Series of 9-amino and 9-thioacridines have been synthesized and studied as inhibitors of trypanothione reductase (TR) from Trypanosoma cruzi, the causative agent of Chagas' disease. The compounds are structural analogues of the acridine drug mepacrine (quinacrine), which is a competitive inhibitor of the parasite enzyme, but not of human glutathione reductase, the closest related host enzyme. The 9-aminoacridines yielded apparent K(i) values for competitive inhibition between 5 and 43 microM. The most effective inhibitors were those with the methoxy and chlorine substituents of mepacrine and NH(2) or NHCH(CH(3))(CH(2))(4)N(Et)(2) at C9. Detailed kinetic analyses revealed that in the case of 9-aminoacridines more than one inhibitor molecule can bind to the enzyme. In contrast, the 9-thioacridine derivatives inhibit TR with mixed-type kinetics. The kinetic data are discussed in light of the three-dimensional structure of the TR-mepacrine complex. The conclusion that structurally very similar acridine compounds can give rise to completely different inhibition patterns renders modelling studies and quantitative structure-activity relationships difficult.
Ajoene ((E,Z)-4,5,9-trithiadodeca-1,6,11-triene 9-oxide), a garlic-derived natural compound, is a covalent inhibitor as well as a substrate of human glutathione reductase (GR) and Trypanosoma cruzi trypanothione reductase (TR). The 2.1-A resolution crystal structure of GR inhibited by (E)-ajoene revealed a mixed disulfide between the active site Cys58 and the CH2=CH-CH2-SO-CH2-CH=CH-S moiety of ajoene. The modified enzyme has a markedly increased oxidase activity when compared to free GR. GR reduces (Z)-ajoene with a kcat/Km of 6.8 x 10(3) M-1 s-1 yielding 4,5,9-trithiadodeca-1, 6,11-triene (deoxyajoene) and 4,8,9,13-tetrathiahexadeca-1,6,10, 15-tetraene as stable reaction products. The reaction leads also to the formation of single-electron reduced products and concomitantly superoxide anion radicals as shown by coupling the reaction to the reduction of cytochrome c. The interactions between the flavoenzymes and ajoene are expected to increase the oxidative stress of the respective cell. The antiparasitic and cytostatic actions of ajoene may at least in part be due to the multiple effects on key enzymes of the antioxidant thiol metabolism.
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