posted on 2013-09-23, 00:00authored byShih-Hsun Chen, Sheng-Wei Lin, Shen-Rong Lin, Po-Huang Liang, Jinn-Moon Yang
Bisphosphonates
are potent inhibitors of farnesyl pyrophosphate synthase (FPPS) and
geranylgeranyl diphosphate synthase (GGPPS). Current bisphosphonate
drugs (e.g., Fosamax and Zometa) are highly efficacious in the treatment
of bone diseases such as osteoporosis, Paget’s disease, and
tumor-induced osteolysis, but they are often less potent in blood
and soft-tissue due to their phosphate moieties. The discovery of
nonbisphosphonate inhibitors of FPPS and/or GGPPS for the treatment
of bone diseases and cancers is, therefore, a current goal. Here,
we propose a moiety-linkage-based method, combining a site-moiety
map with chemical structure rules (CSRs), to discover nonbisphosphonate
inhibitors from thousands of commercially available compounds and
known crystal structures. Our moiety-linkage map reveals the binding
mechanisms and inhibitory efficacies of 51 human GGPPS (hGGPPS) inhibitors.
To the best of our knowledge, we are the first team to discover two
novel selective nonbisphosphonate inhibitors, which bind to the inhibitory
site of hGGPPS, using CSRs and site-moiety maps. These two compounds
can be considered as a novel lead for the potent inhibitors of hGGPPS
for the treatment of cancers and mevalonate-pathway diseases. Moreover,
based on our moiety-linkage map, we identified two key residues of
hGGPPS, K202, and K212, which play an important role for the inhibitory
effect of zoledronate (IC50 = 3.4 μM and 2.4 μM,
respectively). This result suggests that our method can discover specific
hGGPPS inhibitors across multiple prenyltransferases. These results
show that the compounds that highly fit our moiety-linkage map often
inhibit hGGPPS activity and induce tumor cell apoptosis. We believe
that our method is useful for discovering potential inhibitors and
binding mechanisms for pharmaceutical targets.