Synthesis, Biological Evaluation and Docking Studies of Ring-Opened Analogues of Ipomoeassin F

Sarah O'Keefe, Pratiti Bhadra, Kwabena Baffour Duah, Guanghui Zong, Levise Tenay, Lauren E. Andrews, Hayden Schneider, Ashley Anderson, Zhijian Hu, Hazim Aljewari, Belinda Hall, Rachel Simmonds, Volkhard Helms, Stephen High, Wei Q. Shi

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

Abstract

The plant-derived macrocyclic resin glycoside ipomoeassin F (Ipom-F) binds to Sec61α and significantly disrupts multiple aspects of Sec61-mediated protein biogenesis at the endoplasmic reticulum, ultimately leading to cell death. However, extensive assessment of Ipom-F as a molecular tool and a therapeutic lead is hampered by its limited production scale, largely caused by intramolecular assembly of the macrocyclic ring. Here, using in vitro and/or in cellula biological assays to explore the first series of ring-opened analogues for the ipomoeassins, and indeed all resin glycosides, we provide clear evidence that macrocyclic integrity is not required for the cytotoxic inhibition of Sec61-dependent protein translocation by Ipom-F. Furthermore, our modeling suggests that open-chain analogues of Ipom-F can interact with multiple sites on the Sec61α subunit, most likely located at a previously identified binding site for mycolactone and/or the so-called lateral gate. Subsequent in silico-aided design led to the discovery of the stereochemically simplified analogue 3 as a potent, alternative lead compound that could be synthesized much more efficiently than Ipom-F and will accelerate future ipomoeassin research in chemical biology and drug discovery. Our work may also inspire further exploration of ring-opened analogues of other resin glycosides.
Original languageEnglish
Article number4419
JournalMolecules
Volume27
Issue number14
Number of pages21
ISSN1420-3049
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 10 Jul 2022
Externally publishedYes
MoE publication typeA1 Journal article-refereed

Fields of Science

  • ENDOPLASMIC-RETICULUM
  • INSIGHTS
  • LEAVES
  • PROTEIN TRANSLOCATION
  • RESIN GLYCOSIDES
  • SQUAMOSA
  • Sec61 translocon
  • cytotoxicity
  • macrocyclic natural glycolipids
  • molecular docking
  • protein translocation
  • resin glycosides
  • ring-opened analogues
  • 1182 Biochemistry, cell and molecular biology

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