Glycogen Phosphorylase as a Target for Type 2 Diabetes: Synthetic, Biochemical, Structural and Computational Evaluation of Novel N-acyl-N '-(beta-D-glucopyranosyl) Urea Inhibitors
Author
Kantsadi, A. L.; Parmenopoulou, V.; Bakalov, D. N.; Snelgrove, L.; Stravodimos, G. A.; Chatzileontiadou, D. S. M.; Manta, S.; Panagiotopoulou, A.; Hayes, J. M.; Komiotis, D.; Leonidas, D. D.Date
2015Keyword
Abstract
Glycogen phosphorylase (GP), a validated target for the development of anti-hyperglycaemic agents, has been targeted for the design of novel glycopyranosylamine inhibitors. Exploiting the two most potent inhibitors from our previous study of N-acyl-beta-D-glucopyranosylamines (Parmenopoulou et al., Bioorg. Med. Chem. 2014, 22, 4810), we have extended the linking group to -NHCONHCO- between the glucose moiety and the aliphatic/aromatic substituent in the GP catalytic site beta-cavity. The N-acyl-N'-(beta-D-glucopyranosyl) urea inhibitors were synthesized and their efficiency assessed by biochemical methods, revealing inhibition constant values of 4.95 mu M and 2.53 mu M. Crystal structures of GP in complex with these inhibitors were determined and analyzed, providing data for further structure based design efforts. A novel Linear Response - Molecular Mechanics Coulomb Surface Area (LR-MM-CBSA) method has been developed which relates predicted and experimental binding free energies for a training set of N-acyl-N'-(beta-D-glucopyranosyl) urea ligands with a correlation coefficient R-2 of 0.89 and leave-one-out cross-validation (LOO-cv) Q(2) statistic of 0.79. The method has significant applications to direct future lead optimization studies, where ligand entropy loss on binding is revealed as a key factor to be considered. ADMET property predictions revealed that apart from potential permeability issues, the synthesized N-acyl-N'-(beta-D-glucopyranosyl) urea inhibitors have drug-like potential without any toxicity warnings.