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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0021051 (
immunodeficiency
)
71,517
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The human
immunodeficiency
virus type 1 (HIV-1) protease is a potential target of acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) therapy. A highly potent, perfectly symmetrical phosphinate inhibitor of this enzyme, SB204144, has been synthesized. It is a competitive inhibitor of HIV-1 protease, with an apparent inhibition constant of 2.8 nM at pH 6.0. The three-dimensional structure of SB204144 bound to the enzyme has been determined at 2.3-A resolution by X-ray diffraction techniques and refined to a crystallographic discrepancy factor, R (= sigma parallel F(o) magnitude to - Fc parallel/sigma magnitude of F(o)), of 0.178. The inhibitor is held in the enzyme active site by a set of hydrophobic and hydrophilic interactions, including an interaction between Arg8 and the center of the terminal benzene rings of the inhibitor. The phosphinate establishes a novel interaction with the two catalytic aspartates; each oxygen of the central phosphinic acid moiety interacts with a single oxygen of one aspartic acid, establishing a very short (2.2-2.4 A) oxygen-oxygen contact. As with the structures of
penicillopepsin
bound to phosphinate and phosphonate inhibitors [Fraser, M. E., Strynadka, N. C., Bartlett, P. A., Hanson, J. E., & James, M. N. (1992) Biochemistry 31, 5201-14], we interpret this short distance and the stereochemical environment of each pair of oxygens in terms of a hydrogen bond that has a symmetric single-well potential energy curve with the proton located midway between the two atoms.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Inhibition of human immunodeficiency virus-1 protease by a C2-symmetric phosphinate. Synthesis and crystallographic analysis. 834 1
Phosphinate and phosphonate derivatives are potent inhibitors of aspartic proteases (APs). The affinity for the enzyme might be caused by the presence of low barrier hydrogen bonds between the ligand and the catalytic Asp dyad in the cleavage site. We have used density functional theory calculations along with hybrid quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics Car-Parrinello molecular dynamics simulations to investigate the hydrogen-bonding pattern at the binding site of the complexes of human
immunodeficiency
virus type-1 AP and the eukaryotic endothiapepsin and
penicillopepsin
. Our calculations are in fair agreement with the NMR data available for endothiapepsin (Coates et al. J. Mol. Biol. 2002, 318, 1405-1415) and show that the most stable active site configuration is the diprotonated, negatively charged form. In the viral complex both protons are located at the catalytic Asp dyad, while in the eukaryotic complexes the proton shared by the closest oxygen atoms is located at the phosphinic/phosphonic group.
...
PMID:Binding of phosphinate and phosphonate inhibitors to aspartic proteases: a first-principles study. 1647 95