| Literature DB >> 34163793 |
Yangyang Cheng1, Anh-Tuan Pham1, Takehiro Kato1, Bumhee Lim1, Dimitri Moreau1, Javier López-Andarias1, Lili Zong1, Naomi Sakai1, Stefan Matile1.
Abstract
Ellman's reagent has caused substantial confusion and concern as a probe for thiol-mediated uptake because it is the only established inhibitor available but works neither efficiently nor reliably. Here we use fluorescent cyclic oligochalcogenides that enter cells by thiol-mediated uptake to systematically screen for more potent inhibitors, including epidithiodiketopiperazines, benzopolysulfanes, disulfide-bridged γ-turned peptides, heteroaromatic sulfones and cyclic thiosulfonates, thiosulfinates and disulfides. With nanomolar activity, the best inhibitors identified are more than 5000 times better than Ellman's reagent. Different activities found with different reporters reveal thiol-mediated uptake as a complex multitarget process. Preliminary results on the inhibition of the cellular uptake of pseudo-lentivectors expressing SARS-CoV-2 spike protein do not exclude potential of efficient inhibitors of thiol-mediated uptake for the development of new antivirals. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 34163793 PMCID: PMC8179002 DOI: 10.1039/d0sc05447j
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Sci ISSN: 2041-6520 Impact factor: 9.825
Fig. 1In thiol-mediated uptake, dynamic covalent exchange with thiols on the cell surface precedes entry through different mechanisms. Inhibition of thiol-mediated uptake by removal of exofacial thiols and disulfides could thus afford new antivirals.
Fig. 2Structure of reporters 1 and 2 and inhibitor candidates 3–30 with their concentrations needed to inhibit by ∼15% (MIC) the uptake of 1 (1 h pre-incubation with inhibitors, 30 min incubation with reporter, filled symbols) and 2 (4 h pre-incubation, empty symbols). Red squares: ETPs; orange circles: BPSs; blue upward triangles: heteroaromatic sulfones; purple diamonds: thiosulfonates; magenta downward triangles: di- and polysulfides; brown hexagons: thiosulfinates. Symbols with upward arrows: MIC not reached at the highest concentration tested. Symbols with downward arrows indicate the lowest concentration tested already exceeds the MIC. (a) Similarly active upon co-incubation of reporters and inhibitor; (b–d) similarly (b), less (c), or more (d) active upon co-incubation in the presence of serum (mostly 6 h); (e) pre-incubation for 15 min; (f) isomerizes into cis22; (g) V-shaped DRC (see Fig. 3f); (h) pre-incubation for 30 min, co-incubation with 2; (i) mixture of regioisomers.
Fig. 3(a) Fluorescence image of HCHT plates (4 images per well) with HeLa cells pre-incubated with 6 (30 min) followed by co-incubation with 1 (left) and 2 (right, 10 μM each) for constant 30 min. (b–f) HCHT data showing relative fluorescence intensity (filled symbols) and cell viability (empty symbols) of HeLa cells after (b) pre-incubation with 4 for 1 h, followed by washing and incubation with 1 (top), or pre-incubation with 4 for 30 min, followed by co-incubation with 4 and 2 (bottom). (c) As in (b) with 18. (d) As in (b) after incubation for 4 h with 16 followed by incubation with 2. (e) As in (b) after pre-incubation with 11 (circles), 14 (crosses), or 21 (diamonds) for 15 min, followed by washing and incubation with 1. (f) As in (b) after pre-incubation with 20 (30 min), followed by washing and incubation with 1.