| Literature DB >> 34055746 |
Joanna Bojarska1, Roger New2, Paweł Borowiecki3, Milan Remko4, Martin Breza5, Izabela D Madura6, Andrzej Fruziński1, Anna Pietrzak1, Wojciech M Wolf1.
Abstract
Targeting the polyamine biosynthetic pathway by inhibitingEntities:
Keywords: DFMO; SARS-CoV-2; coronavirus; difluoromethylornithine; eflornithine; fluorine theranostics; ornidyl
Year: 2021 PMID: 34055746 PMCID: PMC8155678 DOI: 10.3389/fchem.2021.679776
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Chem ISSN: 2296-2646 Impact factor: 5.221
FIGURE 1Three ways in which DFMO acts to reduce polyamines and increase NO. All of these changes inhibit viral infectivity.
FIGURE 2Crystal structure of the title compound 1.
FIGURE 3RM06/6-311++G(d,p) optimized structures (A, B and C) of 2-(difluoromethyl)ornithine hydrochloride species studied, distances are in Å.
FIGURE 4On the left: the molecular ESP mapped on the HS of 1. On the right: surface patches identified with decomposed close contacts in crystal 1. Red regions (acceptors) correspond to the negative electrostatic potential, while blue (donors) to the positive electrostatic potential.
FIGURE 5Fingerprint Plots and relative percentage contributions of the diverse supramolecular interactions to the HSs for analyzed crystals (others signifies contacts below 1%).
FIGURE 6Energy frameworks of crystals 1 and 2 corresponding to the electrostatic and dispersion energy components, and the total energy framework along a, b and c-axis. The cylinders thickness shows the relative strength of molecular packing.
FIGURE 7Schematic depiction of representative models of H-bond interactions (synthons) with labels of analyzed crystals in which the corresponding H-bonding pattern is present.
FIGURE 8Supramolecular synthon linking DFMO and H2O moieties in the crystal structure of 1.
FIGURE 9Schematic presentation of all types of interactions in the analyzed structures: above – bifurcated H-bonds (including bifurcated donor and bifurcated acceptors); in the middle – ambivalent; bottom – others (red - oxygen, grey - carbon, blue - nitrogen, greeen - Cl-, lime - fluorine).
FIGURE 10On the left: the bio-complex of arginase with the DFMO ligand. On the right: the supramolecular synthon D(2) builded by amino and carboxy groups (PDB code: 3GN0) (Ilies et al., 2011).
FIGURE 11Gallery of fluorine-based supramolecular motifs grouped into ring-, chain-, and finite chain-D- H-bonding motifs, encountered in analyzed supramolecular systems. The atom-numbering scheme for interacting atoms is included. For clarity, side chains were eliminated.
FIGURE 12Graph representation of the crystal structure of 1 and 2 showing LSAMs (A,C) and their packing (B,D). The black dot represents cations’ center of gravity, red dot – positions of water molecules while green spheres positions of chloride anions. Thick red rods show the most important N-H…O interactions, the thin ones — secondary interactions between cations while blue lines stand for interactions with water molecules.
FIGURE 13Representative binding modes of L-DFMO (A,B), D-DFMO (C,D), and the DFMO-analogue (E,F) to human ornithine decarboxylase without PLP-cofactor (h-ODC, PDB ID: 2OO0) (Dufe et al., 2007) with close contacts to residues in the active site. All six panels (A–F) show inhibition of h-ODC by blocking the substrate-binding site through direct interaction of the ligands with critical amino acids of the receptor in the catalytic cavity. Ligands are shown as sticks colored in yellow (L-DFMO), gold (D-DFMO) or green (DFMO-analogue), respectively. The overall enzyme structure is shown as a light blue cartoon diagram (see A,C,E). The most significant amino acid residues contributing to the stabilization of the ligand molecules in the complex with h-ODC by polar interactions and by CH–CH van der Waals (vdW) interactions are shown in light blue sticks (see B,D,F) representations. Nitrogen atoms are presented in blue, oxygen atoms in red, fluorine atoms in light blue, whereas hydrogen atoms (attached to nitrogen and/or oxygen atom of the carboxylic group) in gray. Mutual distances between the amino acid residues, and the respective ligands’ atoms are given in Ångström (see B,D,F). The formation of intermolecular hydrogen bonds is represented by magenta dashed lines.
FIGURE 14Three-dimensional model of the representative binding modes of L-DFMO (A,B), D-DFMO (C,D), and the DFMO-analogue (E,F) to human ornithine decarboxylase complexed with PLP-cofactor (h-ODC, PDB ID: 2OO0) (Dufe et al., 2007) with close contacts to residues in the active site. All six panels (A–F) show inhibition of h-ODC by blocking substrate-binding site through direct interaction of the ligands with critical amino acids of the receptor in catalytic cavity. Ligands are shown as sticks colored in yellow (L-DFMO), gold (D-DFMO) or green (DFMO-analogue), respectively. The overall enzyme structure is shown as a light blue cartoon diagram (see A,C,E). The most significant amino acid residues contributing to the stabilization of the ligand molecules in the complex with h-ODC by polar interactions and by CH–CH van der Waals (vdW) interactions are shown in light blue sticks (see B,D,F) representations. Nitrogen atoms are presented in blue, oxygen atoms in red, fluorine atoms in pale cyan, phosphorus atoms in orange, whereas hydrogen atoms (attached to nitrogen and/or oxygen atom of the carboxylic group) in gray. The mutual distances between the amino acid residues (and PLP-cofactor) and the respective ligands’ atoms are given in Ångström (see B,D,F). The formation of intermolecular hydrogen bonds is represented by magenta dashed lines. Orange dashed lines represent distances between the α-amino group of L-DFMO and the carbon atom of the formyl group present in the PLP-cofactor.
FIGURE 15Two dimensional visualization of the h-ODC (PDB ID: 2OO0) (Dufe et al., 2007) binding interfaces as computed by BIOVIA Discovery Studio Visualizer 20.1.0.19295 software for top-scoring poses of the ligand molecules L-DFMO (A), D-DFMO (B), and DFMO-analogue (C), respectively. Polar contacts between receptor-ligand including hydrogen bonds (green), unfavorable hydrogen bond acceptor–acceptor (AA) clashes (red), halogen bonds (cyan), and π–σ interactions (purple) are represented by dashed lines. Intermolecular Van der Waals forces are displayed in light-green spoked arcs respectively.