Exploiting the S4-S5 Specificity of Human Neutrophil Proteinase 3 to Improve the Potency of Peptidyl Di(chlorophenyl)-phosphonate Ester Inhibitors: A Kinetic and Molecular Modeling Analysis.

  • Guarino, C.
  • Gruba, N.
  • Grzywa, R.
  • Dyguda-Kazimierowicz, E.
  • Hamon, Y.
  • Łȩgowska, M.
  • Skoreński, M.
  • Dallet-Choisy, S.
  • Marchand-Adam, S.
  • Kellenberger, C.
  • Jenne, D.
  • Sieńczyk, M.
  • Lesner, A.
  • Gauthier, F.
  • Korkmaz, B.
Publication date
January 2018
Publisher
American Chemical Society (ACS)

Abstract

The neutrophilic serine protease proteinase 3 (PR3) is involved in inflammation and immune response and thus appears as a therapeutic target for a variety of infectious and inflammatory diseases. Here we combined kinetic and molecular docking studies to increase the potency of peptidyl-diphenyl phosphonate PR3 inhibitors. Occupancy of the S1 subsite of PR3 by a nVal residue and of the S4-S5 subsites by a biotinylated Val residue as obtained in biotin-VYDnV(O-CH-4-Cl) enhanced the second-order inhibition constant k/[I] toward PR3 by more than 10 times ( k/[I] = 73000 ± 5000 M s) as compared to the best phosphonate PR3 inhibitor previously reported. This inhibitor shows no significant inhibitory activity toward human neutrophil elastas...

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