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1.
Int J Mol Sci ; 25(9)2024 Apr 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38731811

ABSTRACT

Recently studied N-(ß-d-glucopyranosyl)-3-aryl-1,2,4-triazole-5-carboxamides have proven to be low micromolar inhibitors of glycogen phosphorylase (GP), a validated target for the treatment of type 2 diabetes mellitus. Since in other settings, the bioisosteric replacement of the 1,2,4-triazole moiety with imidazole resulted in significantly more efficient GP inhibitors, in silico calculations using Glide molecular docking along with unbound state DFT calculations were performed on N-(ß-d-glucopyranosyl)-arylimidazole-carboxamides, revealing their potential for strong GP inhibition. The syntheses of the target compounds involved the formation of an amide bond between per-O-acetylated ß-d-glucopyranosylamine and the corresponding arylimidazole-carboxylic acids. Kinetics experiments on rabbit muscle GPb revealed low micromolar inhibitors, with the best inhibition constants (Kis) of ~3-4 µM obtained for 1- and 2-naphthyl-substituted N-(ß-d-glucopyranosyl)-imidazolecarboxamides, 2b-c. The predicted protein-ligand interactions responsible for the observed potencies are discussed and will facilitate the structure-based design of other inhibitors targeting this important therapeutic target. Meanwhile, the importance of the careful consideration of ligand tautomeric states in binding calculations is highlighted, with the usefulness of DFT calculations in this regard proposed.


Subject(s)
Enzyme Inhibitors , Glycogen Phosphorylase , Imidazoles , Molecular Docking Simulation , Kinetics , Rabbits , Animals , Enzyme Inhibitors/chemistry , Enzyme Inhibitors/pharmacology , Enzyme Inhibitors/chemical synthesis , Glycogen Phosphorylase/antagonists & inhibitors , Glycogen Phosphorylase/metabolism , Glycogen Phosphorylase/chemistry , Imidazoles/chemistry , Imidazoles/chemical synthesis , Imidazoles/pharmacology , Computer Simulation , Structure-Activity Relationship , Triazoles/chemistry , Triazoles/pharmacology , Triazoles/chemical synthesis
2.
Chem Biol Interact ; 382: 110568, 2023 Sep 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37277066

ABSTRACT

Glycogen phosphorylase (GP) is the rate-determining enzyme in the glycogenolysis pathway. Glioblastoma (GBM) is amongst the most aggressive cancers of the central nervous system. The role of GP and glycogen metabolism in the context of cancer cell metabolic reprogramming is recognised, so that GP inhibitors may have potential treatment benefits. Here, baicalein (5,6,7-trihydroxyflavone) is studied as a GP inhibitor, and for its effects on glycogenolysis and GBM at the cellular level. The compound is revealed as a potent GP inhibitor against human brain GPa (Ki = 32.54 µM), human liver GPa (Ki = 8.77 µM) and rabbit muscle GPb (Ki = 5.66 µM) isoforms. It is also an effective inhibitor of glycogenolysis (IC50 = 119.6 µM), measured in HepG2 cells. Most significantly, baicalein demonstrated anti-cancer potential through concentration- and time-dependent decrease in cell viability for three GBM cell-lines (U-251 MG, U-87 MG, T98-G) with IC50 values of ∼20-55 µM (48- and 72-h). Its effectiveness against T98-G suggests potential against GBM with resistance to temozolomide (the first-line therapy) due to a positive O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) status. The solved X-ray structure of rabbit muscle GP-baicalein complex will facilitate structure-based design of GP inhibitors. Further exploration of baicalein and other GP inhibitors with different isoform specificities against GBM is suggested.


Subject(s)
Glioblastoma , Animals , Humans , Rabbits , Kinetics , Glioblastoma/drug therapy , Crystallography, X-Ray , Glycogen Phosphorylase/metabolism
3.
Molecules ; 28(7)2023 Mar 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37049768

ABSTRACT

Glycogen phosphorylase (GP) is a key regulator of glucose levels and, with that, an important target for the discovery of novel treatments against type 2 diabetes. ß-d-Glucopyranosyl derivatives have provided some of the most potent GP inhibitors discovered to date. In this regard, C-ß-d-glucopyranosyl azole type inhibitors proved to be particularly effective, with 2- and 4-ß-d-glucopyranosyl imidazoles among the most potent designed to date. His377 backbone C=O hydrogen bonding and ion-ion interactions of the protonated imidazole with Asp283 from the 280s loop, stabilizing the inactive state, were proposed as crucial to the observed potencies. Towards further exploring these features, 4-amino-3-(ß-d-glucopyranosyl)-5-phenyl-1H-pyrazole (3) and 3-(ß-d-glucopyranosyl)-4-guanidino-5-phenyl-1H-pyrazole (4) were designed and synthesized with the potential to exploit similar interactions. Binding assay experiments against rabbit muscle GPb revealed 3 as a moderate inhibitor (IC50 = 565 µM), but 4 displayed no inhibition at 625 µM concentration. Towards understanding the observed inhibitions, docking and post-docking molecular mechanics-generalized Born surface area (MM-GBSA) binding free energy calculations were performed, together with Monte Carlo and density functional theory (DFT) calculations on the free unbound ligands. The computations revealed that while 3 was predicted to hydrogen bond with His377 C=O in its favoured tautomeric state, the interactions with Asp283 were not direct and there were no ion-ion interactions; for 4, the most stable tautomer did not have the His377 backbone C=O interaction and while ion-ion interactions and direct hydrogen bonding with Asp283 were predicted, the conformational strain and entropy loss of the ligand in the bound state was significant. The importance of consideration of tautomeric states and ligand strain for glucose analogues in the confined space of the catalytic site with the 280s loop in the closed position was highlighted.


Subject(s)
Glycogen Phosphorylase , Pyrazoles , Pyrazoles/chemical synthesis , Pyrazoles/chemistry , Pyrazoles/pharmacology , Glycogen Phosphorylase/antagonists & inhibitors , Glycogen Phosphorylase/metabolism , Density Functional Theory , Molecular Docking Simulation , Monte Carlo Method , Molecular Conformation , Glucose/analogs & derivatives , Glucose/chemistry , Glucose/metabolism , Glucose/pharmacology , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2
4.
ACS Chem Biol ; 14(7): 1460-1470, 2019 07 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31243960

ABSTRACT

Several C-ß-d-glucopyranosyl azoles have recently been uncovered as among the most potent glycogen phosphorylase (GP) catalytic site inhibitors discovered to date. Toward further exploring their translational potential, ex vivo experiments have been performed for their effectiveness in reduction of glycogenolysis in hepatocytes. New compounds for these experiments were predicted in silico where, for the first time, effective ranking of GP catalytic site inhibitor potencies using the molecular mechanics-generalized Born surface area (MM-GBSA) method has been demonstrated. For a congeneric training set of 27 ligands, excellent statistics in terms of Pearson (RP) and Spearman (RS) correlations (both 0.98), predictive index (PI = 0.99), and area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AU-ROC = 0.99) for predicted versus experimental binding affinities were obtained, with ligand tautomeric/ionization states additionally considered using density functional theory (DFT). Seven 2-aryl-4(5)-(ß-d-glucopyranosyl)-imidazoles and 2-aryl-4-(ß-d-glucopyranosyl)-thiazoles were subsequently synthesized, and kinetics experiments against rabbit muscle GPb revealed new potent inhibitors with best Ki values in the low micromolar range (5c = 1.97 µM; 13b = 4.58 µM). Ten C-ß-d-glucopyranosyl azoles were then tested ex vivo in mouse primary hepatocytes. Four of these (5a-c and 9d) demonstrated significant reduction of glucagon stimulated glycogenolysis (IC50 = 30-60 µM). Structural and predicted physicochemical properties associated with their effectiveness were analyzed with permeability related parameters identified as crucial factors. The most effective ligand series 5 contained an imidazole ring, and the calculated pKa (Epik: 6.2; Jaguar 5.5) for protonated imidazole suggests that cellular permeation through the neutral state is favored, while within the cell, there is predicted more favorable binding to GP in the protonated form.


Subject(s)
Azoles/pharmacology , Enzyme Inhibitors/pharmacology , Glycogen Phosphorylase/antagonists & inhibitors , Glycogenolysis/drug effects , Hepatocytes/drug effects , Animals , Azoles/chemistry , Caco-2 Cells , Drug Design , Enzyme Inhibitors/chemistry , Glycogen Phosphorylase/metabolism , Hepatocytes/metabolism , Humans , Models, Molecular , Rabbits , Structure-Activity Relationship
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