174678-99-0Relevant academic research and scientific papers
Catalytic triple carbonylation of olefins. Enantioselective synthesis of 2-oxoglutarates
Sperrle, Martin,Consiglio, Giambattista
, p. 177 - 180 (1996)
A new carbonylation reaction, namely "triple carbonylation" of olefins catalysed by cationic palladium complexes to substituted 2-oxoglutarates, has been developed. Even though the chemoselectivity is not high, this reaction allows a one-step synthesis of
Allele-Specific Chemical Rescue of Histone Demethylases Using Abiotic Cofactors
Dey, Debasis,Hinkelman, Kathryn,Islam, Kabirul,Kuwik, Jordan,Scott, Valerie,Waldman, Megan
, (2021/09/29)
Closely related protein families evolved from common ancestral genes present a significant hurdle in developing member- and isoform-specific chemical probes, owing to their similarity in fold and function. In this piece of work, we explore an allele-specific chemical rescue strategy to activate a "dead"variant of a wildtype protein using synthetic cofactors and demonstrate its successful application to the members of the alpha-ketoglutarate (αKG)-dependent histone demethylase 4 (KDM4) family. We show that a mutation at a specific residue in the catalytic site renders the variant inactive toward the natural cosubstrate. In contrast, αKG derivatives bearing appropriate stereoelectronic features endowed the mutant with native-like demethylase activity while remaining refractory to a set of wild type dioxygenases. The orthogonal enzyme-cofactor pairs demonstrated site- and degree-specific lysine demethylation on a full-length chromosomal histone in the cellular milieu. Our work offers a strategy to modulate a specific histone demethylase by identifying and engineering a conserved phenylalanine residue, which acts as a gatekeeper in the KDM4 subfamily, to sensitize the enzyme toward a novel set of αKG derivatives. The orthogonal pairs developed herein will serve as probes to study the role of degree-specific lysine demethylation in mammalian gene expression. Furthermore, this approach to overcome active site degeneracy is expected to have general application among all human αKG-dependent dioxygenases.
Synthesis of 2-oxoglutarate derivatives and their evaluation as cosubstrates and inhibitors of human aspartate/asparagine-β-hydroxylase
Brewitz, Lennart,Nakashima, Yu,Schofield, Christopher J.
, p. 1327 - 1342 (2021/02/12)
2-Oxoglutarate (2OG) is involved in biological processes including oxidations catalyzed by 2OG oxygenases for which it is a cosubstrate. Eukaryotic 2OG oxygenases have roles in collagen biosynthesis, lipid metabolism, DNA/RNA modification, transcriptional regulation, and the hypoxic response. Aspartate/asparagine-β-hydroxylase (AspH) is a human 2OG oxygenase catalyzing post-translational hydroxylation of Asp/Asn-residues in epidermal growth factor-like domains (EGFDs) in the endoplasmic reticulum. AspH is of chemical interest, because its Fe(ii) cofactor is complexed by two rather than the typical three residues. AspH is upregulated in hypoxia and is a prognostic marker on the surface of cancer cells. We describe studies on how derivatives of its natural 2OG cosubstrate modulate AspH activity. An efficient synthesis of C3- and/or C4-substituted 2OG derivatives, proceedingviacyanosulfur ylid intermediates, is reported. Mass spectrometry-based AspH assays with >30 2OG derivatives reveal that some efficiently inhibit AspHviacompeting with 2OG as evidenced by crystallographic and solution analyses. Other 2OG derivatives can substitute for 2OG enabling substrate hydroxylation. The results show that subtle changes,e.g.methyl- to ethyl-substitution, can significantly alter the balance between catalysis and inhibition. 3-Methyl-2OG, a natural product present in human nutrition, was the most efficient alternative cosubstrate identified; crystallographic analyses reveal the binding mode of (R)-3-methyl-2OG and other 2OG derivatives to AspH and inform on the balance between turnover and inhibition. The results will enable the use of 2OG derivatives as mechanistic probes for other 2OG utilizing enzymes and suggest 2-oxoacids other than 2OG may be employed by some 2OG oxygenasesin vivo.
Chemoenzymatic synthesis of a series of 4-substituted glutamate analogues and pharmacological characterization at human glutamate transporters subtypes 1-3
Alaux, Sebastien,Kusk, Mie,Sagot, Emanuelle,Bolte, Jean,Jensen, Anders A.,Br?uner-Osborne, Hans,Gefflaut, Thierry,Bunch, Lennart
, p. 7980 - 7992 (2007/10/03)
A series of nine L-2,4-s;yrc-4-alkylglutamic acid analogues (1a-i) were synthesized in high yield and high enantiomeric excess (>99% ee) from their corresponding 4-substituted ketoglutaric acids (2a-i), using the enzyme aspartate aminotransferase (AAT) from pig heart or E. coli. The synthesized compounds were evaluated as potential ligands for the glutamate transporters EAAT1, EAAT2, and EAAT3 (excitatory amino acid transporter, subtypes 1-3) in the FLIPR membrane potential (FMP) assay. We found a distinct change in the pharmacological profile when the 4-methyl group (compound 1a, an EAAT1 substrate and EAAT2,3 inhibitor) was extended to a 4-ethyl group, compound 1b, as this analogue is an inhibitor at all three subtypes, EAAT1-3. Furthermore, we conclude that both large and bulky hydrophobic substituents in the 4-position of L-2,4-syn Glu are allowed by all three glutamate transporter subtypes EAAT1-3 while maintaining inhibitory activity.
