TY - JOUR
T1 - Quinone Methide‐Based Organophosphate Hydrolases Inhibitors
T2 - Trans Proximity Labelers versus Cis Labeling Activity‐Based Probes
AU - Dubovetskyi, Artem
AU - Cherukuri, Kesava Phaneendra
AU - Ashani, Yacov
AU - Meshcheriakova, Anna
AU - Reuveny, Eitan
AU - Ben‐Nissan, Gili
AU - Sharon, Michal
AU - Fumagalli, Laura
AU - Tawfik, Dan S
PY - 2021/3/2
Y1 - 2021/3/2
N2 - Quinone methide (QM) chemistry is widely applied including in enzyme inhibitors. Typically, enzyme-mediated bond breaking releases a phenol product that rearranges into an electrophilic QM that in turn covalently modifies protein side chains. However, the factors that govern the reactivity of QM-based inhibitors and their mode of inhibition have not been systematically explored. Foremost, enzyme inactivation might occur in cis, whereby a QM molecule inactivates the very same enzyme molecule that released it, or by trans if the released QMs diffuse away and inactivate other enzyme molecules. We examined QM-based inhibitors for enzymes exhibiting phosphoester hydrolase activity. We tested different phenolic substituents and benzylic leaving groups, thereby modulating the rates of enzymatic hydrolysis, phenolate-to-QM rearrangement, and the electrophilicity of the resulting QM. By developing assays that distinguish between cis and trans inhibition, we have identified certain combinations of leaving groups and phenyl substituents that lead to inhibition in the cis mode, while other combinations gave trans inhibition. Our results suggest that cis-acting QM-based substrates could be used as activity-based probes to identify various phospho- and phosphono-ester hydrolases, and potentially other hydrolases.
AB - Quinone methide (QM) chemistry is widely applied including in enzyme inhibitors. Typically, enzyme-mediated bond breaking releases a phenol product that rearranges into an electrophilic QM that in turn covalently modifies protein side chains. However, the factors that govern the reactivity of QM-based inhibitors and their mode of inhibition have not been systematically explored. Foremost, enzyme inactivation might occur in cis, whereby a QM molecule inactivates the very same enzyme molecule that released it, or by trans if the released QMs diffuse away and inactivate other enzyme molecules. We examined QM-based inhibitors for enzymes exhibiting phosphoester hydrolase activity. We tested different phenolic substituents and benzylic leaving groups, thereby modulating the rates of enzymatic hydrolysis, phenolate-to-QM rearrangement, and the electrophilicity of the resulting QM. By developing assays that distinguish between cis and trans inhibition, we have identified certain combinations of leaving groups and phenyl substituents that lead to inhibition in the cis mode, while other combinations gave trans inhibition. Our results suggest that cis-acting QM-based substrates could be used as activity-based probes to identify various phospho- and phosphono-ester hydrolases, and potentially other hydrolases.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85097135099&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/cbic.202000611
DO - 10.1002/cbic.202000611
M3 - مقالة
C2 - 33105515
SN - 1439-4227
VL - 22
SP - 894
EP - 903
JO - Chembiochem : a European journal of chemical biology
JF - Chembiochem : a European journal of chemical biology
IS - 5
ER -