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A Phenylboronic Acid-Based Transition State Analogue Yields Nanomolar Inhibition of Mandelate Racemase.

Oliver P KuehmJoshua A HaydenStephen L Bearne
Published in: Biochemistry (2023)
Mandelate racemase (MR) catalyzes the Mg 2+ -dependent interconversion of ( R )- and ( S )-mandelate by stabilizing the altered substrate in the transition state (TS) by ∼26 kcal/mol. The enzyme has been employed as a model to explore the limits to which the free energy of TS stabilization may be captured by TS analogues to effect strong binding. Herein, we determined the thermodynamic parameters accompanying binding of a series of bromo-, chloro-, and fluoro-substituted phenylboronic acids (PBAs) by MR and found that binding was predominately driven by favorable entropy changes. 3,4-Dichloro-PBA was discovered to be the most potent inhibitor yet identified for MR, binding with a K d app value of 11 ± 2 nM and exceeding the binding of the substrate by ∼72,000-fold. The Δ C p value accompanying binding (-488 ± 18 cal·mol -1 K -1 ) suggested that dispersion forces contribute significantly to the binding. The pH-dependence of the inhibition revealed that MR preferentially binds the anionic, tetrahedral form of 3,4-dichloro-PBA with a pH-independent K i value of 5.7 ± 0.5 nM, which was consistent with the observed upfield shift of the 11 B NMR signal. The linear free energy relationship between log( k cat / K m ) and log(1/ K i ) for wild-type and 11 MR variants binding 3,4-dichloro-PBA had a slope of 0.8 ± 0.2, indicating that MR recognizes the inhibitor as an analogue of the TS. Hence, halogen substitution may be utilized to capture additional free energy of TS stabilization arising from dispersion forces to enhance the binding of boronic acid inhibitors by MR.
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