Design of Gallinamide A Analogs as Potent Inhibitors of the Cysteine Proteases Human Cathepsin L and Trypanosoma cruzi Cruzain.
Paul D BoudreauBailey W MillerLaura-Isobel McCallJehad AlmalitiRaphael ReherKen HirataThu LeJair L Siqueira-NetoVivian HookWilliam H GerwickPublished in: Journal of medicinal chemistry (2019)
Gallinamide A, originally isolated with a modest antimalarial activity, was subsequently reisolated and characterized as a potent, selective, and irreversible inhibitor of the human cysteine protease cathepsin L. Molecular docking identified potential modifications to improve binding, which were synthesized as a suite of analogs. Resultingly, this current study produced the most potent gallinamide analog yet tested against cathepsin L (10, Ki = 0.0937 ± 0.01 nM and kinact/Ki = 8 730 000). From a protein structure and substrate preference perspective, cruzain, an essential Trypanosoma cruzi cysteine protease, is highly homologous. Our investigations revealed that gallinamide and its analogs potently inhibit cruzain and are exquisitely toxic toward T. cruzi in the intracellular amastigote stage. The most active compound, 5, had an IC50 = 5.1 ± 1.4 nM, but was relatively inactive to both the epimastigote (insect stage) and the host cell, and thus represents a new candidate for the treatment of Chagas disease.
Keyphrases
- molecular docking
- trypanosoma cruzi
- endothelial cells
- molecular dynamics simulations
- single cell
- fluorescent probe
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- photodynamic therapy
- living cells
- pluripotent stem cells
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- dna damage
- cell therapy
- dna repair
- risk assessment
- reactive oxygen species
- climate change
- lymph node
- zika virus
- human health
- rectal cancer
- plasmodium falciparum
- structure activity relationship
- structural basis