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Carba-cyclophellitols Are Neutral Retaining-Glucosidase Inhibitors
Author(s) -
Thomas J. M. Beenakker,
Dennis P. A. Wander,
Wendy A. Offen,
Marta Artola,
Lluı́s Raich,
Maria J. Ferraz,
Kah-Yee Li,
Judith Houben,
Erwin R. van Rijssel,
Thomas Hansen,
Gijsbert A. van der Marel,
Jeroen D. C. Codée,
Johannes M. F. G. Aerts,
Carme Rovira,
G.J. Davies,
Herman S. Overkleeft
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of the american chemical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.115
H-Index - 612
eISSN - 1520-5126
pISSN - 0002-7863
DOI - 10.1021/jacs.7b01773
Subject(s) - chemistry , metadynamics , thermotoga maritima , stereochemistry , moiety , covalent bond , transition state analog , enzyme , active site , molecular dynamics , computational chemistry , biochemistry , organic chemistry , escherichia coli , gene
The conformational analysis of glycosidases affords a route to their specific inhibition through transition-state mimicry. Inspired by the rapid reaction rates of cyclophellitol and cyclophellitol aziridine-both covalent retaining β-glucosidase inhibitors-we postulated that the corresponding carba "cyclopropyl" analogue would be a potent retaining β-glucosidase inhibitor for those enzymes reacting through the 4 H 3 transition-state conformation. Ab initio metadynamics simulations of the conformational free energy landscape for the cyclopropyl inhibitors show a strong bias for the 4 H 3 conformation, and carba-cyclophellitol, with an N-(4-azidobutyl)carboxamide moiety, proved to be a potent inhibitor (K i = 8.2 nM) of the Thermotoga maritima TmGH1 β-glucosidase. 3-D structural analysis and comparison with unreacted epoxides show that this compound indeed binds in the 4 H 3 conformation, suggesting that conformational strain induced through a cyclopropyl unit may add to the armory of tight-binding inhibitor designs.

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