| June
21, 2004
UCSD Chemists Bring Use Of Designer
Molecules
To Treat Common Diseases Closer To Reality
By Sherry Seethaler
By making use
of model compounds in drug design, chemists at the University
of California, San Diego identified a class of molecules that
could lead to treatments for a wide range of diseases, including
cancer, arthritis, and heart disease.
Enzymes—protein
catalysts—in the body that help break down connective
tissue like collagen are important in growth and wound healing,
but also play a role in many diseases. For example, these enzymes
are overactive in arthritis and are used by cancer cells to
migrate through connective tissue and spread. While a number
of drugs have been designed to inhibit these enzymes, only one
has made it through clinical trials because of a variety of
drawbacks.
In a study to be published
in the July 14 issue of the Journal of the American Chemical
Society, a group of chemists led by Seth Cohen in UCSD’s
Division of Physical Sciences has identified a promising set
of inhibitors that may lack the drawbacks plaguing the previous
generation of such compounds.
“Nearly all the
compounds known to inhibit these enzymes are chemically similar,”
says Cohen, an assistant professor of chemistry and biochemistry.
“But they tend to be toxic, cannot be taken orally, and
are rapidly metabolized. We tested 11 new compounds selected
for their chemical similarities and some differences to the
known inhibitors. Many of the new compounds not only turned
out to be excellent inhibitors, they are also less likely to
have undesirable side effects. For example, one of the inhibitors
we discovered is actually the food additive Maltol, which is
used as a flavor enhancer.”
All enzymes have an
active site—a pocket with a particular shape and chemical
composition, where molecules bind and react. Enzymes that break
down connective tissue—matrix metalloproteases or MMPs—have
a zinc ion at the active site, which is essential for providing
the right chemical environment for a reaction to occur. Compounds
that surround and bind to the zinc ion can inhibit the enzyme.
 |
Graphic
showing inhibitor binding to metal in enzyme
Photo Credit: Seth Cohen, UCSD |
In the classical approach
to drug design, chemists use computer programs to predict what
compounds are potential inhibitors of an enzyme. This “computational”
approach requires knowledge of the chemical groups at the active
site of the enzyme and the three-dimensional shape of the active
site. But it can be difficult to obtain and crystallize sufficient
quantities of the enzyme to use X-ray crystallography—the
method chemists employ to take detailed pictures of molecules
using X-rays.
“The drug design
process is much more challenging for proteins containing metal
ions because computational chemistry is not as advanced for
this,” says Cohen. “It’s a frontier area of
research. But you can overcome the limitations of computational
chemistry by using the model compounds to understand how the
drug binds to just the metal part. Basically you take out the
difficult part by using models.”
Cohen and his colleagues
tested the ability of the 11 compounds to inhibit an MMP enzyme
in a test tube. They also studied the strength of binding of
each of the 11 compounds to a chemical model that they had designed
to mimic the way the zinc is bound in the active site of the
enzyme. The researchers found that the ability of the compounds
to inhibit the enzyme increased as the strength of their binding
to the model increased. This is what is expected if the inhibitor
is working by binding to the active site of the enzyme, rather
than some unknown mechanism.
There are actually
26 MMPs in the human body, so to avoid unwanted side effects,
drugs need to be designed that target specific MMPs. Since the
active site for each of these MMPs contains a zinc ion, the
11 inhibitors would not target just one MMP. Designing inhibitors
that target a single type of MMP requires modifying the way
the inhibitor binds to chemical groups of the enzyme unique
to that enzyme. Modifying the inhibitors to make them target
specific enzymes will be the researchers’ next steps,
but according to Cohen, there is a great deal of published work
that will help them with this task. Computational chemistry
can also help them now that they have figured out the tricky
metal-binding part.
“Although the
use of models in chemistry is very well established, we are
among the first groups to aggressively use model chemistry as
a part of drug design,” says Cohen. “So far, our
work has been particularly well received in the community of
MMP research.”
The other researchers
that contributed to this work are David Puerta and Jana Lewis,
graduate students in the Cohen lab. The study was supported
by UCSD, a Chris and Warren Hellman Faculty Scholar award, and
the American Heart Association.
Media Contact: Sherry
Seethaler (858) 534-4656
Comment: Seth Cohen (858)
822-5596
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