
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomolecules ISSN: 2218-273X
Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) classes.
| Class | MMP | |
|---|---|---|
| Collagenases | MMP-1, Collagenase-1, Interstitial or Fibroblast collagenases | |
| MMP-8, Collagenase-2, or Neutrophil collagenases | ||
| MMP-13 or Collagenase 3 | ||
| Gelatinases | MMP-2 or Gelatinase A | |
| MMP-9 or Gelatinase B | ||
| Stromelysin | MMP-3 or Stromelysin-1 | |
| MMP-10 or Stromelysin-2 | ||
| MMP-11 | ||
| Matrilysin | MMP-7 | |
| MMP-26, Matrilysin-2, or Endometase | ||
| Membrane-type | Type I transmembrane protein | MMP-14 or MT1-MMP |
| MMP-15 or MT2-MMP | ||
| MMP-16 or MT3-MMP | ||
| MMP-24 or MT5-MMP | ||
| Glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored | MMP17 or MT4-MMP | |
| MMP-25 or MT6-MMP | ||
| Other MMPs | MMP-12 | |
| MMP-19 | ||
| MMP-20 | ||
| MMP-21 | ||
| MMP-23 | ||
| MMP-27 | ||
| MMP-28 | ||
Figure 1Schematic representation of the general structure of MMP.
MMPs inhibitors classification.
| Specific Inhibitor | Tissue Inhibitor of Metalloproteinases (TIMP) | |
|---|---|---|
| Endogenous inhibitor | Non-specifics inhibitors | α2-macroglobulin |
| Tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI) | ||
| Membrane-bound β-amyloid precursor protein | ||
| Reversion-inducing cystein-rich protein with Kasal domain motifs (RECK) | ||
| GPI-anchored glycoprotein | ||
| Synthetic inhibitor | Hydroxamate-based inhibitors | |
| Non-hydroxamate-based inhibitors | ||
| Catalytic domain (non-zinc binding) inhibitors | ||
| Allosteric and exosite inhibitors | ||
| Antibody-based inhibitors | ||
Tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases (TIMPs) classification.
| TIMP | Expression | Inhibition | Inhibition Mode |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Several tissues with transcription inducible by cytokines and hormones | Strong interaction with MMP-1, -2, -3, and -9 | TIMP-1 forms a complex with pro-MMP-9 by binding to the hemopexin domain |
|
| Constitutive expression | Strong interaction with MMP-2 | TIMP-2 has four residues in the |
|
| In response to mitogenic stimulation and during cell cycle progression | MMP-1, -2, -3, -9, and -13 | The inhibition mode is different from the other TIMPs for its unusual localization, as it is largely sequestered into the extracellular matrix or at the cell surface via heparan sulphate proteoglycans |
|
| Especially abundant in the heart, but is also expressed in injured tissue | MMP-2 and -14 | - |
Figure 2(a) TIMP-1-catalytic domain of the MMP-3 complex. (b) TIMP-1-catalytic domain of the MMP-3 complex, where two conserved groups, Cys-Thr-Cys-Val and Glu-Ser-Val-Cys, are represented in yellow.
Non-specific endogenous inhibitors [4,7,12,13,33,34].
| Non-Specific Inhibitor | Inhibition |
|---|---|
| α2-macroglobulin | MMP-2 and -9 |
| Tissue factor pathway inhibitor | MMP-1 and -2 |
| Membrane-bound β-amyloid precursor protein | MMP-2 |
| MMP-2 | |
| Reversion-inducing-cysteine-rich protein with Kasal motifs (RECK) | MMP-2, -9, and -14 |
| GPI-anchored glycoprotein | - |
Figure 3Examples of zinc binding groups (ZBGs). (a) Hydroxamate-based inhibitor; (b) thiolate-based inhibitor; (c) carboxylate-based inhibitor; (d) phosphorous-based inhibitor. The R group is the scaffold of inhibitor.
Figure 4Types of MMPs’ inhibitors: (a) endogenous-like inhibitors that chelate the catalytic zinc (II) ion; (b) exosite targeting inhibitors that alter the conformation of the enzyme; (c) a combination of exosite binding and metal chelating inhibitors; (d) antibodies inhibitors.
Figure 5(a) Interaction between hydroxamate group and catalytic zinc (II) ion. The oxygen of the hydroxamate forms a strong hydrogen bond with the carboxylate oxygen of the catalytic Glu, while the NH of hydroxamate establishes another hydrogen bond with the carbonyl oxygen of Ala; (b) SC-44463 inhibitor.
Figure 6General structure of hydroxamic acid. OH group: catalytic zinc binding group; Ra: α substituent; R1: P1’ substituent group and this group is determinant to selectivity and activity; R2: P2’ substituent and this substituent can be cyclized with Ra and R3; R3: P3’ substituent.
Figure 7(a) Analogue of Marimastat with the α position disubstituted; (b) analogue of Marimastat with Ra and R2 position connected; (c) SE205; (d) SC903.
Figure 8Inhibitors with conformational restrictions between Ra and R1 positions. (a) Inhibitor with three-membered ring; (b) inhibitor with six-membered ring.
Figure 9Inhibitors with modification of R1 position. (a) Inhibitor with alkyl chain. This inhibitor has activity against MMP-2, -3, and -9, but the inhibition of MMP-1 is low; (b) R-94138, Matlystatin derivate. The inhibition of MMP-9 is 10 times higher than analogues with C8 or C10 chains; (c) succinyl hydroxamate analogue with C10 chain, which inhibits MMP-1; (d) succinyl hydroxamate analogue with C16 chain, which inhibits MMP-1.
Figure 10(a) Succinyl hydroxamate acid with a sulphonamide bond. This compound presents low inhibitory activity because of the pyramidal nature of the sulphonamide group. (b) Succinyl hydroxamate acid with carbonyl bond.
Figure 11(a) Marimastat. The Ra position is substituted with a hydroxyl group (OH). (b) Ro31-9790. The Ra position has no substituents.
Figure 12KB-R7785 inhibitor.
Batimastat and Marimastat.
| Name | Molecule | α Substituent | Effect |
|---|---|---|---|
| Batimastat |
| Thienylthiomethylene | Not available orally |
| Marimastat |
| Hydroxyl group (directed to the protein surface, allowing the formation of hydrogen bonds with solvent) | Available orally |
Figure 13(a) Derivates of succinyl hydroxamic acid; (b) malonyl acid; (c) glutaryl acid.
Figure 14(a) Ilomastat; (b) Ilomastat derivate with isobutylidene group.
IC50 and Ki values of succinyl hydroxamic acid-based inhibitors.
Figure 15(a) CGS-27023A; (b) thioester derivate of CGS-27023A.
Figure 16(a) NNGH; (b) arylhydroxamate sulphonamide compound; (c) 3-hydroxy-3-methylpipecolic hydroxamates.
Figure 17(a) RS-113,456; (b) RS-130,830.
IC50 and Ki values of sulfonamide hydroxamic acid-based inhibitors.
Figure 18Inhibitor with phosphinamide group.
IC50 and Ki values of phosphamides hydroxamic acid-based inhibitors.
|
| IC50 (X = H; Y = (CH2)2C6H5; Z = Me; R = Ph): MMP-1 = 252 nM; MMP-3 = 700 nM |
|
| IC50 (X = CH2i-Pr; Y = H; Z = CH3): R isómer, MMP-1 = 2.51 μM; MMP-3 = 2.55 μM |
|
| IC50 (X = H; Y = (CH2)2C6H5): MMP-1 = 525 nM; MMP-3 = 700 nM |
Figure 19(a) Thiol-based inhibitor with the thiol group as α-substituent. The stoichiometric is S when the thiol group is present. In its absence, the compound with R stoichiometric is more active than the S analogue; (b) thiol-based inhibitor with “linker” substituent; (c) thiol-based inhibitor with methyl carboxylate group.
Figure 20(a) Inhibitor with mercaptoacyl, where the thiol and acyl carbonyl groups could cooperate in binding to the zinc ion. (b) Variant of Montana compounds. n = 0, the compound does not have activity against MMPs-2, 3, and -12. n = 1, the compound has low activity against MMP-3.
Figure 21β-mercaptoacilamide inhibitor.
IC50 and Ki values of thiolates-based inhibitors.
Figure 22(a) Fray et al. inhibitors. R = NH(OH), hydroxamate-based inhibitor. R = OH, carboxylate-based inhibitor. (b) Hagmann inhibitors. If X = H and Y = Me the compound presents inhibition to MMP-1, -2, and -3. When X = C4H9 and Y = Me, the inhibitor has a similar effect to the previous one. The inhibitor with X = H and Y = Phthbutyl (phthalamidibutyl) shows activity against MMP-3.
Figure 23(a) Inhibitor of Wyeth with carboxylate sulphonamide; (b) inhibitor of Wyeth with the carboxylate function connected to a bezofuran via biphenyl sulphonamide spacer.
IC50 and Ki values of carboxylates-based inhibitors.
Figure 24Compound prepared by Reiter et al., with a 4-benzyl substituent. The 4-benzyl group fills the S2 pocket and if the benzyl group was omitted or replaced by a small aliphatic or cyclohexyl methyl group, the activity is lost. The isobuthyl group fills the S1’ pocket in a manner similar to other substrate-like inhibitors.
Figure 25Pochetti’s inhibitor.
IC50 and Ki values of phosphorus-based inhibitors.
IC50 and Ki values of heterocyclic bidentate-based inhibitors.
Figure 26(a) Doxycycline; (b) COL-3.
IC50 values of tetracyclines-based inhibitors.
Figure 27Inhibitor developed by Bernardo el al. The sulfur group coordinates with the catalytic zinc ion and the activation of the thiirane group happened with interactions between the active site glutamate, by nucleophilic attack.
Figure 28(a) PNU-141803; (b) PNU-142372.
Figure 29Sanofi-Aventis compound.