Macrocycles mimic the extended peptide conformation recognized by aspartic, serine, cysteine and metallo proteases
| Data(s) |
01/01/2001
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| Resumo |
It has been previously demonstrated that aspartic, serine, metallo and cysteine proteases bind to their inhibitors and substrate analogues in a single conformation, the saw-tooth or extended beta-strand. Consequently a generic approach to the development of protease inhibitors is the use of constraints that conformationally restrict putative inhibitor molecules to an extended form. In this way the inhibitor is pre-organized for binding to a protease and does not need to rearrange its structure. One constraining device that has proven to be effective for such pre-organization is macrocyclization. This article illustrates the general principle that macrocycles, especially those composed of 3-4 amino acids and usually 13-17 ring atoms, can effectively mimic the extended conformation of short peptide sequences. Such structure-stabilising macrocycles are stable to degradation by proteases, valuable components of potent protease inhibitors, and in many cases they are also bioavailable. |
| Identificador | |
| Idioma(s) |
eng |
| Publicador |
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd |
| Palavras-Chave | #Biochemistry & Molecular Biology #Chemistry, Medicinal #Pharmacology & Pharmacy #Zinc Metalloprotease Inhibitors #Human Renin Inhibitors #Tnf-alpha Production #Hiv-1 Protease #Peptidomimetic Inhibitors #Drug-design #Matrix Metalloproteinases #Molecular Recognition #Proteolytic-enzymes #Cyclotheonamide-a #C1 #250204 Bioinorganic Chemistry #730102 Immune system and allergy |
| Tipo |
Journal Article |