Aminomethyl
Salicylaldehydes Lock onto a Surface Lysine
by Forming an Extended Intramolecular Hydrogen Bond Network
Posted on 2024-08-23 - 11:33
The development of electrophilic
ligands that rapidly modify specific
lysine residues remains a major challenge. Salicylaldehyde-based inhibitors
have been reported to form stable imine adducts with the catalytic
lysine of protein kinases. However, the targeted lysine in these examples
is buried in a hydrophobic environment. A key unanswered question
is whether this strategy can be applied to a lysine on the surface
of a protein, where rapid hydrolysis of the resulting salicylaldimine
is more likely. Here, we describe a series of aminomethyl-substituted
salicylaldehydes that target a fully solvated lysine on the surface
of the ATPase domain of Hsp90. By systematically varying the orientation
of the salicylaldehyde, we discovered ligands with long residence
times, the best of which engages Hsp90 in a quasi-irreversible manner.
Crystallographic analysis revealed a daisy-chain network of intramolecular
hydrogen bonds in which the salicylaldimine is locked into position
by the adjacent piperidine linker. This study highlights the potential
of aminomethyl salicylaldehydes to generate conformationally stabilized,
hydrolysis-resistant imines, even when the targeted lysine is far
from the ligand binding site and is exposed to bulk solvent.
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Weaver, Jacqueline; Craven, Gregory B.; Tram, Linh; Chen, Hao; Taunton, Jack (2024). Aminomethyl
Salicylaldehydes Lock onto a Surface Lysine
by Forming an Extended Intramolecular Hydrogen Bond Network. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.4c04314