Altman Michael D, Ali Akbar, Reddy G S Kiran Kumar, Nalam Madhavi N L, Anjum Saima Ghafoor, Cao Hong, Chellappan Sripriya, Kairys Visvaldas, Fernandes Miguel X, Gilson Michael K, Schiffer Celia A, Rana Tariq M, Tidor Bruce
Department of Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, USA.
J Am Chem Soc. 2008 May 14;130(19):6099-113. doi: 10.1021/ja076558p. Epub 2008 Apr 16.
The acquisition of drug-resistant mutations by infectious pathogens remains a pressing health concern, and the development of strategies to combat this threat is a priority. Here we have applied a general strategy, inverse design using the substrate envelope, to develop inhibitors of HIV-1 protease. Structure-based computation was used to design inhibitors predicted to stay within a consensus substrate volume in the binding site. Two rounds of design, synthesis, experimental testing, and structural analysis were carried out, resulting in a total of 51 compounds. Improvements in design methodology led to a roughly 1000-fold affinity enhancement to a wild-type protease for the best binders, from a Ki of 30-50 nM in round one to below 100 pM in round two. Crystal structures of a subset of complexes revealed a binding mode similar to each design that respected the substrate envelope in nearly all cases. All four best binders from round one exhibited broad specificity against a clinically relevant panel of drug-resistant HIV-1 protease variants, losing no more than 6-13-fold affinity relative to wild type. Testing a subset of second-round compounds against the panel of resistant variants revealed three classes of inhibitors: robust binders (maximum affinity loss of 14-16-fold), moderate binders (35-80-fold), and susceptible binders (greater than 100-fold). Although for especially high-affinity inhibitors additional factors may also be important, overall, these results suggest that designing inhibitors using the substrate envelope may be a useful strategy in the development of therapeutics with low susceptibility to resistance.
传染性病原体获得耐药性突变仍然是一个紧迫的健康问题,制定应对这一威胁的策略是当务之急。在此,我们应用了一种通用策略——利用底物包络进行逆向设计,来开发HIV-1蛋白酶抑制剂。基于结构的计算用于设计预计能保持在结合位点共识底物体积范围内的抑制剂。进行了两轮设计、合成、实验测试和结构分析,共得到51种化合物。设计方法的改进使最佳结合物对野生型蛋白酶的亲和力提高了约1000倍,从第一轮的Ki为30 - 50 nM提高到第二轮的低于100 pM。一部分复合物的晶体结构揭示了一种与每种设计相似的结合模式,几乎在所有情况下都符合底物包络。第一轮的所有四种最佳结合物对一组临床相关的耐药HIV-1蛋白酶变体均表现出广泛的特异性,相对于野生型,亲和力损失不超过6 - 13倍。针对耐药变体组测试第二轮化合物的一个子集,发现了三类抑制剂:强结合物(最大亲和力损失为14 - 16倍)、中等结合物(35 - 80倍)和敏感结合物(大于100倍)。尽管对于特别高亲和力的抑制剂,其他因素可能也很重要,但总体而言,这些结果表明,利用底物包络设计抑制剂可能是开发低耐药性治疗药物的一种有用策略。