scholarly journals In-peptide amino acid racemization via inter-residue oxazoline intermediates during acidic hydrolysis

Amino Acids ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anders Broberg ◽  
Christina Nord ◽  
Jolanta J. Levenfors ◽  
Joakim Bjerketorp ◽  
Bengt Guss ◽  
...  

AbstractIsopedopeptins are antibiotic cyclic lipodepsipeptides containing the subsequence L-Thr—L-2,3-diaminopropanoic acid—D-Phe—L-Val/L-3-hydroxyvaline. Acidic hydrolysis of isopedopeptins in D2O showed the D-Phe residues to racemize extensively in peptides with L-3-hydroxyvaline but not in peptides with L-Val. Similarly, one Leu residue in pedopeptins, which are related peptides containing the subsequence Leu—2,3-diaminopropanoic acid—Leu—L-Val/L-3-hydroxyvaline, was found to racemize in peptides with L-3-hydroxyvaline. Model tetrapeptides, L-Ala—L-Phe—L-Val/3-hydroxyvaline—L-Ala, gave the corresponding results, i.e. racemization of L-Phe only when linked to a L-3-hydroxyvaline. We propose the racemization to proceed via an oxazoline intermediate involving Phe/Leu and the L-3-hydroxyvaline residues. The 3-hydroxyvaline residue may form a stable tertiary carbocation by loss of the sidechain hydroxyl group as water after protonation. Elimination of the Phe/Leu H-2 and ring-closure from the carbonyl oxygen onto the carbocation results in the suggested oxazoline intermediate. The reversed reaction leads to either retained or inversed configuration of Phe/Leu. Such racemization during acidic hydrolysis may occur whenever a 3-hydroxyvaline residue or any amino acid that can form a stable carbocation on the C-3, is present in a peptide. The proposed mechanism for racemization was supported by incorporation of 18O in the 3-hydroxyvaline sidechain when the acidic hydrolysis was performed in H2O/H218O (1:1). The 2,3-diaminopropanoic residues of isopedopeptins and pedopeptins were also found to racemize during acidic hydrolysis, as previously described. Based on the results, the configuration of the Leu and 2,3-diaminopropanoic acid residues of the pedopeptins were reassigned to be L-Leu and D-Leu, and 2 × L-2,3-diaminopropanoic acid.

2020 ◽  
Vol 64 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
Brandy N. Curtis ◽  
Kali A. Smolen ◽  
Sara J. Barlow ◽  
Emilia Caselli ◽  
Fabio Prati ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Extended-spectrum class C β-lactamases have evolved to rapidly inactivate expanded-spectrum cephalosporins, a class of antibiotics designed to be resistant to hydrolysis by β-lactamase enzymes. To better understand the mechanism by which Acinetobacter-derived cephalosporinase-7 (ADC-7), a chromosomal AmpC enzyme, hydrolyzes these molecules, we determined the X-ray crystal structure of ADC-7 in an acyl-enzyme complex with the cephalosporin ceftazidime (2.40 Å) as well as in complex with a boronic acid transition state analog inhibitor that contains the R1 side chain of ceftazidime (1.67 Å). In the acyl-enzyme complex, the carbonyl oxygen is situated in the oxyanion hole where it makes key stabilizing interactions with the main chain nitrogens of Ser64 and Ser315. The boronic acid O1 hydroxyl group is similarly positioned in this area. Conserved residues Gln120 and Asn152 form hydrogen bonds with the amide group of the R1 side chain in both complexes. These complexes represent two steps in the hydrolysis of expanded-spectrum cephalosporins by ADC-7 and offer insight into the inhibition of ADC-7 by ceftazidime through displacement of the deacylating water molecule as well as blocking its trajectory to the acyl carbonyl carbon. In addition, the transition state analog inhibitor, LP06, was shown to bind with high affinity to ADC-7 (Ki, 50 nM) and was able to restore ceftazidime susceptibility, offering the potential for optimization efforts of this type of inhibitor.


1999 ◽  
Vol 40 (44) ◽  
pp. 7757-7760 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elizabeth A. Jefferson ◽  
Eric E. Swayze

2020 ◽  
Vol 88 (4) ◽  
pp. 57
Author(s):  
Oussama Moussaoui ◽  
Rajendra Bhadane ◽  
Riham Sghyar ◽  
El Mestafa El Hadrami ◽  
Soukaina El Amrani ◽  
...  

A new series of amino acid derivatives of quinolines was synthesized through the hydrolysis of amino acid methyl esters of quinoline carboxamides with alkali hydroxide. The compounds were purified on silica gel by column chromatography and further characterized by TLC, NMR and ESI-TOF mass spectrometry. All compounds were screened for in vitro antimicrobial activity against different bacterial strains using the microdilution method. Most of the synthesized amino acid-quinolines show more potent or equipotent inhibitory action against the tested bacteria than their correspond esters. In addition, many of them exhibit fluorescent properties and could possibly be utilized as fluorophores. Molecular docking and simulation studies of the compounds at putative bacterial target enzymes suggest that the antimicrobial potency of these synthesized analogues could be due to enzyme inhibition via their favorable binding at the fluoroquinolone binding site at the GyrA subunit of DNA gyrase and/or the ParC subunit of topoisomerase-IV.


2020 ◽  
Vol 35 (2) ◽  
pp. 129-135
Author(s):  
James A. Kaduk ◽  
Amy M. Gindhart ◽  
Thomas N. Blanton

The crystal structure of atazanavir has been solved and refined using synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction data and optimized using density functional techniques. Atazanavir crystallizes in space group P21 (#4) with a = 15.33545(7), b = 5.90396(3), c = 21.56949(13) Å, β = 96.2923(4)°, V = 1941.134(11) Å3, and Z = 2. Despite being labeled as “atazanavir sulfate”, the commercial reagent sample consisted of atazanavir free base. The structure consists of an array of extended-conformation molecules parallel to the ac-plane. Although the atazanavir molecule contains only four classical hydrogen bond donors, hydrogen bonding is, surprisingly, important to the crystal energy. Both intra- and intermolecular hydrogen bonds are significant. The hydroxyl group forms bifurcated intramolecular hydrogen bonds to a carbonyl oxygen atom and an amide nitrogen. Several amide nitrogens act as donors to the hydroxyl group and carbonyl oxygen atoms. An amide nitrogen acts as a donor to another amide nitrogen. Several methyl, methylene, methyne, and phenyl hydrogens participate in hydrogen bonds to carbonyl oxygens, an amide nitrogen, and the pyridine nitrogen. The powder pattern is included in the Powder Diffraction File™ as entry 00-065-1426.


ChemInform ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 26 (21) ◽  
pp. no-no
Author(s):  
R. UEOKA ◽  
J. OKAI ◽  
K. SHIMADA ◽  
D. SEGAWA ◽  
T. NAKATA ◽  
...  

2001 ◽  
Vol 45 (9) ◽  
pp. 2598-2603 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laurent Poirel ◽  
Gerhard F. Weldhagen ◽  
Thierry Naas ◽  
Christophe De Champs ◽  
Michael G. Dove ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Pseudomonas aeruginosa GW-1 was isolated in 2000 in South Africa from blood cultures of a 38-year-old female who developed nosocomial pneumonia. This isolate harbored a self-transferable ca. 100-kb plasmid that conferred an expanded-spectrum cephalosporin resistance profile associated with an intermediate susceptibility to imipenem. A β-lactamase gene, bla GES-2, was cloned from whole-cell DNA of P. aeruginosa GW-1 and expressed in Escherichia coli. GES-2, with a pI value of 5.8, hydrolyzed expanded-spectrum cephalosporins, and its substrate profile was extended to include imipenem compared to that of GES-1, identified previously in Klebsiella pneumoniae. GES-2 activity was less inhibited by clavulanic acid, tazobactam and imipenem than GES-1. The GES-2 amino acid sequence differs from that of GES-1 by a glycine-to-asparagine substitution in position 170 located in the omega loop of Ambler class A enzymes. This amino acid change may explain the extension of the substrate profile of the plasmid-encoded β-lactamase GES-2.


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