474644-31-0Relevant academic research and scientific papers
Incorporation of an amide into 5-phosphonoalkyl-6-D-ribitylaminopyrimidinedione lumazine synthase inhibitors results in an unexpected reversal of selectivity for riboflavin synthase vs lumazine synthase
Cushman, Mark,Yang, Donglai,Mihalic, Jeffrey T.,Chen, Jinhua,Gerhardt, Stefan,Huber, Robert,Fischer, Markus,Kis, Klaus,Bacher, Adelbert
, p. 6871 - 6877 (2002)
Several analogues of a hypothetical intermediate in the reaction catalyzed by lumazine synthase were synthesized and tested as inhibitors of both Bacillus subtilis lumazine synthase and Escherichia coli riboflavin synthase. The new compounds were designed by replacement of a two-carbon fragment of several 5-phosphonoalkyl-6-D-ribitylaminopyrimidinedione lumazine synthase inhibitors with an amide linkage that was envisioned as an analogue of a Schiff base moiety of a hypothetical intermediate in the enzyme-catalyzed reaction. The incorporation of the amide group led to an unexpected reversal in selectivity for inhibition of lumazine synthase vs riboflavin synthase. Whereas the parent 5-phosphonoalkyl-6-D-ribitylaminopyrimidinediones were lumazine synthase inhibitors and did not inhibit riboflavin synthase, the amide-containing derivatives inhibited riboflavin synthase and were only very weak or inactive as lumazine synthase inhibitors. Molecular modeling of inhibitor-lumazine synthase complexes did not reveal a structural basis for these unexpected findings. However, molecular modeling of one of the inhibitors with E. coli riboflavin synthase demonstrated that the active site of the enzyme could readily accommodate two ligand molecules.
A new series of 3-alkyl phosphate derivatives of 4,5,6,7-tetrahydro-1-D- ribityl-1H-pyrazolo[3,4-d]pyrimidinedione as inhibitors of lumazine synthase: Design, synthesis, and evaluation
Zhang, Yanlei,Jin, Guangyi,Illarionov, Boris,Bacher, Adelbert,Fischer, Markus,Cushman, Mark
, p. 7176 - 7184 (2008/02/12)
(Chemical Equation Presented) Lumazine synthase catalyzes the penultimate step in the biosynthesis of riboflavin. A homologous series of three pyrazolopyrimidine analogues of a hypothetical intermediate in the lumazine synthase-catalyzed reaction were synthesized and evaluated as lumazine synthase inhibitors. The key steps of the synthesis were C-5 deprotonation of 4-chloro-2,6-dimethoxypyrimidine, acylation of the resulting anion, and conversion of the product to a pyrazolopyrimidine with hydrazine. Alkylation of the pyrazolopyrimidine with a substituted ribityl iodide and deprotection of the ribityl chain afforded the final set of three products. All three compounds were extremely potent inhibitors of the lumazine synthases of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Magnaporthe grisea, Candida albicans, and Schizosaccharomyces pombe lumazine synthase, with inhibition constants in the low nanomolar to subnanomolar range. Molecular modeling of one of the homologues bound to Mycobacterium tuberculosis lumazine synthase suggests that both the hypothetical intermediate in the lumazine synthase-catalyzed reaction pathway and the metabolically stable analogues bind similarly.
