Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences and Experimental Therapeutics, College of Pharmacy, University of Iowa , Iowa City, Iowa 52242, United States.
Department of Medicinal Chemistry and Molecular Pharmacology and Center for Drug Discovery, College of Pharmacy, Purdue University , West Lafayette, Indiana 47907, United States.
ACS Chem Neurosci. 2018 Feb 21;9(2):346-357. doi: 10.1021/acschemneuro.7b00349. Epub 2017 Oct 16.
Adenylyl cyclases (AC) catalyze the formation of cyclic AMP (cAMP) from ATP and are involved in a number of disease states, making them attractive potential drug targets. AC8, in particular, has been implicated in several neurological disorders. While development of small molecule AC inhibitors has generated some chemical leads, the lack of inhibitor specificity among AC family members has limited the identification of successful drug candidates. Therefore, finding alternative novel methods to suppress AC activity are needed. Because only AC1 and AC8 are robustly stimulated by calmodulin (CaM), we set out to explore the mechanism of disrupting the AC/CaM interaction as a way to selectively inhibit AC8. Through the development and implementation of a novel biochemical high-throughput-screening paradigm, we identified six small molecules from an FDA-approved compound library that are capable of disrupting the AC8/CaM interaction. These compounds were also shown to be able disrupt formation of this complex in cells, ultimately leading to decreased AC8 activity. Interestingly, further mechanistic analysis determined that these compounds functioned by binding to CaM and blocking its interaction with AC8. While these particular compounds could inhibit CaM interaction with both AC1 and AC8, they provide significant proof of concept for inhibition of ACs through disruption of CaM binding. These compounds, as dual AC1/AC8 inhibitors, provide important tools for probing pathological conditions where AC1/AC8 activity are enhanced, such as chronic pain and ethanol consumption. Furthermore, unlike tools such as genetic deletion, these compounds can be used in a dose-dependent fashion to determine the role of AC/CaM interactions in these pathologies.
腺苷酸环化酶(AC)催化 ATP 生成环 AMP(cAMP),并参与多种疾病状态,因此成为有吸引力的潜在药物靶点。特别是 AC8 已被牵连到几种神经紊乱中。尽管小分子 AC 抑制剂的开发产生了一些化学先导物,但 AC 家族成员之间缺乏抑制剂特异性限制了成功候选药物的鉴定。因此,需要寻找替代的新型方法来抑制 AC 活性。由于只有 AC1 和 AC8 被钙调蛋白(CaM)强烈刺激,我们着手探索破坏 AC/CaM 相互作用的机制,作为选择性抑制 AC8 的一种方法。通过开发和实施一种新颖的生化高通量筛选范例,我们从 FDA 批准的化合物库中鉴定出 6 种能够破坏 AC8/CaM 相互作用的小分子。这些化合物还被证明能够在细胞中破坏这种复合物的形成,最终导致 AC8 活性降低。有趣的是,进一步的机制分析确定这些化合物通过与 CaM 结合并阻止其与 AC8 的相互作用来发挥作用。虽然这些特定的化合物可以抑制 CaM 与 AC1 和 AC8 的相互作用,但它们为通过破坏 CaM 结合来抑制 AC 提供了重要的概念证明。作为 AC1/AC8 的双重抑制剂,这些化合物为研究 AC1/AC8 活性增强的病理条件(如慢性疼痛和乙醇消耗)提供了重要的工具。此外,与基因缺失等工具不同,这些化合物可以以剂量依赖的方式使用,以确定 AC/CaM 相互作用在这些病理中的作用。