Nanavati S M, Silverman R B
Department of Chemistry, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois 60208-3113.
J Med Chem. 1989 Nov;32(11):2413-21. doi: 10.1021/jm00131a001.
Because of the importance of the inactivation of GABA aminotransferase to the design of anticonvulsant agents, a seemingly wide variety of inactivators has been investigated; all of the compounds, however, are analogues of GABA, beta-alanine, or delta-aminovaleric acid, which are substrates for the enzyme. Relatively minor modifications in the inactivator structures result in major differences in inactivation mechanisms and enzyme adduct structures. Compounds that inactivate GABA aminotransferase by a Michael addition mechanism, leading to modification of an active-site residue are Class I inactivators. Those that proceed by an enamine mechanism and give ternary adducts are Class II inactivators. Class III inactivators modify only the PLP cofactor; if the inactivation involves aromatization of the inactivator, it is a Class IIIA inactivation, and if no aromatization is involved, then it is a Class IIIB inactivation. The last class of inactivators (Class IV) are not classified on the basis of the mechanism, but, rather, that they require the enzyme to be in the PMP form. There appears to be no trend in partition ratio values when comparing Class I with Class II inactivators. Class III inactivations alter only the cofactor, so it may be possible for these adducts to diffuse slowly out of the active site; reactivation of the apoenzyme would require additional PLP. These inactivators also inactivate a variety of other PLP-dependent enzymes. At this point there does not seem to be a therapeutic advantage of one class of inactivators over another, although the only current example of these inactivators to be useful clinically is gamma-vinyl GABA (vigabatrin), a Class I inactivator recently approved for the drug market in France and the U.K. There is a mechanistic significance, however, for one class over another. If labeling of an active-site amino acid residue is desired, then Class I inactivators should be selected; desire for attachment of the inactivator to both the protein and the cofactor or just to the cofactor would determine whether Class II or Class III inactivators would be chosen. The classification presented here should allow us to think about inactivator structures in terms of their mechanistic potential and, as a result of this, should afford us the opportunity to be able to make predictions regarding inactivation mechanisms for hypothetical new structural classes of inactivators. Since the different mechanistic pathways lead to different types of enzyme adducts, inactivator design may be driven by the class of adduct that is desired.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
由于γ-氨基丁酸转氨酶的失活对于抗惊厥药物设计的重要性,人们已经研究了种类繁多的失活剂;然而,所有这些化合物都是γ-氨基丁酸、β-丙氨酸或δ-氨基戊酸的类似物,而这些正是该酶的底物。失活剂结构中相对较小的修饰会导致失活机制和酶加合物结构的重大差异。通过迈克尔加成机制使γ-氨基丁酸转氨酶失活,从而导致活性位点残基发生修饰的化合物属于I类失活剂。那些通过烯胺机制进行并生成三元加合物的是II类失活剂。III类失活剂仅修饰磷酸吡哆醛辅因子;如果失活涉及失活剂的芳构化,则为IIIA类失活,如果不涉及芳构化,则为IIIB类失活。最后一类失活剂(IV类)不是根据机制进行分类,而是基于它们要求酶处于磷酸吡哆胺形式。比较I类和II类失活剂时,分配比值似乎没有趋势。III类失活仅改变辅因子,因此这些加合物可能会缓慢地从活性位点扩散出去;脱辅基酶的重新激活需要额外的磷酸吡哆醛。这些失活剂还会使多种其他依赖磷酸吡哆醛的酶失活。目前,似乎没有一类失活剂相对于另一类具有治疗优势,尽管这些失活剂目前在临床上唯一有用的例子是γ-乙烯基-γ-氨基丁酸(vigabatrin),一种最近在法国和英国获批进入药物市场的I类失活剂。然而,一类相对于另一类在机制上具有重要意义。如果希望标记活性位点氨基酸残基,则应选择I类失活剂;希望失活剂与蛋白质和辅因子都结合还是仅与辅因子结合,将决定选择II类还是III类失活剂。此处提出的分类应使我们能够根据失活剂的潜在机制来思考其结构,因此,应使我们有机会对假设的新型失活剂结构类别的失活机制进行预测。由于不同的机制途径会导致不同类型的酶加合物,失活剂的设计可能由所需的加合物类别驱动。(摘要截选至400字)