AI Article Synopsis

  • - TbMetRS is a crucial enzyme in Trypanosoma brucei that is being targeted for new antitrypanosomal drugs due to its essential role and adaptable structure when binding with various compounds.
  • - A series of urea-based inhibitors (UBIs) have been developed that effectively inhibit TbMetRS with very low IC50 values and show the potential for oral use and crossing the blood-brain barrier, making them strong candidates for treating late-stage human African trypanosomiasis.
  • - Structural analysis of 14 UBIs has revealed their binding interactions within TbMetRS, suggesting that they can fill key binding pockets without competing with ATP, pointing towards a novel drug design strategy that could be applied to other

Article Abstract

Methionyl-tRNA synthetase of Trypanosoma brucei (TbMetRS) is an important target in the development of new antitrypanosomal drugs. The enzyme is essential, highly flexible and displaying a large degree of changes in protein domains and binding pockets in the presence of substrate, product and inhibitors. Targeting this protein will benefit from a profound understanding of how its structure adapts to ligand binding. A series of urea-based inhibitors (UBIs) has been developed with IC50 values as low as 19 nM against the enzyme. The UBIs were shown to be orally available and permeable through the blood-brain barrier, and are therefore candidates for development of drugs for the treatment of late stage human African trypanosomiasis. Here, we expand the structural diversity of inhibitors from the previously reported collection and tested for their inhibitory effect on TbMetRS and on the growth of T. brucei cells. The binding modes and binding pockets of 14 UBIs are revealed by determination of their crystal structures in complex with TbMetRS at resolutions between 2.2 Å to 2.9 Å. The structures show binding of the UBIs through conformational selection, including occupancy of the enlarged methionine pocket and the auxiliary pocket. General principles underlying the affinity of UBIs for TbMetRS are derived from these structures, in particular the optimum way to fill the two binding pockets. The conserved auxiliary pocket might play a role in binding tRNA. In addition, a crystal structure of a ternary TbMetRS•inhibitor•AMPPCP complex indicates that the UBIs are not competing with ATP for binding, instead are interacting with ATP through hydrogen bond. This suggests a possibility that a general 'ATP-engaging' binding mode can be utilized for the design and development of inhibitors targeting tRNA synthetases of other disease-causing pathogen.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3990509PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0002775DOI Listing

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