Quantifying the Inhibitor-Target Site Interactions of Photosystem II Herbicides

Weed Science ◽  
1996 ◽  
Vol 44 (3) ◽  
pp. 743-748 ◽  
Author(s):  
John L. Huppatz

A convergence of research effort in a number of scientific disciplines in the early 1980s resulted in a rapid expansion of knowledge of the structure and function of the photosynthetic reaction center in bacteria and higher plants. The structure of the reaction center from photosynthetic bacteria was determined by X-ray analysis. The herbicide binding protein (the D1 protein) was identified by photoaffinity labelling and found to be an integral part of the photosynthetic reaction center complex in higher plants. Studies using herbicide-resistant mutants enabled the location of the herbicide binding niche on D1 to be determined. Quantitative Structure Activity Relationships (QSAR) of families of inhibitors and their effect on photosynthetic electron transport helped elucidate the nature of the interaction between inhibitors and receptor. Binding appeared to be predominantly hydrophobic with hydrogen bonding also having an important role. Studies with a series of highly potent inhibitors, the 2-cyanoacrylates, identified certain steric constraints in the interaction of these molecules with the binding site. The activity of these inhibitors was particularly sensitive to minor structural change and they proved to be useful probes of receptor topography. The results of structure-activity studies of the 2-cyanoacrylates combined with a refined knowledge of the three-dimensional structure of the inhibitor binding site has enabled computer-based molecular modelling of interactions of these inhibitors with the receptor. The spatial arrangement of the inhibitor functional groups within the binding domain was shown to be a critical factor in determining binding affinity.

1987 ◽  
Vol 42 (6) ◽  
pp. 742-750 ◽  
Author(s):  
Achim Trebst

The folding through the membrane of the plastoquinone and herbicide binding protein subunits of photosystem II and the topology of the binding niche for plastoquinone and herbicides is described. The model is based on the homology in amino acid sequence and folding prediction from the hydropathy analysis of the D-1 and D-2 subunits of photosystem II to the reaction center polypeptides L and M of the bacterial reaction center. It incorporates the amino acid changes in the D-1 polypeptide in herbicide tolerant plants and those indicated by chemical tagging to be involved in Qв binding. It proposes homologous amino acids in the D-1/D-2 polypeptides to those indicated by the X-ray structure of the bacterial reaction center to be involved in Fe-, quinone- and reaction center chlorophyll-binding. The different chemical compounds known to interfere with Qв function are grouped into two families depending on their orientation in the Qв binding niche.


1990 ◽  
Vol 45 (5) ◽  
pp. 336-342 ◽  
Author(s):  
John L. Huppatz ◽  
Helen G. McFadden ◽  
Leslie F. McCaffery

Three series of phenyl-substituted 2-cyanoacrylates were evaluated using simple quantitative structure activity relationships (QSAR) in an attempt to elucidate the nature of the regions of the binding site occupied by different parts of the molecules. Inhibition of the Hill reaction by substituted 3-phenylamino-2-cyanoacrylates correlated well with the lipophilicity of the substituent. The hydrophobic effect was also dominant when the Hill activity of a series of 3-benzylamino-2-cyanoacrylates was analyzed, although potency was considerably higher in the latter series. Lipophilicity and the electronic nature of the substituents were not major determinants in the Hill inhibitory activity of a series of substituted phcnoxycthyl 2-cyanoacrylic esters. In this case, a significant correlation was found with the molar rcfractivity (MR) of meta substituents, a parameter reflecting substituent size. The results indicate that the phenyl moiety of substituted 3-phenylamino- and 3-bcnzyl- amino-2-cyanoacrylates interacts with an essentially lipophilic binding domain, though it is likely that the two series are oriented differently with the 3-bcnzylamino series able to bind with greater affinity. In the phcnoxycthyl ester series, the substituted phenyl group interacts with a different environment, wherein ortho- and we7tf-substitution is tolerated, dependent on the bulk of the substituent, but /wra-substitution is detrimental to affinity for this region of the site.


1990 ◽  
Vol 45 (5) ◽  
pp. 455-458 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Sinning ◽  
J. Koepke ◽  
B. Schiller ◽  
H. Michel

A first model of the three-dimensional structure of the photosynthetic reaction center of the mutant T1 (SerL 223 → Ala, ArgL 217 → His) from Rhodopseudomonas viridis, resistant toward the triazine herbicide terbutryn (2-methylthio-4-ethylamino-6-f-butylamino-5-triazine), has been developed from X-ray data measured to a resolution of 2.5 Å. The secondary quinone, QB, which in T1 binds better than in the wild type, is present in the crystals. Both substituted residues are clearly visible in the difference fourier map. The replacement of these two residues in the QB site causes only minor changes in the overall structure of the protein.


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