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1.
This study is an attempt to develop a simple search method for lead peptide candidates, which include constrained structures in a recognized sequence, using the design of a competitive inhibitor for HMG-CoA reductase (HMGR). A structure-functional analysis of previously synthesized peptides proposes that a competitive inhibitory peptide can be designed by maintaining bioactive conformation in a recognized sequence. A conformational aspect of the structure-based approach was applied to the peptide design. By analysis of the projections obtained through a principle component analysis (PCA) for short linear and cyclic peptides, a head-to-tail peptide cycle is considered as a model for its linear analogy. It is proposed that activities of the linear peptides based on an identical amino acid sequence, which are obtained from a less flexible peptide cycle, would be relatively higher than those obtained from more flexible cyclic peptides. The design criterion was formulated in terms of a 'V' parameter, reflecting a relative deviation of an individual peptide cycle from an average statistical peptide cycle based on all optimized structures of the cyclic peptides in set. Twelve peptide cycles were selected for the peptide library. Comparing the calculated 'V' parameters, two cyclic peptides (GLPTGG and GFPTGG) were selected as lead cycles from the library. Based on these sequences, six linear peptides obtained by breaking the cycle at different positions were selected as lead peptide candidates. The linear GFPTGG peptide, showing the highest inhibitory activity against HMGR, increases the inhibitory potency nearly tenfold. Kinetic analysis reveals that the GFPTGG peptide is a competitive inhibitor of HMG-CoA with an equilibrium constant of inhibitor binding (K(i)) of 6.4 +/- 0.3 microM. Conformational data support a conformation of the designed peptides close to the bioactive conformation of the previously synthesized active peptides.  相似文献   

2.
Comparison of the inferred amino acid sequence of orf AF1736 of Archaeoglobus fulgidus to that of Pseudomonas mevalonii HMG-CoA reductase suggested that AF1736 might encode a Class II HMG-CoA reductase. Following polymerase chain reaction-based cloning of AF1736 from A. fulgidus genomic DNA and expression in Escherichia coli, the encoded enzyme was purified to apparent homogeneity and its enzymic properties were determined. Activity was optimal at 85 degrees C, deltaHa was 54 kJ/mol, and the statin drug mevinolin inhibited competitively with HMG-CoA (Ki 180 microM). Protonated forms of His390 and Lys277, the apparent cognates of the active site histidine and lysine of the P. mevalonii enzyme, appear essential for activity. The mechanism proposed for catalysis of P. mevalonii HMG-CoA reductase thus appears valid for A. fulgidus HMG-CoA reductase. Unlike any other HMG-CoA reductase, the A. fulgidus enzyme exhibits dual coenzyme specificity. pH-activity profiles for all four reactions revealed that optimal activity using NADP(H) occurred at a pH from 1 to 3 units more acidic than that observed using NAD(H). Kinetic parameters were therefore determined for all substrates for all four catalyzed reactions using either NAD(H) or NADP(H). NADPH and NADH compete for occupancy of a common site. k(cat)[NAD(H)]/k(cat)[NADP(H)] varied from unity to under 70 for the four reactions, indicative of slight preference for NAD(H). The results indicate the importance of the protonated status of active site residues His390 and Lys277, shown by altered K(M) and k(cat) values, and indicate that NAD(H) and NADP(H) have comparable affinity for the same site.  相似文献   

3.
A series of novel 4-thiophenyl quinoline-based mevalonolactone derivatives were synthesized from ethyl 6,7,8-trisubstituted-4-chloro-quinoline-3-carboxylates by several reactions and evaluated for their ability to inhibit the rat HMG CoA reductase in vitro. It was found that substitution with a variety of thiophenyl groups at position 4 in quinoline resulted in retention or enhancement of the inhibition and the preferable groups were 4-isopropyl-thiophenyl and 3-methoxy-thiophenyl. (4R,6S)-6-[(E)-2-(6,7,8-trifluoro-4-isopropylthiophenyl-quinoline-3-yl)-ethenyl]-3,4,5,6-tetrahydro-4-hydroxy-2H-pyran-2-one (A16) and (4R, 6S)-6-[(E)-2-(6-fluoro-4,7-di-(3-methoxy-thiophenyl)-quinoline-3-yl)-ethenyl]-3,4,5,6-tetrahydro-4-hydroxy-2H-pyran-2-one (A23) were approximately three times more potent than rosuvastatin or pitavastatin in inhibiting HMG CoA reductase and selected as the hypocholesterolemic candidates for further evaluation.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Isolated gut tissue from male cotton boll weevil, Anthonomus grandis (Coleoptera: Curculionidae), incorporated radiolabeled acetate into components that co-eluted with monoterpenoid pheromone components on HPLC. This demonstrates that pheromone components of male A. grandis are produced de novo and strongly suggests that pheromone biosynthesis occurs in gut tissue. A central enzyme in isoprenoid biosynthesis is 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA reductase (HMG-R), and a full-length HMG-R cDNA was isolated from A. grandis. The predicted translation product was 54 and 45% identical to HMG-R from Ips paraconfusus and Drosophila melanogaster, respectively. HMG-R gene expression gradually increased with age in male A. grandis, which correlates with pheromone production. However, topical application of JH III did not significantly increase HMG-R mRNA levels.  相似文献   

6.
Monocyte-endothelial interaction plays a pivotal role in atherosclerosis. We previously showed that HMG CoA reductase inhibitor reduces adhesion, however, not the rolling of monocytes to vascular endothelium under flow in vitro. In the present study, we investigated the effect of pitavastatin, a novel HMG CoA reductase inhibitor, on the transition from monocyte rolling on vascular endothelium to stable adhesion induced by MCP-1 under flow (shear stress = 1.0 dyne/cm(2)). Control THP-1 cells rolled on activated (IL-1beta, 4 hours) human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) and the number of adhered THP-1 cells were significantly enhanced following the addition of 50 nM of MCP-1 (p < 0.002). In contrast, MCP-1 failed to convert pitavastatin-treated (10 microM, 48 hours) THP-1 rolling to stable adhesion, as compared to baseline adhesion, prior to the addition of MCP-1 (p > 0.4). Pitavastatin-induced changes in THP-1 cells were reversed by treatment with 10 microM of mevalonate, the intermediate of cholesterol biosynthesis. To elucidate the mechanism by which pitavastatin modulates MCP-1-induced THP-1 adhesive interactions, the possible involvement of extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 (ERK1/2) was examined. Western blotting analysis using an anti-ERK1/2 Ab and an antibody against phosphorylated-ERK1/2 (p-ERK) revealed that pitavastatin treatment significantly inhibited the MCP-1-induced phosphorylation of ERK1/2. Further, a RhoA pull-down assay revealed that activation of RhoA GTPase was reduced after pitavastatin treatment. Interestingly, an inhibitor of RhoA GTPase, but not that of the ERK1/2 pathway, attenuated MCP-1-dependent adhesion of THP-1 cells to HUVEC. These findings indicate a role for pitavastatin in modulating the MCP-1-induced phenotypic changes of monocyte-endothelial interactions, which may account for the anti-inflammatory effects of statins.  相似文献   

7.
This study investigates a proposed design of a peptide sequence that is based on a bioactive conformation of statins that act as the competitive inhibitors of HMG-CoA for HMGR. To bridge these heterogeneous organic compounds, a conformational aspect relating to an analysis of the flexibility of the peptide molecules and their occupied volumes was applied to the peptide design. The design criterion was formulated in terms of a proximity parameter (Pr), reflecting the probability of an active peptide conformation to approximate the statin. Through a structure-functional analysis of previously synthesized peptides and statin molecules, nine peptides were selected for the peptide library. Comparing the calculated proximity parameters, four peptides (IAVE, YAVE, IVAE, and YVAE) from the library were selected and synthesized. In vitro assays elucidated the inhibition properties for HMGR that are exhibited by these peptides. Among all peptides, YVAE showed the highest ability to inhibit HMGR. A kinetic analysis revealed that this peptide is a competitive inhibitor of HMG-CoA with an equilibrium constant of inhibitor binding (K(i)) of 15.2 +/- 1.4 microM. The calculated coefficient correlation (R) between log (IC(50)) and the inverse value of proximity parameter (1/Pr) was found to be 0.99, indicating a high degree of correlation and efficacy of the given approach in the peptide sequence design.  相似文献   

8.
The Y362K mutation in the neck domain of conventional kinesin from Neurospora crassa provokes a significant reduction of the rate of movement along microtubules. Since the alpha-helical coiled-coil structure of the neck region is implicated in the mechanism of the processive movement of kinesins, a series of peptides related to the heptad region 338-379 of the wild-type and the variant fungal kinesinswere synthesized as monomers and as N-terminal disulfide dimers, crosslinked to favour self-association into coiled-coil structures entropically. A comparison of the dichroic properties of the peptides and the effects of trifluoroethanol and peptide concentration clearly confirmed the strong implication of the single point mutation in destabilizing the intrinsic propensity of the peptides to fold into the supercoiled conformation. That there is a correlation between the stability of the coiled-coil and rate of movement of the kinesin is confirmed.  相似文献   

9.
There is controversy about the effect of saturated and polyunsaturated fats on 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA (HMG-CoA) reductase, the main regulatory enzyme of cholesterogenic pathway. Results from dietary studies are difficult to interpret because diets normally contain a mixture of fatty acids. Therefore, we have used Reuber H35 hepatoma cells whose phospholipids were enriched in different individual fatty acids and have studied their effects on the cellular reductase activity. Lauric, myristic, eicosapentaenoic (EPA), and docosahexaenoic (DHA) acids were supplemented to the culture medium coupled to bovine serum albumin. The four fatty acids were incorporated into phospholipids from cells grown in media containing whole serum or lipoprotein-poor serum (LPPS). Reductase activity of cells cultivated in a medium with LPPS was three to four times higher than those cultivated in medium with whole serum. Saturated fatty acids increased reductase activity of cells grown in medium with whole serum, whereas n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) decreased it. However, both saturated and polyunsaturated fatty acids increased reductase activity when serum lipoproteins were removed. In conclusion, this is one of the first reports demonstrating that saturated and n-3 PUFA only show differential effects on HMG-CoA reductase activity in the presence of lipoproteins.  相似文献   

10.
Protein folding problem remains a formidable challenge as main chain, side chain and solvent interactions remain entangled and have been difficult to resolve. Alanine‐based short peptides are promising models to dissect protein folding initiation and propagation structurally as well as energetically. The effect of N‐terminal diproline and charged side chains is assessed on the stabilization of helical conformation in alanine‐based short peptides using circular dichroism (CD) with water and methanol as solvent. A1 (Ac–Pro–Pro–Ala–Lys–Ala–Lys–Ala–Lys–Ala–NH2) is designed to assess the effect of N‐terminal homochiral diproline and lysine side chains to induce helical conformation. A2 (Ac–Pro–Pro–Glu–Glu–Ala–Ala–Lys–Lys–Ala–NH2) and A3 (Ac–d Pro–Pro–Glu–Glu–Ala–Ala–Lys–Lys–Ala–NH2) with N‐terminal homochiral and heterochiral diproline, respectively, are designed to assess the effect of Glu...Lys (i , i  + 4) salt bridge interactions on the stabilization of helical conformation. The CD spectra of A1 , A2 and A3 in water manifest different amplitudes of the observed polyproline II (PPII) signals, which indicate different conformational distributions of the polypeptide structure. The strong effect of solvent substitution from water to methanol is observed for the peptides, and CD spectra in methanol evidence A2 and A3 as helical folds. Temperature‐dependent CD spectra of A1 and A2 in water depict an isodichroic point reflecting coexistence of two conformations, PPII and β‐strand conformation, which is consistent with the previous studies. The results illuminate the effect of N‐terminal diproline and charged side chains in dictating the preferences for extended‐β, semi‐extended PPII and helical conformation in alanine‐based short peptides. The results of the present study will enhance our understanding on stabilization of helical conformation in short peptides and hence aid in the design of novel peptides with helical structures. Copyright © 2017 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

11.
This study presents an application of two approaches in the design of constrained and unconstrained peptides in an investigation of the peptide binding effect for HMG-CoA reductase (HMGR). In previous works, hypocholesterolemic peptides isolated from soybean were determined as competitive inhibitory peptides for HMGR. Based on the modeling of an active peptide backbone in the active site of HMGR, two peptide libraries for constrained and unconstrained peptides were designed using different amino acids varying in hydrophobicity and electronic properties. Active peptides were selected by the design parameter 'V' or 'Pr', which reflects the probability of active peptide conformations for constrained and unconstrained peptides, respectively. Using peptides designed as mimics of HMGR substrates, and a combination of in vitro test and circular dichroism study, it was found that: (1) peptide binding causes an ordering of secondary structure, reflecting an increase of alpha-helical content; (2) HMGR binds the peptide without closure of the active site; and (3) peptide binding induces the protein aggregation. The GFPDGG peptide (IC(50)=1.5 microM), designed on the basis of the rigid peptide backbone, increases the inhibitory potency more than 300 times compared to the first isolated LPYP peptide (IC(50)=484 microM) from soybean. The obtained data imply the possibility of designing a highly potent inhibitory peptide for HMGR and confirm that changes of the secondary structure in the enzyme play an important role in the mechanism of HMGR inhibition.  相似文献   

12.
Human plasma kallikrein (huPK) is a proteinase that participates in several biological processes. Although various inhibitors control its activity, members of the Kazal family have not been identified as huPK inhibitors. In order to map the enzyme active site, we synthesized peptides based on the reactive site (PRILSPV) of a natural Kazal-type inhibitor found in Cayman plasma, which is not an huPK inhibitor. As expected, the leader peptide (Abz-SAPRILSPVQ-EDDnp) was not cleaved by huPK. Modifications to the leader peptide at P'1, P'3 and P'4 positions were made according to the sequence of a phage display-generated recombinant Kazal inhibitor (PYTLKWV) that presented huPK-binding ability. Novel peptides were identified as substrates for huPK and related enzymes. Both porcine pancreatic and human plasma kallikreins cleaved peptides at Arg or Lys bonds, whereas human pancreatic kallikrein cleaved bonds involving Arg or a pair of hydrophobic amino acid residues. Peptide hydrolysis by pancreatic kallikrein was not significantly altered by amino acid replacements. The peptide Abz-SAPRILSWVQ-EDDnp was the best substrate and a competitive inhibitor for huPK, indicating that Trp residue at the P'4 position is important for enzyme action.  相似文献   

13.
Electronic and vibrational optical activity of the set of neurohypophyseal hormones and their analogs was investigated to clarify the S-S bond solution conformation. The selected compounds include oxytocin (I), lysine vasopressin (II), arginine vasopressin (III), and their analogs (IV-IX), differing widely in their pharmacological properties. We have extended the already known electronic circular dichroism data by new information provided by vibrational circular dichroism (VCD) and Raman optical activity (ROA). The use of VCD brought additional details on three-dimensional structure of the chain reversal in the ring moiety and on its left handedness. Furthermore, Raman scattering and ROA allowed us to deduce the sense of the disulfide bond torsion.  相似文献   

14.
Stomoxyn and spinigerin belong to the class of linear cysteine-free insect antimicrobial peptides that kill a range of microorganisms, parasites, and some viruses but without any lytic activity against mammalian erythrocytes. Stomoxyn is localized in the gut epithelium of the nonvector stable fly that is sympatric with the trypanosome vector tsetse fly. Spinigerin is stored and secreted by hemocytes from the fungus-growing termite. The structure of synthetic stomoxyn and spinigerin in aqueous solution and in TFE/water mixtures was analyzed by CD and NMR spectroscopy combined with molecular modeling calculations. Stomoxyn and spinigerin adopt a flexible random coil structure in water while both assume a stable helical structure in the presence of TFE. In 50% TFE, the structure of stomoxyn is typical of cecropins, including an amphipathic helix at the N-terminus and a hydrophobic C-terminus with helical features that probably fold in a helical conformation at higher TFE concentration. In contrast to stomoxyn, spinigerin acquires very rapidly a helical conformation. In 10% TFE the helix is highly bent and the structure is poorly defined. In 50% TFE, the helical structure is well defined all along its sequence, and the slightly bent alpha-helix displays an amphiphilic character, as observed for magainin 2. The structural similarities between stomoxyn and cecropin A from Hyalophora cecropia and between spinigerin and magainin 2 suggest a similar mode of action on the bacterial membranes of both pairs of peptides. Our results also confirm that TFE induces helix formation and propagation for amino acids showing helical propensity in water but also enhances the helix propagation propensity of nonpolar beta-branched residues.  相似文献   

15.
Kim SY  Jung Y  Hwang GS  Han H  Cho M 《Proteins》2011,79(11):3155-3165
Despite the notion that a control of protein function by phosphorylation works mainly by inducing its conformational changes, the phosphorylation effects on even small peptide conformation have not been fully understood yet. To study its possible effects on serine and threonine peptide conformations, we recently carried out pH- and temperature-dependent circular dichroism (CD) as well as (1)H NMR studies of the phosphorylated serine and threonine peptides and compared them with their unphosphorylated analogs. In the present article, by performing the self-consistent singular value decomposition analysis of the temperature-dependent CD spectra and by analyzing the (3)J(H(N),H(α)) coupling constants extracted from the NMR spectra, the populations of the polyproline II (PPII) and β-strand conformers of the phosphorylated Ser and Thr peptides are determined. As temperature is increased, the β-strand populations of both phosphorylated serine and threonine peptides increase. However, the dependences of PPII/β-strand population ratio on pH are different for these two cases. The phosphorylation of the serine peptide enhances the PPII propensity, whereas that of the threonine peptide has the opposite effect. This suggests that the serine and threonine phosphorylations can alter the backbone conformational propensity via direct but selective intramolecular hydrogen-bonding interactions with the peptide N--H groups. This clearly indicates that the phosphoryl group actively participates in modulating the peptide backbone conformations.  相似文献   

16.
17.
In the fat body of adult Blattella germanica females, the expression of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA reductase (HMG-CoA reductase) during the first reproductive cycle is parallel to that of vitellogenin, suggesting a functional link between the mevalonate pathway, and vitellogenesis and reproduction. We have studied the effects of compactin and fluvastatin, two inhibitors of HMG-CoA reductase, on the expression and activity of the enzyme in the fat body, and on the ootheca formation, ootheca viability, and number of larvae per viable ootheca. Short-term assays showed that both compounds reduce the protein levels and enzymatic activity of HMG-CoA reductase, and long-term experiments revealed that fluvastatin impairs embryo development.  相似文献   

18.
Understanding the secondary structure of peptides is important in protein folding, enzyme function, and peptide‐based drug design. Previous studies of synthetic Ala‐based peptides (>12 a.a.) have demonstrated the role for charged side chain interactions involving Glu/Lys or Glu/Arg spaced three (i, i + 3) or four (i, i + 4) residues apart. The secondary structure of short peptides (<9 a.a.), however, has not been investigated. In this study, the effect of repetitive Glu/Lys or Glu/Arg side chain interactions, giving rise to E‐R/K helices, on the helicity of short peptides was examined using circular dichroism. Short E‐R/K–based peptides show significant helix content. Peptides containing one or more E‐R interactions display greater helicity than those with similar E‐K interactions. Significant helicity is achieved in Arg‐based E‐R/K peptides eight, six, and five amino acids long. In these short peptides, each additional i + 3 and i + 4 salt bridge has substantial contribution to fractional helix content. The E‐R/K peptides exhibit a strongly linear melt curve indicative of noncooperative folding. The significant helicity of these short peptides with predictable dependence on number, position, and type of side chain interactions makes them an important consideration in peptide design.  相似文献   

19.
Two series of dehydropeptides of the general formulae Boc-Gly-X-Phe-p-NA, Boc-Gly-Gly-X-Phe-p-NA, Gly-X-Gly-Phe-p-NA.TFA, and Boc-Gly-X-Gly-Phe-p-NA, with X = Delta(Z)Phe and DeltaAla, were studied with NMR in DMSO and CDCl(3)-DMSO, and with CD in MeOH, MeCN, and TFE. The NMR spectra measured in DMSO suggest that peptides with the DeltaPhe residue next to Phe are folded whereas peptides with Gly between DeltaPhe and Phe are less ordered. NMR spectra of DeltaAla-containing peptides indicate that these peptides are flexible and their conformational equilibria are populated by many different conformations. The CD spectra show that conformational properties of the peptides studied are distinctly influenced by a mutual position of the dehydroamino acid residue and the p-NA group. They indicate that all dehydropeptides with the DeltaPhe residue, Boc-Gly-DeltaAla-Phe-p-NA, and Boc-Gly-Gly-DeltaAla-Phe-p-NA adopt ordered conformations in all solvents studied, presumably of the beta-turn type. The last two peptides exhibit surprising chiroptical properties. Their spectra show exciton coupling-like couplets in the region of the p-NA group absorption. This shape of CD spectra suggests a rigid, chiral conformation with a fixed disposition of the p-NA group. The CD spectra indicate that Boc-Gly-DeltaAla-Gly-Phe-p-NA and Gly-DeltaAla-Gly-Phe-p-NA.TFA are unordered, independently of the solvent.  相似文献   

20.
Aldose reductase, a monomeric NADPH-dependent oxidoreductase, catalyzes the reduction of a wide variety of aldehydes and ketones to their corresponding alcohols. The X-ray structure of human aldose reductase holoenzyme in complex with statil was determined at a resolution of 2.1 A. The carboxylate group of statil interacted with the conserved anion binding site located between the nicotinamide ring of the coenzyme and active site residues Tyr48, His110, and Trp111. Statil's hydrophobic phthalazinyl ring was bound in an adjacent pocket lined by residues Trp20, Phe122, and Trp219, with the bromo-fluorobenzyl group penetrating the "specificity" pocket. The interactions between the inhibitor's bromo-fluorobenzyl group and the enzyme include the stacking against the side-chain of Trp111 as well as hydrogen bonding to residues Leu300 and Thr113. Based on the model of the ternary complex, the program GRID was used in an attempt to design novel potential inhibitors of human aldose reductase with enhanced binding energies of the complex. Molecular modeling calculations suggested that the replacement of the fluorine atom of statil with a carboxylate functional group may enhance the binding energies of the complex by 33%.  相似文献   

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