6533b858fe1ef96bd12b5ad7

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Fluorovinylsulfones and -Sulfonates as Potent Covalent Reversible Inhibitors of the Trypanosomal Cysteine Protease Rhodesain: Structure–Activity Relationship, Inhibition Mechanism, Metabolism, and In Vivo Studies

Annika WagnerSascha JungNatalie FuchsPhilipp KleinUte DistlerJochen KleinBernd EngelsUte A. HellmichUte A. HellmichStefan TenzerFabian BarthelsHans Joachim RäderPatrick JoheWaldemar WaigelTri YulianiErika DiehlTill OpatzCollin ZimmerRobert A. ZimmermannChristian KerstenTanja SchirmeisterJessica Meyr

subject

MaleBiodistributionVinyl CompoundsMolecular modelTrypanosoma brucei bruceiCysteine Proteinase InhibitorsMiceStructure-Activity RelationshipParasitic Sensitivity TestsIn vivoDrug DiscoveryAnimalsHumansStructure–activity relationshipSulfonesEnzyme Assayschemistry.chemical_classificationMolecular StructureChemistryTrypanosoma brucei rhodesienseTrypanocidal AgentsCysteine proteaseMolecular Docking SimulationCysteine EndopeptidasesKineticsEnzymeBiochemistryCovalent bondMolecular MedicineFemaleSulfonic AcidsHeLa CellsProtein Binding

description

Rhodesain is a major cysteine protease of Trypanosoma brucei rhodesiense, a pathogen causing Human African Trypanosomiasis, and a validated drug target. Recently, we reported the development of α-halovinylsulfones as a new class of covalent reversible cysteine protease inhibitors. Here, α-fluorovinylsulfones/-sulfonates were optimized for rhodesain based on molecular modeling approaches. 2d, the most potent and selective inhibitor in the series, shows a single-digit nanomolar affinity and high selectivity toward mammalian cathepsins B and L. Enzymatic dilution assays and MS experiments indicate that 2d is a slow-tight binder (Ki = 3 nM). Furthermore, the nonfluorinated 2d-(H) shows favorable metabolism and biodistribution by accumulation in mice brain tissue after intraperitoneal and oral administration. The highest antitrypanosomal activity was observed for inhibitors with an N-terminal 2,3-dihydrobenzo[b][1,4]dioxine group and a 4-Me-Phe residue in P2 (2e/4e) with nanomolar EC50 values (0.14/0.80 μM). The different mechanisms of reversible and irreversible inhibitors were explained using QM/MM calculations and MD simulations.

https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jmedchem.1c01002