Mechanistic and structural requirements for active site labeling of phosphoglycerate mutase by spiroepoxides

Michael J. Evans, Garrett M. Morris, Jane Wu, Arthur J. Olson, Erik J. Sorensen, Benjamin F. Cravatt

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

46 Scopus citations

Abstract

We recently reported the pharmacological screening of a natural products-inspired library of spiroepoxide probes, resulting in the discovery of an agent MJE3 that displayed anti-proliferative effects in human breast cancer cells. MJE3 was found to covalently inactivate phosphoglycerate mutase-1 (PGAM1), a glycolytic enzyme with postulated roles in cancer cell metabolism and proliferation. Considering that MJE3 is one of the first examples of a cell-permeable, small-molecule inhibitor for PGAM1, we pursued a detailed examination of its mechanism and structural requirements for covalent inactivation. MJE3 was found to label PGAM1 on lysine-100, a conserved active site residue implicated in substrate recognition. Structural features of MJE3 important for PGAM1 labeling included two key recognition elements (an indole ring and carboxylic acid), the stereochemical orientation of the spiroepoxide, and presentation of these various binding/reactive groups on a rigid cyclohexane scaffold. Modeling studies of the docked MJE3-PGAM1 complex provide a structural rationale for these stringent requirements. Overall, these studies indicate that a special combination of binding and reactive elements are united in the MJE3 structure to inactivate PGAM1. More generally, our findings provide further evidence that useful pharmacological tools can emerge from screening structurally diverse libraries of protein-reactive probes.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)495-506
Number of pages12
JournalMolecular BioSystems
Volume3
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - 2007

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Molecular Biology
  • Biotechnology

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