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Biocalorimetry as a tool for Trypanosoma cruzi dihydroorotate dehydrogenase inhibitors discovery

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Author(s):
Juliana Cheleski
Total Authors: 1
Document type: Doctoral Thesis
Press: São Carlos.
Institution: Universidade de São Paulo (USP). Instituto de Química de São Carlos (IQSC/BT)
Defense date:
Examining board members:
Carlos Alberto Montanari; Ricardo Bicca de Alencastro; Andrei Leitão; Carlos Henrique Inacio Ramos; Maria Goretti de Vasconcelos Silva
Advisor: Carlos Alberto Montanari
Abstract

American trypanosomiasis or Chagas disease, caused by the haemoflagellate Trypanosoma cruzi, is a tropical disease that affects millions of people in Latin America. Epidemiology of Chagas disease in non-endemic countries is attained by immigration as the disease also affects people in the United States, Canada, Europe, Australia and Japan. However, the United States are not to be written off as an area of nonendemicity for Chagas disease like Europe or Asia because the southern states have enzootic T. cruzi transmission that involves triatomine species and hosts such as raccoons, opossums, and domestic dogs. Even though, this disease has been considered as a super-neglected from the big Pharma Industry viewpoint since the only available drugs for its treatment were introduced in the market more than forty years ago and worsen is that they have low efficacy and cause various severe side effects. <br />Although the current clinical scenario is of course discouraging and is far from being even a soothing treatment for those who suffer from the disease, it prompt ones to set efforts towards the need of discovering and developing new efficacious and safe drugs to treat Chagas disease. <br />Our research group covers the concept of enzymes acting as targets for the action of drugs. Once T. cruzi has many druggable targets, the dihydroorotate dehydrogenase enzyme (TcDHODH) that belongs to the de novo pyrimidine nucleotide synthetic pathway has been chosen for the search of new inhibitors that may be of use in the treatment of Chagas disease. To accomplish with this and considering that inhibitors are molecules that decrease enzyme activity leading to parasite death, we used the concepts and tools of modern computational medicinal chemistry such as in silico screening of small molecules that bind to the active site of the TcDHODH. <br />After a thoroughly program of virtually screening thousands of compounds, 26 were purchased from commercially available sources and experimentally assayed against the TcDHODH using Isothermal Titration Calorimetry (ITC) in order to determine the mechanism of inhibition and the kinetic affinity constant (Kiapp). <br />The first series of inhibitors selected from our in silico strategy were evaluated by ITC to yield compounds that inhibited the TcDHODH in the micromolar concentration range with an average of 0.50 kcal mol-1 atom-1 ligand efficiency (LE). Because the assayed compounds have low molecular weight (ca. 200 kDa) and high LE, which bring them to the specific bimolecular pattern recognition all of them were considered good inhibitors capable of being selected to enter the hit-to-lead optimization process. <br />The detailed description of the ligand-enzyme mode of binding (MOB) is thoroughly accomplished by solving the X ray crystal structure of the surrogate Leishmania major DHODH enzyme (LmDHODH), which has a high degree of similarity with the enzyme TcDHODH. The MOB credited to be in the active site of the TcDHODH orthogonally validated the ITC kinetic experimental data obtained for all ligands as competitive inhibitors that interact at the active site of the TcDHODH and helped to generate pharmacophoric hypotheses for the search of new second generation molecules acting against the enzyme TcDHODH.  Analyzing the 3D structure of the TcDHODH along with its surrogate LmDHODH, we envisaged the possibility of compounds to extend their side chain beyond the region of the catalytic site (called S1), and interacting in a region called S2, so to increase binding affinity. Moreover, the TcDHODH S2 site that is not found in the 3D protein structure of humans (HsDHODH) is likely to offer new insights for the search of inhibitors whose binding to this S2 site can pave the roads towards the needed structural basis for selective inhibition of TcDHODH. <br />The most potent compounds inhibited the enzyme competitively with respect to the substrate dihydroorotate (DHO) at Kiapp values of 121 &plusmn; 14 nM and 190 &plusmn; 10 nM, which constitutes high affinity TcDHODH inhibitors. The ITC technique was pivotal to this process of enzyme inhibitors discovery, because it proved to be extremely sensitive thus allowing to monitor the kinetics of the reaction and to obtain precise and accurate values of affinity constants. <br />The hit rate obtained in this work, considering only those compounds with Kiapp < 100 &micro;M, was 46%. This is a really high number, since literature values range from 1 to 10% when the planning new inhibitors via in silico methods when compared to the success rates obtained by the methods of testing on large scales (HTS), 0-2 %, the results achieved in this work are even more significant. Moreover, the compounds selected through the integration of in silico and calorimetric methods showed a high degree of complexity in the process of bimolecular enzyme-ligand recognition, which allows to pass them to the next phase of the drug design process. (AU)