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Phosphinic peptides, the first potent inhibitors of astacin, behave as extremely slow-binding inhibitors.

TLDR
The phosphinic peptides may provide a rational basis for the design of drugs directed towards other members of the astacin family which, like bone morphogenetic protein 1 (BMP1), have become targets of pharmacological research.
Abstract
A series of phosphinic pseudo-peptides varying in length and composition have been designed as inhibitors of the crayfish zinc endopeptidase astacin, the prototype of the astacin family and of the metzincin superfamily of metalloproteinases. The most efficient phosphinic peptide, fluorenylmethyloxycarbonyl-Pro-Lys-PhePsi(PO2CH2)Ala-P ro-Leu-Val, binds to astacin with a Ki value of 42 nM, which is about three orders of magnitude below the corresponding values for previously used hydroxamic acid derivatives. However, the rate constants for association (kon = 96.8 M-1.s-1) and dissociation (koff = 4.1 x 10(-6) s-1) are evidence for the extremely slow binding behaviour of this compound. N-terminally or C-terminally truncated phosphinic analogues of this parent molecule are much less potent, indicating a critical role of the peptide size on the potency. In particular, omission of the N-terminal proline residue leads to a 40-fold increase in Ki which is mostly due to a 75-fold higher koff value. These findings are consistent with the previously solved crystal structure of astacin complexed with one of the phosphinic peptides, benzyloxycarbonyl-Pro-Lys-PhePsi(PO2CH2)Ala-Pro-O-methyl, Ki = 14 microM [Grams, Dive, Yiotakis, Yiallouros, Vassiliou, Zwilling, Bode and Stocker (1996) Nature Struct. Biol. 3, 671-675]. This structure also reveals that the phosphinic group binds to the active site as a transition-state analogue. The extremely slow binding behaviour of the phosphinic peptides is discussed in the light of the conformational changes involving a unique 'tyrosine switch' in the structure of astacin upon inhibitor binding. The phosphinic peptides may provide a rational basis for the design of drugs directed towards other members of the astacin family which, like bone morphogenetic protein 1 (BMP1; i.e. the procollagen C-proteinase), have become targets of pharmacological research.

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Rationally designed anti-HER2/neu peptide mimetic disables P185HER2/neu tyrosine kinases in vitro and in vivo.

TL;DR: A structure-based derivation of the AHNP represents a novel strategy for the design of receptor-specific tumor therapies for p185HER2/neu-expressing human cancers.
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Meprins, membrane-bound and secreted astacin metalloproteinases.

TL;DR: The in vivo substrates of meprins are unknown, but the abundant expression of these proteinases in the epithelial cells of the intestine, kidney and skin provide clues to their functions.
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RXP 407, a phosphinic peptide, is a potent inhibitor of angiotensin I converting enzyme able to differentiate between its two active sites

TL;DR: RXP 407, a highly potent and selective inhibitor of the N-terminal active site of wild ACE, may lead to a new generation of ACE inhibitors able to block in vivo only a subset of the different functions regulated by ACE.
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Sortase A: An ideal target for anti-virulence drug development

TL;DR: This review is focused on the most promising sortase A inhibitor compounds that are currently in development as leads towards a new class of anti-infective drugs that are urgently needed to help combat the alarming increase in antimicrobial resistance.

Sortase A : an ideal target for anti-virulence drug development

TL;DR: The most promising sortase A inhibitor compounds that are currently in development as leads towards a new class of anti-infective drugs that are urgently needed to help combat the alarming increase in antimicrobial resistance are presented in this paper.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Structure of astacin with a transition-state analogue inhibitor

TL;DR: The structure of the zinc peptidase astacin in complex with a phosphinic peptide suggests that a special role is played by the side chain of a zinc-bound tyrosine, which is shifted to form a hydrogen bond to the phosphinyl group—a mimic of the carboxyanion of the transition state.
Journal ArticleDOI

Refined 1.8 A X-ray crystal structure of astacin, a zinc-endopeptidase from the crayfish Astacus astacus L. Structure determination, refinement, molecular structure and comparison with thermolysin.

TL;DR: The astacin structure has been solved by multiple isomorphous replacement using six heavy-atom derivatives, and refined to a crystallographic R-value of 0.158 applying stringent constraints.
Journal ArticleDOI

What makes a binding site a binding site

TL;DR: It appears that the presence of water on the surface of a protein plays a crucial role in the interaction between that protein and its binding site.
Journal ArticleDOI

Possible role for water dissociation in the slow binding of phosphorus-containing transition-state-analogue inhibitors of thermolysin.

TL;DR: A specific water molecule in the active site that may hinder binding of the alpha-substituted inhibitors of the zinc endopeptidase thermolysin is identified and the implication for a mechanism for slow binding is discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Development of Highly Potent and Selective Phosphinic Peptide Inhibitors of Zinc Endopeptidase 24-15 Using Combinatorial Chemistry

TL;DR: This study demonstrates that the combinatorial chemistry approach leading to the development of phosphinic peptide libraries is a powerful strategy for discovering highly potent and selective inhibitors of zinc metalloproteases and should find a broader application in studies of this important class of enzymes.
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