Structural Characterization of Thiadiazolesulfonamide Inhibitors Bound to Neisseria gonorrhoeae α-Carbonic Anhydrase.
Anil Kumar MarapakaAlessio NocentiniMolly S YouseWeiwei AnKatrina J HollyChittaranjan DasRavi YadavMohamed N SeleemClaudiu T SupuranDaniel P FlahertyPublished in: ACS medicinal chemistry letters (2022)
Drug-resistant Neisseria gonorrhoeae is a critical threat to public health, and bacterial carbonic anhydrases expressed by N. gonorrhoeae are potential new therapeutic targets to combat this pathogen. To further expand upon our recent reports of bacterial carbonic anhydrase inhibitors for the treatment of N. gonorrhoeae , our team has solved ligand-bound crystal structures of the FDA-approved carbonic anhydrase inhibitor acetazolamide, along with three analogs, in complex with the essential α-carbonic anhydrase isoform from N. gonorrhoeae . The structural data for the analogs presented bound to N. gonorrhoeae α-carbonic anhydrase supports the observed structure-activity relationship for in vitro inhibition with this scaffold against the enzyme. Moreover, the ligand-bound structures indicate differences in binding poses compared to those traditionally observed with the close human ortholog carbonic anhydrase II. These results present key differences in inhibitor binding between N. gonorrhoeae α-carbonic anhydrase and the human carbonic anhydrase II isoform.
Keyphrases
- drug resistant
- public health
- endothelial cells
- multidrug resistant
- structure activity relationship
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- acinetobacter baumannii
- pluripotent stem cells
- molecular docking
- palliative care
- dna binding
- high resolution
- quality improvement
- transcription factor
- adverse drug
- replacement therapy
- mass spectrometry
- smoking cessation
- drug induced
- molecular dynamics simulations