ja061155v_si_001.pdf (302.06 kB)
Download fileA Fluoro Analogue of the Menadione Derivative 6-[2‘-(3‘-Methyl)-1‘,4‘-naphthoquinolyl]hexanoic Acid Is a Suicide Substrate of Glutathione Reductase. Crystal Structure of the Alkylated Human Enzyme†
journal contribution
posted on 2006-08-23, 00:00 authored by Holger Bauer, Karin Fritz-Wolf, Andreas Winzer, Sebastian Kühner, Susan Little, Vanessa Yardley, Hervé Vezin, Bruce Palfey, R. Heiner Schirmer, Elisabeth Davioud-CharvetGlutathione reductase is an important housekeeping enzyme for redox homeostasis both in human
cells and in the causative agent of tropical malaria, Plasmodium falciparum. Glutathione reductase inhibitors
were shown to have anticancer and antimalarial activity per se and to contribute to the reversal of drug
resistance. The development of menadione chemistry has led to the selection of 6-[2‘-(3‘-methyl)-1‘,4‘-naphthoquinolyl]hexanoic acid, called M5,as a potent reversible and uncompetitive inhibitor of both human
and P. falciparum glutathione reductases. Here we describe the synthesis and kinetic characterization of
a fluoromethyl-M5 analogue that acts as a mechanism-based inhibitor of both enzymes. In the course of
enzymatic catalysis, the suicide substrate is activated by one- or two-electron reduction, and then a highly
reactive quinone methide is generated upon elimination of the fluorine. Accordingly the human enzyme
was found to be irreversibly inactivated with a kinact value of 0.4 ± 0.2 min-1. The crystal structure of the
alkylated enzyme was solved at 1.7 Å resolution. It showed the inhibitor to bind covalently to the active site
Cys58 and to interact noncovalently with His467‘, Arg347, Arg37, and Tyr114. On the basis of the crystal
structure of the inactivated human enzyme and stopped-flow kinetic studies with two- and four-electron-reduced forms of the unreacted P. falciparum enzyme, a mechanism is proposed which explains
naphthoquinone reduction at the flavin of glutathione reductase.