Interactions of "bora-penicilloates" with serine ?-lactamases and DD-peptidases.
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ABSTRACT: Specific boronic acids are generally powerful tetrahedral intermediate/transition state analogue inhibitors of serine amidohydrolases. This group of enzymes includes bacterial ?-lactamases and DD-peptidases where there has been considerable development of boronic acid inhibitors. This paper describes the synthesis, determination of the inhibitory activity, and analysis of the results from two ?-(2-thiazolidinyl) boronic acids that are closer analogues of particular tetrahedral intermediates involved in ?-lactamase and DD-peptidase catalysis than those previously described. One of them, 2-[1-(dihydroxyboranyl)(2-phenylacetamido)methyl]-5,5-dimethyl-1,3-thiazolidine-4-carboxylic acid, is a direct analogue of the deacylation tetrahedral intermediates of these enzymes. These compounds are micromolar inhibitors of class C ?-lactamases but, very unexpectedly, not inhibitors of class A ?-lactamases. We rationalize the latter result on the basis of a new mechanism of boronic acid inhibition of the class A enzymes. A stable inhibitory complex is not accessible because of the instability of an intermediate on its pathway of formation. The new boronic acids also do not inhibit bacterial DD-peptidases (penicillin-binding proteins). This result strongly supports a central feature of a previously proposed mechanism of action of ?-lactam antibiotics, where deacylation of ?-lactam-derived acyl-enzymes is not possible because of unfavorable steric interactions.
SUBMITTER: Dzhekieva L
PROVIDER: S-EPMC4204886 | biostudies-literature | 2014 Oct
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
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