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Journal ArticleDOI

Synthesis and inhibition studies of sulfur-substituted squalene oxide analogues as mechanism-based inhibitors of 2,3-oxidosqualene-lanosterol cyclase

TLDR
The synthesis and biological evaluation of three new sulfur-substituted oxidosqualene (OS) analogues are presented, and the S-18 analogue 3 showed the most potent inhibition toward the rat liver enzyme and showed potent, selective inhibition against the fungal enzyme, making it the most powerful OSC inhibitor known to date.
Abstract
The synthesis and biological evaluation of three new sulfur-substituted oxidosqualene (OS) analogues (1-3) are presented. In these analogues, C-11, C-15, or C-18 in the OS skeleton was replaced by sulfur. The sulfur position in the OS skeleton was chosen to disrupt one or more key processes involved in cyclization: (a) the folding of the B-ring into a boat conformation, (b) the anti-Markovnikov cyclization leading to the C-ring, or (c) the formation of the D-ring during the lanosterol biosynthesis. Enzyme inhibition kinetics using homogeneous mammalian oxidosqualene cyclases (OSC) were also examined for the previously reported S-19 analogue 4. The four analogues were potent inhibitors of mammalian OSCs (IC50 = 0.05-2.3 microM for pig and rat liver OSC) and fungal cell-free Candida albicans OSC (submicromolar IC50 values). In particular, the S-18 analogue 3 showed the most potent inhibition toward the rat liver enzyme (IC50 = 50 nM) and showed potent, selective inhibition against the fungal enzyme (IC50 = 0.22 nM, 10-fold more potent than the S-19 analogue 4). Thus, 3 is the most potent OSC inhibitor known to date. The Ki values ranged from 0.5 to 4.5 microM for pig OSC, with 3 and 4 showing about 10-fold higher potency for rat liver OSC. Interestingly, the S-18 analogue 3 showed time-dependent irreversible inhibition with homogeneous pig liver OSC (kinact = 0.06 min-1) but not with rat OSC.

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The biology and chemistry of hyperlipidemia

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Squalene–hopene cyclase: catalytic mechanism and substrate recognition

TL;DR: In this paper, a series of site-directed mutation experiments and some squalene analogues have provided deep insight into the polycyclization mechanism and catalytic sites in conjunction with the information from X-ray crystal data.
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Squalene-hopene cyclase: catalytic mechanism and substrate recognition

TL;DR: A series of site-directed mutation experiments and some squalene analogues have provided deep insight into the polycyclization mechanism and catalytic sites in conjunction with the information from X-ray crystal data.
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Mechanistic insights into triterpene synthesis from quantum mechanical calculations. Detection of systematic errors in B3LYP cyclization energies

TL;DR: This work calculated mPW1PW91/6-311+G(2d,p)//B3LYP/ 6-31G* energies to establish the first comprehensive energy profiles for the cationic cyclization of oxidosqualene to lanosterol, lupeol, and hopen-3beta-ol to reveal systematic errors in DFT cyclization energies.
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Emerging targets for the development of novel antifungal therapeutics.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Cation-π Interactions in Chemistry and Biology: A New View of Benzene, Phe, Tyr, and Trp

TL;DR: A great deal of direct and circumstantial evidence indicates that cation-π interactions are important in a variety of proteins that bind cationic ligands or substrates.
Journal ArticleDOI

The slow-binding and slow, tight-binding inhibition of enzyme-catalysed reactions

TL;DR: Inhibitors of enzyme-catalysed reactions can be divided into four classes according to the rate and strength of their interactions with enzymes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantum Engineering of Optical Nonlinearities

TL;DR: The second-order optical nonlinearities in materials are of paramount importance for optical wavelength conversion techniques, which are the basis of new high-resolution spectroscopic tools as mentioned in this paper.
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