Protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B (PTP1B) attenuates insulin signaling by catalyzing dephosphorylation of insulin receptors (IR) and is an attractive target of potential new drugs for treating the insulin resistance that is central to type II diabetes. Several analogues of cholecystokinin(26)(-)(33) (CCK-8) were found to be surprisingly potent inhibitors of PTP1B, and a common N-terminal tripeptide, N-acetyl-Asp-Tyr(SO(3)H)-Nle-, was shown to be necessary and sufficient for inhibition. This tripeptide was modified to reduce size and peptide character, and to replace the metabolically unstable sulfotyrosyl group. This led to the discovery of a novel phosphotyrosine bioisostere, 2-carboxymethoxybenzoic acid, and to analogues that were >100-fold more potent than the CCK-8 analogues and >10-fold selective for PTP1B over two other PTP enzymes (LAR and SHP-2), a dual specificity phosphatase (cdc25b), and a serine/threonine phosphatase (calcineurin). These inhibitors disrupted the binding of PTP1B to activated IR in vitro and prevented the loss of tyrosine kinase (IRTK) activity that accompanied PTP1B-catalyzed dephosphorylation of IR. Introduction of these poorly cell permeant inhibitors into insulin-treated cells by microinjection (oocytes) or by esterification to more lipophilic proinhibitors (3T3-L1 adipocytes and L6 myocytes) resulted in increased potency, but not efficacy, of insulin. In some instances, PTP1B inhibitors were insulin-mimetic, suggesting that in unstimulated cells PTP1B may suppress basal IRTK activity. X-ray crystallography of PTP1B-inhibitor complexes revealed that binding of an inhibitor incorporating phenyl-O-malonic acid as a phosphotyrosine bioisostere occurred with the mobile WPD loop in the open conformation, while a closely related inhibitor with a 2-carboxymethoxybenzoic acid bioisostere bound with the WPD loop closed, perhaps accounting for its superior potency. These CCK-derived peptidomimetic inhibitors of PTP1B represent a novel template for further development of potent, selective inhibitors, and their cell activity further justifies the selection of PTP1B as a therapeutic target.
A series of phenyl-substituted analogues of prostaglandin F2 alpha (PGF2 alpha) were prepared and evaluated for ocular hypotensive effect and side effects in different animal models. In addition, the activity of the analogues on FP receptors was studied in vitro. The results were compared with those of PGF2 alpha and its isopropyl ester. The phenyl-substituted PGF2 alpha analogues exhibited good intraocular pressure reducing effect, were more selective, and exhibited a much higher therapeutic index in the eye than PGF2 alpha or its isopropyl ester. The analogues exhibited high activity on FP receptors in a stereoselective manner for the 15 alpha-hydroxyl group.
Protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs) constitute a diverse family of enzymes that, together with protein tyrosine kinases, control the level of intracellular tyrosine phosphorylation, thus regulating many cellular functions. PTP1B negatively regulates insulin signaling, in part, by dephosphorylating key tyrosine residues within the regulatory domain of the beta-subunit of the insulin receptor, thereby attenuating receptor kinase activity. Inhibitors of PTP1B would therefore have the potential of prolonging the phosphorylated (activated) state of the insulin receptor and are anticipated to be a novel treatment of the insulin resistance characteristic of type 2 diabetes. We previously reported a series of small molecular weight peptidomimetics as competitive inhibitors of PTP1B, with the most active analogues having K(i) values in the low nanomolar range. Furthermore, we confirmed that the O-carboxymethyl salicylic acid moiety is a remarkably effective novel phosphotyrosine mimetic. Because of the low cell permeability of this compound class, it was important to investigate the possibility of replacing one or both of the remaining carboxyl groups while maintaining PTP1B inhibitory activity. The analogues described herein further support the importance of an acidic functionality at both positions of the tyrosine head moiety. An important discovery was the ortho tetrazole analogue 29 (K(i) = 2.0 microM), which was equipotent to the dicarboxylic acid analogue 2 (K(i) = 2.0 microM). Solution of the X-ray cocrystal structure of the ortho tetrazole analogue 29 bound to PTP1B revealed that the tetrazole moiety is well-accommodated in the active site and binds in a fashion similar to the ortho carboxylate analogue 2 reported previously. This novel monocarboxylic acid analogue revealed significantly higher Caco-2 cell permeability as compared to all previous compounds. Furthermore, compound 29 exhibited modest enhancement of insulin-stimulated 2-deoxyglucose uptake by L6 myocytes.
Protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B (PTP1B) negatively regulates insulin signaling in part by dephosphorylating key tyrosine residues within the regulatory domain of the beta-subunit of the insulin receptor (IR), thereby attenuating receptor tyrosine kinase activity. Inhibition of PTP1B is therefore anticipated to improve insulin resistance and has recently become the focus of discovery efforts aimed at identifying new drugs to treat type II diabetes. We previously reported that the tripeptide Ac-Asp-Tyr(SO(3)H)-Nle-NH(2) is a surprisingly effective inhibitor of PTP1B (K(i) = 5 microM). With the goal of improving the stability and potency of this lead, as well as attenuating its peptidic character, an analogue program was undertaken. Specific elements of the initial phase of this program included replacement of the N- and C-termini with non-amino acid components, modification of the tyrosine subunit, and replacement of the tyrosine sulfate with other potential phosphate mimics. The most potent analogue arising from this effort was triacid 71, which inhibits PTP1B competitively with a K(i) = 0.22 microM without inhibiting SHP-2 or LAR at concentrations up to 100 microM. Overall, the inhibitors generated in this work showed little or no enhancement of insulin signaling in cellular assays. However, potential prodrug triester 70 did induce enhancements in 2-deoxyglucose uptake into two different cell lines with concomitant augmentation of the tyrosine phosphorylation levels of insulin-signaling molecules. Key elements of the overall SAR reported herein include confirmation of the effectiveness and remarkable PTP1B-specificity of the novel tyrosine phosphate bioisostere, O-carboxymethyl salicylic acid; demonstration that the tyrosine skeleton is optimal relative to closely related structures; replacement of the p-1 aspartic acid with phenylalanine with little effect on activity; and demonstration that inhibitory activity can be maintained in the absence of an N-terminal carboxylic acid. An X-ray cocrystal structure of an analogue bearing a neutral N-terminus (69) bound to PTP1B is reported that confirms a mode of binding similar to that of peptidic substrates.
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