1,6- epi -Cyclophellitol Cyclosulfamidate Is a Bona Fide Lysosomal α-Glucosidase Stabilizer for the Treatment of Pompe Disease.
Ken KokChi-Lin KuoRebecca E KatzyLindsey T LelieveldLiang WuVéronique Roig-ZamboniGijsbert A van der MarelJeroen D C CodéeGerlind SulzenbacherGideon J DaviesHerman S OverkleeftJohannes M F G AertsMarta ArtolaPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2022)
α-Glucosidase inhibitors are potential therapeutics for the treatment of diabetes, viral infections, and Pompe disease. Herein, we report a 1,6- epi -cyclophellitol cyclosulfamidate as a new class of reversible α-glucosidase inhibitors that displays enzyme inhibitory activity by virtue of its conformational mimicry of the substrate when bound in the Michaelis complex. The α-d- glc- configured cyclophellitol cyclosulfamidate 4 binds in a competitive manner the human lysosomal acid α-glucosidase (GAA), ER α-glucosidases, and, at higher concentrations, intestinal α-glucosidases, displaying an excellent selectivity over the human β-glucosidases GBA and GBA2 and glucosylceramide synthase (GCS). Cyclosulfamidate 4 stabilizes recombinant human GAA (rhGAA, alglucosidase alfa, Myozyme) in cell medium and plasma and facilitates enzyme trafficking to lysosomes. It stabilizes rhGAA more effectively than existing small-molecule chaperones and does so in vitro , in cellulo , and in vivo in zebrafish, thus representing a promising therapeutic alternative to Miglustat for Pompe disease.
Keyphrases
- replacement therapy
- small molecule
- late onset
- molecular docking
- endothelial cells
- recombinant human
- type diabetes
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- pluripotent stem cells
- molecular dynamics simulations
- smoking cessation
- single cell
- sars cov
- metabolic syndrome
- oxidative stress
- adipose tissue
- climate change
- bone marrow
- insulin resistance
- mesenchymal stem cells
- amino acid