Abstract
Polymerases have a structurally highly conserved negatively charged amino acid motif that is strictly required for Mg 2+ cation-dependent catalytic incorporation of (d)NTP nucleotides into nucleic acids. Based on these characteristics, a nucleoside monophosphonate scaffold, α-carboxy nucleoside phosphonate (α-CNP), was designed that is recognized by a variety of polymerases. Kinetic, biochemical, and crystallographic studies with HIV-1 reverse transcriptase revealed that α-CNPs mimic the dNTP binding through a carboxylate oxygen, two phosphonate oxygens, and base-pairing with the template. In particular, the carboxyl oxygen of the α-CNP acts as the potential equivalent of the α-phosphate oxygen of dNTPs and two oxygens of the phosphonate group of the α-CNP chelate Mg 2+, mimicking the chelation by the β- and γ-phosphate oxygens of dNTPs. α-CNPs (i ) do not require metabolic activation (phosphorylation), (ii ) bind directly to the substrate-binding site, (iii ) chelate one of the two active site Mg 2+ ions, and (iv) reversibly inhibit the polymerase catalytic activity without being incorporated into nucleic acids. In addition, α-CNPs were also found to selectively interact with regulatory (i.e., allosteric) Mg 2+ -dNTP-binding sites of nucleos(t)ide-metabolizing enzymes susceptible to metabolic regulation. α-CNPs represent an entirely novel and broad technological platform for the development of specific substrate active- or regulatory-site inhibitors with therapeutic potential.
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Balzarini, J., Das, K., Bernatchez, J. A., Martinez, S. E., Ngure, M., Keane, S., … Arnold, E. (2015). Alpha-carboxy nucleoside phosphonates as universal nucleoside triphosphate mimics. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 112(11), 3475–3480. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1420233112
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