Liu M, Haddad J, Azucena E, Kotra LP, Kirzhner M, Mobashery S. Tethered bisubstrate derivatives as probes for mechanism and as inhibitors of aminoglycoside 3'-phosphotransferases.
J Org Chem 2000;
65:7422-31. [PMID:
11076599 DOI:
10.1021/jo000589k]
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Abstract
Aminoglycoside 3'-phosphotransferases [APH(3')s] phosphorylate aminoglycoside antibiotics, a reaction that inactivates the antibiotics. These enzymes are the primary cause of resistance to aminoglycosides in bacteria. APH(3')-Ia operates by a random-equilibrium BiBi mechanism, whereas APH(3')-IIIa catalyzes its reaction by the Theorell-Chance mechanism, a form of ordered BiBi mechanism. Hence, both substrates have to be present in the active site prior to the transfer of phosphate by both mechanisms. Four bisubstrate analogues, compounds 1-4, were designed and synthesized as inhibitors for APH(3')s. These compounds are made of adenosine linked covalently to the 3'-hydroxyl of neamine (an aminoglycoside) via all-methylene tethers of 5-8 carbons. The K(i) values measured for these compounds indicated that affinities of APH(3')-Ia and APH(3')-IIa for compounds 2 and 3 (six- and seven-carbon tethers, respectively) were the best, and the inhibition constants for the two were comparable.
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