The intriguing chemistry and biology of soraphens.
Arun NainiFlorenz SasseMark BrönstrupPublished in: Natural product reports (2019)
Covering: up to the end of 2018Soraphens are a class of polyketide natural products discovered from the myxobacterial strain Sorangium cellulosum. The review is intended to provide an overview on the biosynthesis, chemistry and biological properties of soraphens, that represent a prime example to showcase the value of natural products as tools to decipher cell biology, but also to open novel therapeutic options. The prototype soraphen A is an inhibitor of acetyl coenzyme A carboxylase (ACC1/2), an enzyme that converts acetyl-CoA to malonyl-CoA and thereby controls essential cellular metabolic processes like lipogenesis and fatty acid oxidation. Soraphens illustrate how the inhibition of a single target (ACC1/2) may be explored to treat various pathological conditions: initially developed as a fungicide, efforts in the past decade were directed towards human diseases, including diabetes/obesity, cancer, hepatitis C, HIV, and autoimmune disease - and led to a synthetic molecule, discovered by virtual screening of the allosteric binding site of soraphen in ACC, that is currently in phase 2 clinical trials. We will summarize how structural analogs of soraphen A have been generated through extensive isolation efforts, genetic engineering of the biosynthetic gene cluster, semisynthesis as well as partial and total synthesis.
Keyphrases
- fatty acid
- clinical trial
- type diabetes
- genome wide
- endothelial cells
- antiretroviral therapy
- high fat diet induced
- papillary thyroid
- copy number
- quality improvement
- hiv infected
- metabolic syndrome
- hiv positive
- human immunodeficiency virus
- cardiovascular disease
- insulin resistance
- drug discovery
- single cell
- weight loss
- hepatitis c virus
- small molecule
- minimally invasive
- multiple sclerosis
- hydrogen peroxide
- cell therapy
- weight gain
- squamous cell
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- stem cells
- body mass index
- lymph node metastasis
- randomized controlled trial
- open label
- molecular docking
- gene expression
- mesenchymal stem cells
- bone marrow