| Literature DB >> 33053658 |
Ranko Gacesa1,2,3, Andrea A P Tripodi1, Agostino Cilibrizzi1, Antonella Leggio4, Robert Hider1, Vincenzo Abbate5.
Abstract
Siderophores are iron-complexing compounds synthesized by bacteria and fungi. They are low molecular weight compounds (500-1500 Daltons) possessing high affinity for iron(III). Since 1970 a large number of siderophores have been characterized, the majority using hydroxamate or catecholate as functional groups. The biosynthesis of siderophores is typically regulated by the iron levels of the environment where the organism is located. Because of their exclusive affinity and specificity for iron(III), natural siderophores and their synthetic derivatives have been exploited in the treatment of human iron-overload diseases, as both diagnostic and therapeutic agents. Here, solid-phase approach for the preparation of hexadentate, peptide-based tricatecholato containing peptides is described. The versatility of the synthetic method allows for the design of a common scaffolding structure whereby diverse ligands can be conjugated. With so many possibilities, a computational approach has been developed which will facilitate the identification of those peptides which are capable of providing a high affinity iron(III) binding site. This study reports an integrated computational/synthetic approach towards a rational development of peptide-based siderophores.Entities:
Keywords: Siderophore; catechol; hexadentate; iron(III) complexes; structure prediction; synthesis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33053658 PMCID: PMC7593911 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21207498
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Structures of the synthesized tricatecholato-containing peptides.
Figure 2Schematic route for the synthesis of hexadentate peptide-chelator 3: (a) Fmoc-Lys(Mtt)-OH, Oxyma, N,N’-diisopropylcarbodiimide (DIC), DMF; (b) 20% piperidine/DMF; (c) Boc-Lys(Mtt)-OH, Oxyma, DIC, DMF; (d) 1% TFA/DCM; (e) 2,3-dimethoxybenzoic acid (DBA), PyOxP/DIPEA, DMF; (f) TFA; (g) BBr3/DCM.
Siderophore analogues.
| Ligand in FeL Complex | Sum of Angles 2 | RMSD 1 |
|---|---|---|
|
| 509.1 | 0.260 |
|
| 489.5 | 0.300 |
|
| 486.6 | 0.286 |
|
| 506.4 | 0.238 |
|
| 487.5 | 0.315 |
|
| 481.6 | 0.320 |
|
| 478.0 | 0.340 |
|
| 474.8 | 0.340 |
|
| 486.5 | 0.269 |
1. Roots mean square differences (RMSD)—refers to the comparison of octahedra resulting from the six ligating oxygen atoms. 2. Sum of angles = sum of the tree transverse angles.
Figure 3The relationship between predicted RMSD values and sum of transverse Fe-coordination angles for a series of siderophores and siderophore analogues.
Hypothetical catechol siderophore analogues.
| Ligand in FeL Complex | Sum of Angles 2 | RMSD 1 |
|---|---|---|
|
| 489.4 | 0.270 |
|
| 502.9 | 0.230 |
|
| 466.2 | 0.450 |
|
| 501.0 | 0.230 |
|
| 480.2 | 0.307 |
|
| 488.5 | 0.309 |
|
| 482.9 | 0.291 |
|
| 494.3 | 0.280 |
|
| 477.4 | 0.350 |
|
| 498.9 | 0.230 |
1. RMSD—refers to the comparison of octahedra resulting from the six ligating oxygen atoms. 2. Sum of angles = sum of the tree transverse angles.
Figure 4The relationship between predicted RMSD values and sum of transverse Fe-coordination angles for a series of peptide based tricatecholate ligands.