| Literature DB >> 32974990 |
Rodrigo F Ortiz-Meoz1, Liping Wang1, Rosalie Matico1, Anna Rutkowska-Klute2, Martha De la Rosa3, Sabrina Bedard1, Robert Midgett1, Katrin Strohmer2, Douglas Thomson2, Cunyu Zhang1, Makda Mebrahtu1, Jeffrey Guss1, Rachel Totoritis1, Thomas Consler1, Nino Campobasso1, David Taylor1, Tia Lewis1, Kurt Weaver1, Marcel Muelbaier2, John Seal1, Richard Dunham3, Wieslaw Kazmierski3, David Favre3, Giovanna Bergamini2, Lisa Shewchuk1, Alan Rendina1, Guofeng Zhang1.
Abstract
Indoleamine-2,3-dioxygenase 1 (IDO1) is a heme-containing enzyme that catalyzes the rate-limiting step in the kynurenine pathway of tryptophan (TRP) metabolism. As it is an inflammation-induced immunoregulatory enzyme, pharmacological inhibition of IDO1 activity is currently being pursued as a potential therapeutic tool for the treatment of cancer and other disease states. As such, a detailed understanding of the mechanism of action of IDO1 inhibitors with various mechanisms of inhibition is of great interest. Comparison of an apo-form-binding IDO1 inhibitor (GSK5628) to the heme-coordinating compound, epacadostat (Incyte), allows us to explore the details of the apo-binding inhibition of IDO1. Herein, we demonstrate that GSK5628 inhibits IDO1 by competing with heme for binding to a heme-free conformation of the enzyme (apo-IDO1), whereas epacadostat coordinates its binding with the iron atom of the IDO1 heme cofactor. Comparison of these two compounds in cellular systems reveals a long-lasting inhibitory effect of GSK5628, previously undescribed for other known IDO1 inhibitors. Detailed characterization of this apo-binding mechanism for IDO1 inhibition might help design superior inhibitors or could confer a unique competitive advantage over other IDO1 inhibitors vis-à-vis specificity and pharmacokinetic parameters.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32974990 DOI: 10.1002/cbic.202000298
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chembiochem ISSN: 1439-4227 Impact factor: 3.164