Seite - (000062) - in Biomedical Chemistry: Current Trends and Developments
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Francisca Lopes, Maria M. M. Santos and Rui Moreira*
1.2 Designing Covalent Inhibitors: A Medicinal
Chemistry Challenge
1.2.1 Introduction
The design of enzyme inhibitors is one of the most attractive research
topics in Medicinal Chemistry. In particular, covalent inhibitors provide
the opportunity of combining concepts of chemical reactivity and
mechanisms of organic reactions with the structural features required
for optimal molecular recognition in order to obtain the appropriate
reactivity and selectivity profile towards the desired enzyme target.
Typically, these inhibitors present an electrophilic functionality capable
of reacting irreversibly with catalytic amino acid residues containing a
nucleophilic group (e.g. serine, threonine and cysteine) (Powers, 2002;
Santos, 2007). In spite of its tremendous potential (Robertson, 2007;
Potashman, 2009), designing selective covalent inhibitors remains a
challenging task as the electrophilic groups present in many inhibitor
structures can also react with other macromolecules leading to
deleterious (off-target) events, or can be scavenged by ubiquitous low-
molecular-weight nucleophiles such as glutathione leading to sub-
optimal drug concentration at the site of action (Johansson, 2012).
However, there are several examples of covalent inhibitors that are
widely used drugs, including acetyl salicylic acid (the active ingredient
of Aspirin), orlistat (anti-obesity drug) and ampicillin (antibiotic) (Fig.
1.2.1). Many of these drugs were not originally designed as irreversible
inhibitors and their exact mechanism of action was often discovered
afterwards. A recent example is the case of clopidogrel (antiplatelet
agent), which was found to require activation by cytochrome P450 in the
liver to generate an active metabolite containing a free thiol capable of
reacting with a cysteine residue of adenosine 5´-diphosphate (ADP)
receptor to form a covalent disulfide adduct (Fig. 1.2.1). Overall, nearly
30% of the enzymes that are inhibited by marketed drugs are irreversibly
Biomedical Chemistry: Current Trends and Developments
- Titel
- Biomedical Chemistry: Current Trends and Developments
- Autor
- Nuno Vale
- Verlag
- De Gruyter Open Ltd
- Datum
- 2016
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-11-046887-8
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 427
- Schlagwörter
- Physical Sciences, Engineering and Technology, Chemistry, Organic Chemistry, Green Chemistry
- Kategorien
- Naturwissenschaften Chemie