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1.
J Pharm Sci ; 108(2): 821-831, 2019 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30385281

ABSTRACT

This article describes the discovery and characterization of nanocolloidal structures formed between VX-985 (an orally administered inhibitor of hepatitis C virus protease) and the bile salt, sodium taurocholate at concentrations of the latter >4 mM. These complexes (1) distribute narrowly in size around a mean diameter of 260 nm, (2) separate from solution only with ultracentrifugation, and (3) appear to influence the absorption of VX-985 from the intestinal tract in vivo, in rodents and humans. Although the oral bioavailability of suspensions of its solid forms is poor, addition of vitamin E D-alpha-tocopherol polyethylene glycol 1000 succinate to dosing vehicles improves the fraction absorbed of the compound in vivo. In vitro characterization is compatible with the hypothesis that surfactants like D-alpha-tocopherol polyethylene glycol 1000 succinate preclude nanocolloidal structures and increase the bioavailability by increasing the rate of absorption of VX-985. This study, while specific to VX-985, provides a route to circumvent the poor oral bioavailability caused by formation of kinetically stable complexes between bile salts and drug molecules. This study also underscores the importance of characterizing aggregation phenomenon that may be observed in solubility measurements during preclinical formulation development.


Subject(s)
Antiviral Agents/administration & dosage , Drug Carriers/chemistry , Spiro Compounds/administration & dosage , Taurocholic Acid/chemistry , Vitamin E/chemistry , Administration, Oral , Animals , Antiviral Agents/pharmacokinetics , Biological Availability , Colloids/chemistry , Hepacivirus/enzymology , Hepatitis C/drug therapy , Humans , Intestinal Absorption , Protease Inhibitors/administration & dosage , Protease Inhibitors/pharmacokinetics , Rats , Solubility , Spiro Compounds/pharmacokinetics
2.
J Phys Chem B ; 120(27): 6461-8, 2016 07 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27292012

ABSTRACT

This paper uses crystals of bovine carbonic anhydrase (CA) and its acetylated variant to examine (i) how a large negative formal charge can be accommodated in protein-protein interfaces, (ii) why lysine residues are often excluded from them, and (iii) how changes in the surface charge of a protein can alter the structure and organization of protein-protein interfaces. It demonstrates that acetylation of lysine residues on the surface of CA increases the participation of polar residues (particularly acetylated lysine) in protein-protein interfaces, and decreases the participation of nonpolar residues in those interfaces. Negatively charged residues are accommodated in protein-protein interfaces via (i) hydrogen bonds or van der Waals interactions with polar residues or (ii) salt bridges with other charged residues. The participation of acetylated lysine in protein-protein interfaces suggests that unacetylated lysine tends to be excluded from interfaces because of its positive charge, and not because of a loss in conformational entropy. Results also indicate that crystal contacts in acetylated CA become less constrained geometrically and, as a result, more closely packed (i.e., more tightly clustered spatially) than those of native CA. This study demonstrates a physical-organic approach-and a well-defined model system-for studying the role of charges in protein-protein interactions.


Subject(s)
Carbonic Anhydrases/metabolism , Lysine/metabolism , Acetylation , Animals , Carbonic Anhydrases/chemistry , Cattle , Crystallography, X-Ray , Hydrogen Bonding , Lysine/chemistry , Protein Interaction Domains and Motifs , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Static Electricity
3.
Biophys Chem ; 196: 100-8, 2015 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25451684

ABSTRACT

As compounds are optimized for greater potency during pharmaceutical discovery, their aqueous solubility often decreases, making them less viable as orally-administered drugs. To investigate whether potency and insolubility share a common origin, we examined the structural and thermodynamic properties of telaprevir, a sparingly soluble inhibitor of hepatitis C virus protease. Comparison of the hydrogen bond motifs in crystalline telaprevir with those present in the protease-telaprevir complex revealed striking similarities. Additionally, the thermodynamics of telaprevir dissolution closely resembles those of protein-ligand dissociation. Together, these findings point to a common origin of potency and insolubility rooted in particular amide-amide hydrogen bond patterns. The insolubility of telaprevir is shown by computational analysis to be caused by interactions in the crystal, not unfavorable hydrophobic hydration. Accordingly, competing out the particular amide-amide hydrogen bond motifs in crystalline telaprevir with 4-hydroxybenzoic acid yielded a co-crystalline solid with excellent aqueous dissolution and oral absorption. The analysis suggests a generalizable approach for identifying drug candidate compounds that either can or cannot be rendered orally bioavailable by alteration of their crystalline solid phases, in an approach that provides a pragmatic way to attain substantial enhancements in the success rate of drug discovery and development.


Subject(s)
Hepacivirus/enzymology , Protease Inhibitors/chemistry , Viral Nonstructural Proteins/antagonists & inhibitors , Amides/chemistry , Hydrogen Bonding , Oligopeptides/chemistry , Oligopeptides/metabolism , Protease Inhibitors/metabolism , Protein Binding , Solubility , Temperature , Thermodynamics , Viral Nonstructural Proteins/metabolism
5.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 14(25): 9041-6, 2012 Jul 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22641381

ABSTRACT

This paper describes an empirical model of polymer dynamics, based on the agitation of millimeter-sized polymeric beads. Although the interactions between the particles in the macroscopic model and those between the monomers of molecular-scale polymers are fundamentally different, both systems follow the Worm-Like Chain theory.


Subject(s)
Molecular Dynamics Simulation , Polymers/chemistry , Monte Carlo Method , Stress, Mechanical
6.
Philos Trans A Math Phys Eng Sci ; 370(1969): 2824-47, 2012 Jun 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22615463

ABSTRACT

A 1980 poem by Alan Mackay outlines his aspiration 'to see what all have seen but think what none have thought': a daunting task, which he accomplished not once, but several times. A 'truly myriadminded, manysided man-a veritable triacontahedron' in the words of his colleagues and friends, Alan Mackay pursued a lifelong interest in the problems of morphogenesis and form, a comprehension of which necessitated him crisscrossing the borders of the inanimate and animate world of soft and hard materials, through the integration of concepts and methods of chemistry, physics, mathematics and biology. In other words, he realized in his time a genuinely interdisciplinary approach to complex problems that still to this day remains beyond much of the academic community. Being invited to contribute a paper on the theme 'beyond crystals', we naturally wondered how Alan Mackay would think about the world of nanoscale self-assembly where so much depends on shape and form.


Subject(s)
Biopolymers/chemistry , Crystallization/methods , Macromolecular Substances/chemistry , Models, Chemical , Models, Molecular , Nanostructures/chemistry , Nanostructures/ultrastructure
7.
J Am Chem Soc ; 134(1): 333-45, 2012 Jan 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22088143

ABSTRACT

This paper describes a synthetic dimer of carbonic anhydrase, and a series of bivalent sulfonamide ligands with different lengths (25 to 69 Å between the ends of the fully extended ligands), as a model system to use in examining the binding of bivalent antibodies to antigens. Assays based on analytical ultracentrifugation and fluorescence binding indicate that this system forms cyclic, noncovalent complexes with a stoichiometry of one bivalent ligand to one dimer. This dimer binds the series of bivalent ligands with low picomolar avidities (K(d)(avidity) = 3-40 pM). A structurally analogous monovalent ligand binds to one active site of the dimer with K(d)(mono) = 16 nM. The bivalent association is thus significantly stronger (K(d)(mono)/K(d)(avidity) ranging from ~500 to 5000 unitless) than the monovalent association. We infer from these results, and by comparison of these results to previous studies, that bivalency in antibodies can lead to associations much tighter than monovalent associations (although the observed bivalent association is much weaker than predicted from the simplest level of theory: predicted K(d)(avidity) of ~0.002 pM and K(d)(mono)/K(d)(avidity) ~ 8 × 10(6) unitless).


Subject(s)
Carbonic Anhydrases/chemistry , Models, Molecular , Calorimetry , Carbonic Anhydrases/metabolism , Ethoxzolamide/chemistry , Humans , Immunoglobulin G/chemistry , Immunoglobulin G/immunology , Ligands , Protein Multimerization , Protein Structure, Quaternary , Sarcosine/chemistry , Sulfonamides/chemistry , Sulfonamides/metabolism , Thermodynamics , Benzenesulfonamides
8.
Bioconjug Chem ; 23(2): 293-9, 2012 Feb 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22188202

ABSTRACT

This paper describes a method for the selective precipitation and purification of a monovalent protein (carbonic anhydrase is used as a demonstration) from cellular lysate using ammonium sulfate and oligovalent ligands. The oligovalent ligands induce the formation of protein-ligand aggregates, and at an appropriate concentration of dissolved ammonium sulfate, these complexes precipitate. The purification involves three steps: (i) the removal of high-molecular-weight impurities through the addition of ammonium sulfate to the crude cell lysate; (ii) the introduction of an oligovalent ligand and the selective precipitation of the target protein-ligand aggregates from solution; and (iii) the removal of the oligovalent ligand from the precipitate by dialysis to release the target protein. The increase of mass and volume of the proteins upon aggregate formation reduces their solubility, and results in the selective precipitation of these aggregates. We recovered human carbonic anhydrase, from crude cellular lysate, in 82% yield and 95% purity with a trivalent benzene sulfonamide ligand. This method provides a chromatography-free strategy of purifying monovalent proteins--for which appropriate oligovalent ligands can be synthesized--and combines the selectivity of affinity-based purification with the convenience of salt-induced precipitation.


Subject(s)
Ammonium Sulfate/chemistry , Carbonic Anhydrases/chemistry , Carbonic Anhydrases/isolation & purification , Fractional Precipitation/methods , Sulfonamides/chemistry , Carbonic Anhydrases/metabolism , Humans , Ligands , Solubility
9.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 108(44): 17889-94, 2011 Nov 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22011572

ABSTRACT

The hydrophobic effect--a rationalization of the insolubility of nonpolar molecules in water--is centrally important to biomolecular recognition. Despite extensive research devoted to the hydrophobic effect, its molecular mechanisms remain controversial, and there are still no reliably predictive models for its role in protein-ligand binding. Here we describe a particularly well-defined system of protein and ligands--carbonic anhydrase and a series of structurally homologous heterocyclic aromatic sulfonamides--that we use to characterize hydrophobic interactions thermodynamically and structurally. In binding to this structurally rigid protein, a set of ligands (also defined to be structurally rigid) shows the expected gain in binding free energy as hydrophobic surface area is added. Isothermal titration calorimetry demonstrates that enthalpy determines these increases in binding affinity, and that changes in the heat capacity of binding are negative. X-ray crystallography and molecular dynamics simulations are compatible with the proposal that the differences in binding between the homologous ligands stem from changes in the number and organization of water molecules localized in the active site in the bound complexes, rather than (or perhaps in addition to) release of structured water from the apposed hydrophobic surfaces. These results support the hypothesis that structured water molecules--including both the molecules of water displaced by the ligands and those reorganized upon ligand binding--determine the thermodynamics of binding of these ligands at the active site of the protein. Hydrophobic effects in various contexts have different structural and thermodynamic origins, although all may be manifestations of the differences in characteristics of bulk water and water close to hydrophobic surfaces.


Subject(s)
Carbonic Anhydrases/metabolism , Sulfonamides/metabolism , Binding Sites , Calorimetry , Crystallography, X-Ray , Molecular Dynamics Simulation , Thermodynamics
10.
Orig Life Evol Biosph ; 41(5): 399-412, 2011 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21728078

ABSTRACT

This article reports rate constants for thiol-thioester exchange (k (ex)), and for acid-mediated (k (a)), base-mediated (k (b)), and pH-independent (k (w)) hydrolysis of S-methyl thioacetate and S-phenyl 5-dimethylamino-5-oxo-thiopentanoate-model alkyl and aryl thioalkanoates, respectively-in water. Reactions such as thiol-thioester exchange or aminolysis could have generated molecular complexity on early Earth, but for thioesters to have played important roles in the origin of life, constructive reactions would have needed to compete effectively with hydrolysis under prebiotic conditions. Knowledge of the kinetics of competition between exchange and hydrolysis is also useful in the optimization of systems where exchange is used in applications such as self-assembly or reversible binding. For the alkyl thioester S-methyl thioacetate, which has been synthesized in simulated prebiotic hydrothermal vents, k (a) = 1.5 × 10(-5) M(-1) s(-1), k (b) = 1.6 × 10(-1) M(-1) s(-1), and k (w) = 3.6 × 10(-8) s(-1). At pH 7 and 23°C, the half-life for hydrolysis is 155 days. The second-order rate constant for thiol-thioester exchange between S-methyl thioacetate and 2-sulfonatoethanethiolate is k (ex) = 1.7 M(-1) s(-1). At pH 7 and 23°C, with [R″S(H)] = 1 mM, the half-life of the exchange reaction is 38 h. These results confirm that conditions (pH, temperature, pK (a) of the thiol) exist where prebiotically relevant thioesters can survive hydrolysis in water for long periods of time and rates of thiol-thioester exchange exceed those of hydrolysis by several orders of magnitude.


Subject(s)
Organic Chemistry Phenomena , Origin of Life , Sulfhydryl Compounds/chemistry , Sulfides/chemistry , Water/chemistry , Acetates/chemistry , Alkanesulfonates/chemistry , Arylsulfonates/chemistry , Earth, Planet , Half-Life , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Hydrothermal Vents/chemistry , Kinetics , Temperature
11.
J Am Chem Soc ; 133(35): 14017-26, 2011 Sep 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21790183

ABSTRACT

The hydrophobic effect, the free-energetically favorable association of nonpolar solutes in water, makes a dominant contribution to binding of many systems of ligands and proteins. The objective of this study was to examine the hydrophobic effect in biomolecular recognition using two chemically different but structurally similar hydrophobic groups, aliphatic hydrocarbons and aliphatic fluorocarbons, and to determine whether the hydrophobicity of the two groups could be distinguished by thermodynamic and biostructural analysis. This paper uses isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) to examine the thermodynamics of binding of benzenesulfonamides substituted in the para position with alkyl and fluoroalkyl chains (H(2)NSO(2)C(6)H(4)-CONHCH(2)(CX(2))(n)CX(3), n = 0-4, X = H, F) to human carbonic anhydrase II (HCA II). Both alkyl and fluoroalkyl substituents contribute favorably to the enthalpy and the entropy of binding; these contributions increase as the length of chain of the hydrophobic substituent increases. Crystallography of the protein-ligand complexes indicates that the benzenesulfonamide groups of all ligands examined bind with similar geometry, that the tail groups associate with the hydrophobic wall of HCA II (which is made up of the side chains of residues Phe131, Val135, Pro202, and Leu204), and that the structure of the protein is indistinguishable for all but one of the complexes (the longest member of the fluoroalkyl series). Analysis of the thermodynamics of binding as a function of structure is compatible with the hypothesis that hydrophobic binding of both alkyl and fluoroalkyl chains to hydrophobic surface of carbonic anhydrase is due primarily to the release of nonoptimally hydrogen-bonded water molecules that hydrate the binding cavity (including the hydrophobic wall) of HCA II and to the release of water molecules that surround the hydrophobic chain of the ligands. This study defines the balance of enthalpic and entropic contributions to the hydrophobic effect in this representative system of protein and ligand: hydrophobic interactions, here, seem to comprise approximately equal contributions from enthalpy (plausibly from strengthening networks of hydrogen bonds among molecules of water) and entropy (from release of water from configurationally restricted positions).


Subject(s)
Carbonic Anhydrase II/metabolism , Fluorocarbons/chemistry , Fluorocarbons/metabolism , Carbonic Anhydrase II/chemistry , Crystallography, X-Ray , Humans , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Ligands , Models, Molecular , Protein Binding , Protein Conformation , Sulfonamides/chemistry , Sulfonamides/metabolism , Thermodynamics , Benzenesulfonamides
12.
J Am Chem Soc ; 133(30): 11701-15, 2011 Aug 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21671600

ABSTRACT

This paper describes the development of a new bivalent system comprising synthetic dimers of carbonic anhydrase linked chemically through thiol groups of cysteine residues introduced by site-directed mutagenesis. These compounds serve as models with which to study the interaction of bivalent proteins with ligands presented at the surface of mixed self-assembled monolayers (SAMs). Monovalent carbonic anhydrase (CA) binds to benzenesulfonamide ligands presented on the surface of the SAM with K(d)(surf) = 89 nM. The synthetic bivalent proteins--inspired by the structure of immunoglobulins--bind bivalently to the sulfonamide-functionalized SAMs with low nanomolar avidities (K(d)(avidity,surf) = 1-3 nM); this difference represents a ~50-fold enhancement of bivalent over monovalent association. The paper describes dimers of CA having (i) different lengths of the covalent linker that joined the two proteins and (ii) different points of attachment of the linker to the protein (either near the active site (C133) or distal to the active site (C185)). Comparison of the thermodynamics of their interactions with SAMs presenting arylsulfonamide groups demonstrated that varying the length of the linker between the molecules of CA had virtually no effect on the rate of association, or on the avidity of these dimers with ligand-presenting surfaces. Varying the point of attachment of the linker between monomeric CA's also had almost no effect on the avidity of the dimers, although changing the point of attachment affected the rates of binding and unbinding. These observations indicate that the avidities of these bivalent proteins, and by inference the avidities of structurally similar bivalent proteins such as IgG, are unexpectedly insensitive to the structure of the linker connecting them.


Subject(s)
Carbonic Anhydrase II/chemistry , Immunoglobulins/chemistry , Carbonic Anhydrase II/metabolism , Catalytic Domain , Dimerization , Humans , Ligands , Models, Molecular , Molecular Structure , Stereoisomerism , Sulfonamides/chemistry , Surface Properties , Thermodynamics , Benzenesulfonamides
13.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 106(42): 17644-9, 2009 Oct 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19805062

ABSTRACT

The "beads-on-a-string" model for folding of polymers is a cornerstone of theoretical polymer science. This communication describes a physical model of beads-on-a-string, based on the folding of flexible strings of electrostatically charged beads in two dimensions. The system comprises millimeter-scale Teflon and Nylon-6,6 (spherical or cylindrical) beads (approximately 6 mm in diameter) separated by smaller (approximately 3 mm) poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) spherical beads, threaded on a flexible string. The smaller, uncharged beads define the distances between the larger beads, and control the flexibility of the string. During agitation of the sequence of beads on a planar, horizontal paper surface, tribocharging generates opposite electrostatic charges on the larger Nylon and Teflon beads, but leaves the smaller PMMA beads essentially uncharged; the resulting electrostatic interactions cause the string to fold. Examination and comparison of two models--one physical and one theoretical--may offer a new approach to understanding folding, collapse, and molecular recognition at an abstract level, with particular opportunity to explore the influence of the flexibility of the string and the shape of the beads on the pattern and rate of folding. The physical system is, thus, an analog computer, simulating the theoretical beads-on-a-string model in two dimensions; this system makes it possible to test hypotheses connecting "sequence" to "folding", rapidly and conveniently, while exploring nonlinearities and other complexities omitted from the theoretical model.


Subject(s)
Models, Molecular , Polymers/chemistry , Biopolymers/chemistry , Models, Chemical , Molecular Structure , Nucleic Acid Conformation , Nylons/chemistry , Polymethyl Methacrylate/chemistry , Polytetrafluoroethylene/chemistry , RNA/chemistry , Static Electricity , Thermodynamics
14.
J Org Chem ; 72(19): 7459-61, 2007 Sep 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17705546

ABSTRACT

Immobilized biocatalytic lithography is presented as an application of soft lithography. In traditional microcontact printing, diffusion limits resolution of pattern transfer. By using an immobilized catalyst, the lateral resolution of microcontact printing would depend only on the length and flexibility of the tether (<2 nm) as opposed to diffusion (>100 nm). In the work, exonuclease reversibly immobilized on a relief-patterned stamp is used to ablate ssDNA monolayers Percent of ablation was determined via confocal fluorescence microscopy to be approximately 70%.


Subject(s)
Acrylic Resins/chemistry , DNA, Single-Stranded/chemistry , Enzymes, Immobilized/chemistry , Exodeoxyribonucleases/chemistry , Nitrilotriacetic Acid/chemistry , Catalysis , Microscopy, Confocal , Microscopy, Fluorescence
15.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 104(8): 2579-84, 2007 Feb 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17307881

ABSTRACT

A cantilever device based on competitive binding of an immobilized receptor to immobilized and soluble ligand and capable of measuring solution-phase thermodynamic quantities is described. Through multiple binary queries, the device stochastically measures the probability of the formation of a bound complex between immobilized protein and immobilized ligand as a function of soluble ligand concentration. The resulting binding isotherm is described by a binding polynomial consisting of the activities of soluble and immobilized ligand and binding constants for the association of immobilized protein with free and immobilized ligand. Evaluation of the polynomial reveals an association constant for the formation of a complex between immobilized ligand and immobilized protein close to that for the formation of complex between soluble protein and soluble ligand. The methodology lays the foundation for construction of practical portable sensing devices.

16.
J Org Chem ; 68(15): 5805-11, 2003 Jul 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12868911

ABSTRACT

The development of carbohydrate-based therapeutics has been frustrated by the low affinities that characterize protein-carbohydrate complexation. Because of the oligomeric nature of most lectins, the use of multivalency may offer a successful strategy for the creation of high-affinity ligands. The solid-phase evaluation of libraries of peptide-linked multivalent ligands facilitates rapid examination of a large fraction of linker structure space. If such solid-phase assays are to replicate solution binding behavior, the potential for intermolecular bivalent binding on bead surfaces must be eliminated. Here we report the solid-phase synthesis and analysis of peptide-linked, spatially segregated mono- and bivalent ligands for the legume lectin concanavalin A. Bead shaving protocols were used for the creation of beads displaying spatially segregated binding sequences on the surface of Tentagel resins. The same ligands were also synthesized on PEGA resin to determine the effect of ligand presentation on solid-phase binding. While we set out to determine the lower limit of assay sensitivity, the unexpected observation that intermolecular bivalent ligand binding is enhanced for bivalent ligands relative to monovalent ligands allowed direct observation of the level of surface blocking required to prevent intermolecular bivalent ligand binding. For a protein with binding sites separated by 65 A, approximately 99.9% of Tentagel(1) surface sites and 99.99% of the total sites on a PEGA bead must be blocked to prevent intermolecular bivalent binding. We also report agglutination and calorimetric solution-phase binding studies of mono- and bivalent peptide-linked ligands.


Subject(s)
Lectins/chemistry , Ligands , Oligopeptides/chemical synthesis , Amino Acid Sequence , Concanavalin A , Hemagglutination Tests , Humans , Indicators and Reagents , Kinetics , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Oligopeptides/chemistry
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