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Binding of Monovalent and Bivalent Ligands by Transthyretin Causes Different Short- and Long-Distance Conformational Changes

Authors :
Paola Nocerino
Iain J. Uings
Ryan P. Bingham
Alessandra Corazza
Diana Canetti
Guglielmo Verona
Palma Mangione
Christopher A. Waudby
John Christodoulou
Vittorio Bellotti
Mark B. Pepys
Graham W. Taylor
Source :
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2019.

Abstract

The wild type protein, transthyretin (TTR), and over 120 genetic TTR variants are amyloidogenic and cause, respectively, sporadic and hereditary systemic TTR amyloidosis. The homotetrameric TTR contains two identical thyroxine binding pockets, occupation of which by specific ligands can inhibit TTR amyloidogenesis in vitro. Ligand binding stabilizes the tetramer, inhibiting its proteolytic cleavage and its dissociation. Here, we show with solution-state NMR that ligand binding induces long-distance conformational changes in the TTR that have not previously been detected by X-ray crystallography, consistently with the inhibition of the cleavage of the DE loop. The NMR findings, coupled with surface plasmon resonance measurements, have identified dynamic exchange processes underlying the negative cooperativity of binding of "monovalent" ligand tafamidis. In contrast, mds84, our prototypic "bivalent" ligand, which is a more potent stabilizer of TTR in vitro that occupies both thyroxine pockets and the intramolecular channel between them, has greater structural effects.

Details

ISSN :
15204804 and 00222623
Volume :
62
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....838c410a107c0493cfd238da6acaa6c6
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jmedchem.9b01037