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1.
Protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B (PTP1B) has been proposed to be an ideal target for treatment of type II diabetes and obesity. However, no druggable PTP1B inhibitor has been established and there is still an urgent demand for the development of structurally novel PTPIB inhibitor. Herein, we reported core-structurally novel PTP1B inhibitors with low micromole-ranged inhibitory activity by one-pot reaction from simple starting materials. Further studies demonstrated some of these active compounds had a specific selectivity over other PTPs. The structure and activity relationship was also described. The best active and selective compound 5e inhibited PTP1B activity with an IC50 of 4.53 μM. Molecular docking analysis further demonstrated that compound 5e bound to the active pocket of PTP1B. The results might provide some insights for further development of new drugs for type II diabetes and obesity.  相似文献   

2.
Protein-tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs) are critically involved in regulation of signal transduction processes. Members of this class of enzymes are considered attractive therapeutic targets in several disease states, e.g. diabetes, cancer, and inflammation. However, most reported PTP inhibitors have been phosphorus-containing compounds, tight binding inhibitors, and/or inhibitors that covalently modify the enzymes. We therefore embarked on identifying a general, reversible, competitive PTP inhibitor that could be used as a common scaffold for lead optimization for specific PTPs. We here report the identification of 2-(oxalylamino)-benzoic acid (OBA) as a classical competitive inhibitor of several PTPs. X-ray crystallography of PTP1B complexed with OBA and related non-phosphate low molecular weight derivatives reveals that the binding mode of these molecules to a large extent mimics that of the natural substrate including hydrogen bonding to the PTP signature motif. In addition, binding of OBA to the active site of PTP1B creates a unique arrangement involving Asp(181), Lys(120), and Tyr(46). PTP inhibitors are essential tools in elucidating the biological function of specific PTPs and they may eventually be developed into selective drug candidates. The unique enzyme kinetic features and the low molecular weight of OBA makes it an ideal starting point for further optimization.  相似文献   

3.
Protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs), which catalyze the dephosphorylation of phosphotyrosine in protein substrates, are important cell-signaling regulators, as well as potential drug targets for a range of human diseases. Chemical tools for selectively targeting the activities of individual PTPs would help to elucidate PTP signaling roles and potentially expedite the validation of PTPs as therapeutic targets. We have recently reported a novel strategy for the design of non-natural allosteric-inhibition sites in PTPs, in which a tricysteine moiety is engineered within the PTP catalytic domain at a conserved location outside of the active site. Introduction of the tricysteine motif, which does not exist in any wild-type PTP, serves to sensitize target PTPs to inhibition by a biarsenical compound, providing a generalizable strategy for the generation of allosterically sensitized (as) PTPs. Here we show that the potency, selectivity, and kinetics of asPTP inhibition can be significantly improved by exploring the inhibitory action of a range of biarsenical compounds that differ in interarsenical distance, steric bulk, and electronic structure. By investigating the inhibitor sensitivities of five asPTPs from four different subfamilies, we have found that asPTP catalytic domains can be broadly divided into two groups: one that is most potently inhibited by biarsenical compounds with large interarsenical distances, such as AsCy3-EDT2, and one that is most potently inhibited by compounds with relatively small interarsenical distances, such as FlAsH-EDT2. Moreover, we show that a tetrachlorinated derivative of FlAsH-EDT2, Cl4FlAsH-EDT2, targets asPTPs significantly more potently than the parent compound, both in vitro and in asPTP-expressing cells. Our results show that biarsenicals with altered interarsenical distances and electronic properties are important tools for optimizing the control of asPTP activity and, more broadly, suggest that diversification of biarsenical libraries can serve to increase the efficacy of these compounds in targeted control of protein function.  相似文献   

4.
Allele-specific enzyme inhibitors are powerful tools in chemical biology. However, few general approaches for the discovery of such inhibitors have been described. Herein is reported a method for the sensitization of protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs) to small-molecule inhibition. It is shown that mutation of an active-site isoleucine to alanine (I219A) sensitizes PTP1B to inhibition by a class of thiophene-based inhibitors. This sensitization strategy succeeds for both 'orthogonal' inhibitors, designed to be incompatible with wild-type PTP active sites, and previously optimized wild-type PTP inhibitors. The finding that the I219A mutation sensitizes phosphatase domains to a variety of compounds suggests that isoleucine 219 may act as a 'gatekeeper' residue that can be widely exploited for the chemical-genetic analysis of PTP function.  相似文献   

5.
Protein-tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs) are considered important therapeutic targets because of their pivotal role as regulators of signal transduction and thus their implication in several human diseases such as diabetes, cancer, and autoimmunity. In particular, PTP1B has been the focus of many academic and industrial laboratories because it was found to be an important negative regulator of insulin and leptin signaling, and hence a potential therapeutic target in diabetes and obesity. As a result, significant progress has been achieved in the design of highly selective and potent PTP1B inhibitors. In contrast, little attention has been given to other potential drug targets within the PTP family. Guided by x-ray crystallography, molecular modeling, and enzyme kinetic analyses with wild type and mutant PTPs, we describe the development of a general, low molecular weight, non-peptide, non-phosphorus PTP inhibitor into an inhibitor that displays more than 100-fold selectivity for PTPbeta over PTP1B. Of note, our structure-based design principles, which are based on extensive bioinformatics analyses of the PTP family, are general in nature. Therefore, we anticipate that this strategy, here applied to PTPbeta, in principle can be used in the design and development of selective inhibitors of many, if not most PTPs.  相似文献   

6.
Protein-tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs) are important for the control of proper cellular tyrosine phosphorylation. Despite the large number of PTPs encoded in the human genome and the emerging roles played by PTPs in human diseases, a detailed understanding of the role played by PTPs in normal physiology and in pathogenic conditions has been hampered by the absence of PTP-specific inhibitors. Such inhibitors could serve as useful tools for determining the physiological functions of PTPs and may constitute valuable therapeutics in the treatment of several human diseases. However, because of the highly conserved nature of the active site, it has been difficult to develop selective PTP inhibitors. By taking an approach to tether together two small ligands that can interact simultaneously with the active site and a unique proximal noncatalytic site, we have recently acquired Compound 2 (see Fig. 1), the most potent and selective PTP1B inhibitor identified to date, which exhibits several orders of magnitude selectivity in favor of PTP1B against a panel of PTPs. We describe an evaluation of the interaction between 2 and its analogs with PTP1B and its site-directed mutants selected based on hydrogen/deuterium exchange of PTP1B backbone amides in the presence and absence of 2. We have established the binding mode of Compound 2 and identified 12 PTP1B residues that are important for the potency and selectivity of Compound 2. Although many of the residues important for Compound 2 binding are not unique to PTP1B, the combinations of all contact residues differ between PTP isozymes, which suggest that the binding surface defined by these residues in individual PTPs determines inhibitor selectivity. Our results provide structural information toward understanding of the molecular basis for potent and selective PTP1B inhibition and further establish the feasibility of acquiring potent, yet highly selective, PTP inhibitory agents.  相似文献   

7.
Zhang XY  Bishop AC 《Biochemistry》2008,47(15):4491-4500
Small molecules that can be used to turn off the activities of specific cellular proteins are essential tools for chemical biology. Few such compounds are known, however, and they are particularly difficult to identify for members of large protein families. Here, we present a method for insertion of a chemical "off switch" into a catalytically essential loop region (the "WPD loop") of a protein tyrosine phosphatase (PTP). Using a combination of point mutations and amino acid insertions, we have engineered variants of T-cell PTP (TCPTP) that possess cysteine-rich WPD loops. The engineered WPD loops, which contain sequences that appear in no wild-type PTP, confer upon TCPTP the ability to bind a cell-permeable small molecule (the biarsenical fluorescein derivative, FlAsH) that is not an inhibitor of wild-type PTPs. We have identified sites in TCPTP's WPD loop that can be modified to display FlAsH-binding cysteine residues without disrupting TCPTP's inherent PTP activity, as assayed with either small-molecule or phosphorylated-peptide PTP substrates. Upon addition of the FlAsH ligand, however, the activities of the mutants drop dramatically. Inhibition of the FlAsH-sensitized TCPTP mutants is rapid and specific; and strong FlAsH sensitivity was observed in mutants that contain as few as two cysteine point mutations in their engineered WPD loops. Our results show that relatively conservative substitutions can be used to engineer precise small-molecule control of PTP activity. Moreover, since all known classical PTPs utilize the WPD-loop mechanism targeted in this study, it is likely that a substantial fraction of the PTP superfamily can be sensitized through an analogous approach.  相似文献   

8.
A central challenge of chemical biology is the development of small-molecule tools for controlling protein activity in a target-specific manner. Such tools are particularly useful if they can be systematically applied to the members of large protein families. Here we report that protein tyrosine phosphatases can be systematically 'sensitized' to target-specific inhibition by a cell-permeable small molecule, Fluorescein Arsenical Hairpin Binder (FlAsH), which does not inhibit any wild-type PTP investigated to date. We show that insertion of a FlAsH-binding peptide at a conserved position in the PTP catalytic-domain's WPD loop confers novel FlAsH sensitivity upon divergent PTPs. The position of the sensitizing insertion is readily identifiable from primary-sequence alignments, and we have generated FlAsH-sensitive mutants for seven different classical PTPs from six distinct subfamilies of receptor and non-receptor PTPs, including one phosphatase (PTP-PEST) whose three-dimensional catalytic-domain structure is not known. In all cases, FlAsH-mediated PTP inhibition was target specific and potent, with inhibition constants for the seven sensitized PTPs ranging from 17 to 370 nM. Our results suggest that a substantial fraction of the PTP superfamily will be likewise sensitizable to allele-specific inhibition; FlAsH-based PTP targeting thus potentially provides a rapid, general means for selectively targeting PTP activity in cell-culture- or model-organism-based signaling studies.  相似文献   

9.
Protein-tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs) are important signaling enzymes that have emerged within the last decade as a new class of drug targets. It has previously been shown that suramin is a potent, reversible, and competitive inhibitor of PTP1B and Yersinia PTP (YopH). We therefore screened 45 suramin analogs against a panel of seven PTPs, including PTP1B, YopH, CD45, Cdc25A, VHR, PTPalpha, and LAR, to identify compounds with improved potency and specificity. Of the 45 compounds, we found 11 to have inhibitory potency comparable or significantly improved relative to suramin. We also found suramin to be a potent inhibitor (IC(50) = 1.5 microm) of Cdc25A, a phosphatase that mediates cell cycle progression and a potential target for cancer therapy. In addition we also found three other compounds, NF201, NF336, and NF339, to be potent (IC(50) < 5 microm) and specific (at least 20-30-fold specificity with respect to the other human PTPs tested) inhibitors of Cdc25A. Significantly, we found two potent and specific inhibitors, NF250 and NF290, for YopH, the phosphatase that is an essential virulence factor for bubonic plague. Two of the compounds tested, NF504 and NF506, had significantly improved potency as PTP inhibitors for all phosphatases tested except for LAR and PTPalpha. Surprisingly, we found that a significant number of these compounds activated the receptor-like phosphatases, PTPalpha and LAR. In further characterizing this activation phenomenon, we reveal a novel role for the membrane-distal cytoplasmic PTP domain (D2) of PTPalpha: the direct intramolecular regulation of the activity of the membrane-proximal cytoplasmic PTP domain (D1). Binding of certain of these compounds to PTPalpha disrupts D1-D2 basal state contacts and allows new contacts to occur between D1 and D2, which activates D1 by as much as 12-14-fold when these contacts are optimized.  相似文献   

10.
Protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs) constitute a large and structurally diverse family of signaling enzymes that control the cellular levels of protein tyrosine phosphorylation. Malfunction of PTP activity has significant implications in many human diseases, and the PTP protein family provides an exciting array of validated diabetes/obesity (PTP1B), oncology (SHP2), autoimmunity (Lyp), and infectious disease (mPTPB) targets. However, despite the fact that PTPs have been garnering attention as novel therapeutic targets, they remain largely an untapped resource. The main challenges facing drug developers by the PTPs are inhibitor specificity and bioavailability. Work over the last ten years has demonstrated that it is feasible to develop potent and selective inhibitors for individual members of the PTP family by tethering together small ligands that can simultaneously occupy both the active site and unique nearby peripheral binding sites. Recent results with the bicyclic salicylic acid pharmacophores indicate that the new chemistry platform may provide a potential solution to overcome the bioavailability issue that has plagued the PTP drug discovery field for many years. Structural analysis of PTP-inhibitor complexes reveals molecular determinants important for the development of more potent and selective PTP inhibitors, thus offering hope in the medicinal chemistry of a largely unexploited protein class with a wealth of attractive drug targets.  相似文献   

11.
Utilizing structure-based design, we have previously demonstrated that it is possible to obtain selective inhibitors of protein-tyrosine phosphatase 1B (PTP1B). A basic nitrogen was introduced into a general PTP inhibitor to form a salt bridge to Asp48 in PTP1B and simultaneously cause repulsion in PTPs containing an asparagine in the equivalent position [Iversen, L. F., et al. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 10300-10307]. Further, we have recently demonstrated that Gly259 in PTP1B forms the bottom of a gateway that allows easy access to the active site for a broad range of substrates, while bulky residues in the same position in other PTPs cause steric hindrance and reduced substrate recognition capacity [Peters, G. H., et al. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 18201-18209]. The current study was undertaken to investigate the feasibility of structure-based design, utilizing these differences in accessibility to the active site among various PTPs. We show that a general, low-molecular weight PTP inhibitor can be developed into a highly selective inhibitor for PTP1B and TC-PTP by introducing a substituent, which is designed to address the region around residues 258 and 259. Detailed enzyme kinetic analysis with a set of wild-type and mutant PTPs, X-ray protein crystallography, and molecular modeling studies confirmed that selectivity for PTP1B and TC-PTP was achieved due to steric hindrance imposed by bulky position 259 residues in other PTPs.  相似文献   

12.
Protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs) are important signaling enzymes that control such fundamental processes as proliferation, differentiation, survival/apoptosis, as well as adhesion and motility. Potent and selective PTP inhibitors serve not only as powerful research tools, but also as potential therapeutics against a variety illness including cancer and diabetes. PTP activity-based assays are widely used in high throughput screening (HTS) campaigns for PTP inhibitor discovery. These assays suffer from a major weakness, in that the reactivity of the active site Cys can cause serious problems as highly reactive oxidizing and alkylating agents may surface as hits. We describe the development of a fluorescence polarization (FP)-based displacement assay that makes the use of an active site Cys to Ser mutant PTP (e.g., PTP1B/C215S) that retains the wild-type binding affinity. The potency of library compounds is assessed by their ability to compete with the fluorescently labeled active site ligand for binding to the Cys to Ser PTP mutant. Finally, the substitution of the active site Cys by a Ser renders the mutant PTP insensitive to oxidation and alkylation and thus will likely eliminate "false" positives due to modification of the active site Cys that destroy the phosphatase activity.  相似文献   

13.
Protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs) form a large family of enzymes that serve as key regulatory components in signal transduction pathways. Recent gene knockout studies in mice identify PTP1B as a promising target for anti-diabetes/obesity drug discovery. PTPs are also implicated in a wide variety of other disorders, including cancer. Significant progress has been made in identifying small molecules that simultaneously bind both the active site and a unique adjacent site that enables specific inhibition of individual PTP isoenzymes. As a consequence, there are compelling reasons to believe that PTP inhibitors may ultimately serve as powerful therapeutic weapons in our arsenal for battling human diseases.  相似文献   

14.
Protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs) play a critical role in regulating insulin action in part through dephosphorylation of the active (autophosphorylated) form of the insulin receptor (IRK) and attenuation of its tyrosine kinase activity. Following insulin binding the activated IRK is rapidly internalized into the endosomal apparatus, a major site at which the IRK is dephosphorylated in vivo. Studies in rat liver suggest a complex regulatory process whereby PTPs may act, via selective IRK tyrosine dephosphorylation, to modulate IRK activity in both a positive and negative manner. Use of peroxovanadium (pV) compounds, shown to be powerful PTP inhibitors, has been critical in delineating a close relationship between the IRK and its associated PTP(s) in vivo. Indeed the in vivo administration of pV compounds effected activation of IRK in parallel with an inhibition of IRK-associated PTP activity. This process was accompanied by a lowering of blood glucose levels in both normal and diabetic rats thus implicating the IRK-associated PTP(s) as a suitable target for defining a novel class of insulin mimetic agents. Identification of the physiologically relevant IRK-associated PTP(s) should facilitate the development of drugs suitable for managing diabetes mellitus.  相似文献   

15.
A novel series of pTyr mimetics containing triaryl-sulfonamide derivatives (5a-r) are reported as potent and selective PTP1B inhibitors. Some of the test compounds (5o and 5p) showed excellent selectivity towards PTP1B over various PTPs, including TCPTP (in vitro). The lead compound 5o showed potent antidiabetic activity (in vivo), along with improved pharmacokinetic profile. These preliminary results confirm discovery of highly potent and selective PTP1B inhibitors for the treatment of T2DM.  相似文献   

16.
Phosphosignaling through pSer/pThr/pTyr is emerging as a common signaling mechanism in prokaryotes. The human pathogen Staphylococcus aureus produces two low-molecular-weight protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs), PtpA and PtpB, with unknown functions. To provide the structural context for understanding PtpA function and substrate recognition, establish PtpA's structural relations within the PTP family, and provide a framework for the design of specific inhibitors, we solved the crystal structure of PtpA at 1 Å resolution. While PtpA adopts the common, conserved PTP fold and shows close overall similarity to eukaryotic PTPs, several features in the active site and surface organization are unique and can be explored to design selective inhibitors. A peptide bound in the active site mimics a phosphotyrosine substrate, affords insight into substrate recognition, and provides a testable substrate prediction. Genetic deletion of ptpA or ptpB does not affect in vitro growth or cell wall integrity, raising the possibility that PtpA and PtpB have specialized functions during infection.  相似文献   

17.

Background

Protein Tyrosine Phosphatases (PTPs) are enzymes that catalyze phosphotyrosine dephosphorylation and modulate cell differentiation, growth and metabolism. In mammals, PTPs play a key role in the modulation of canonical pathways involved in metabolism and immunity. PTP1B is the prototype member of classical PTPs and a major target for treating human diseases, such as cancer, obesity and diabetes. These signaling enzymes are, hence, targets of a wide array of inhibitors. Anautogenous mosquitoes rely on blood meals to lay eggs and are vectors of the most prevalent human diseases. Identifying the mosquito ortholog of PTP1B and determining its involvement in egg production is, therefore, important in the search for a novel and crucial target for vector control.

Methodology/Principal Findings

We conducted an analysis to identify the ortholog of mammalian PTP1B in the Aedes aegypti genome. We identified eight genes coding for classical PTPs. In silico structural and functional analyses of proteins coded by such genes revealed that four of these code for catalytically active enzymes. Among the four genes coding for active PTPs, AAEL001919 exhibits the greatest degree of homology with the mammalian PTP1B. Next, we evaluated the role of this enzyme in egg formation. Blood feeding largely affects AAEL001919 expression, especially in the fat body and ovaries. These tissues are critically involved in the synthesis and storage of vitellogenin, the major yolk protein. Including the classical PTP inhibitor sodium orthovanadate or the PTP substrate DiFMUP in the blood meal decreased vitellogenin synthesis and egg production. Similarly, silencing AAEL001919 using RNA interference (RNAi) assays resulted in 30% suppression of egg production.

Conclusions/Significance

The data reported herein implicate, for the first time, a gene that codes for a classical PTP in mosquito egg formation. These findings raise the possibility that this class of enzymes may be used as novel targets to block egg formation in mosquitoes.  相似文献   

18.
Many pharmacologically important receptors, including all cytokine receptors, signal via tyrosine (auto)phosphorylation, followed by resetting to their original state through the action of protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs). Establishing the specificity of PTPs for receptor substrates is critical both for understanding how signaling is regulated and for the development of specific PTP inhibitors that act as ligand mimetics. We have set up a systematic approach for finding PTPs that are specific for a receptor and have validated this approach with the insulin receptor kinase. We have tested nearly all known human PTPs (45) in a membrane binding assay, using "substrate-trapping" PTP mutants. These results, combined with secondary dephosphorylation tests, confirm and extend earlier findings that PTP-1b and T-cell PTP are physiological enzymes for the insulin receptor kinase. We demonstrate that this approach can rapidly reduce the number of PTPs that have a particular receptor or other phosphoprotein as their substrate.  相似文献   

19.
Protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B (PTP1B) has been implicated in the regulation of the insulin signaling pathway and represents an attractive target for the design of inhibitors in the treatment of type 2 diabetes and obesity. Inspection of the structure of PTP1B indicates that potent PTP1B inhibitors may be obtained by targeting a secondary aryl phosphate-binding site as well as the catalytic site. We report here the crystal structures of PTP1B in complex with first and second generation aryldifluoromethyl-phosphonic acid inhibitors. While all compounds bind in a previously unexploited binding pocket near the primary binding site, the second generation compounds also reach into the secondary binding site, and exhibit moderate selectivity for PTP1B over the closely related T-cell phosphatase. The molecular basis for the selectivity has been confirmed by single point mutation at position 52, where the two phosphatases differ by a phenylalanine-to-tyrosine switch. These compounds present a novel platform for the development of potent and selective PTP1B inhibitors.  相似文献   

20.
Intracellular pathogenic bacteria manipulate host signal transduction pathways to facilitate infection. Mycobacterium tuberculosis protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs) PtpA and PtpB are thought to be secreted into host cells and interfere with unidentified signals. To illuminate the mechanisms of regulation and substrate recognition, we determined the 1.7 A resolution crystal structure of PtpB in complex with the product phosphate. The protein adopts a simplified PTP fold, which combines features of the conventional PTPs and dual-specificity phosphatases. PtpB shows two unusual elaborations--a disordered, acidic loop and a flexible, two-helix lid that covers the active site--that are specific to mycobacterial orthologs. Biochemical studies suggest that substrate mimicry in the lid may protect the phosphatase from oxidative inactivation. The insertion and deletion of large structural elements in PtpB suggest that, outside the active site module, the PTP family is under unusual selective pressure that promotes changes in overall structure.  相似文献   

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