A Nucleophilic Activity-Based Probe Enables Profiling of PLP-Dependent Enzymes

Chembiochem. 2023 Apr 3;24(7):e202200669. doi: 10.1002/cbic.202200669. Epub 2023 Mar 1.

Abstract

PLP-dependent enzymes represent an important class of highly "druggable" enzymes that perform a wide array of critical reactions to support all organisms. Inhibition of individual members of this family of enzymes has been validated as a therapeutic target for pathologies ranging from infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis to epilepsy. Given the broad nature of the activities within this family of enzymes, we envisioned a universally acting probe to characterize existing and putative members of the family that also includes the necessary chemical moieties to enable activity-based protein profiling experiments. Hence, we developed a probe that contains an N-hydroxyalanine warhead that acts as a covalent inhibitor of PLP-dependent enzymes, a linear diazirine for UV crosslinking, and an alkyne moiety to enable enrichment of crosslinked proteins. Our molecule was used to study PLP-dependent enzymes in vitro as well as look at whole-cell lysates of M. tuberculosis and assess inhibitory activity. The probe was able to enrich and identify LysA, a PLP-dependent enzyme crucial for lysine biosynthesis, through mass spectrometry. Overall, our study shows the utility of this trifunctional first-generation probe. We anticipate further optimization of probes for PLP-dependent enzymes will enable the characterization of rationally designed covalent inhibitors of PLP-dependent enzymes, which will expedite the preclinical characterization of these important therapeutic targets.

Keywords: PLP-dependent enzymes; activity-based protein profilin; chemical genetics; chemoproteomics; probes.

MeSH terms

  • Mass Spectrometry
  • Models, Molecular
  • Pyridoxal Phosphate* / chemistry

Substances

  • Pyridoxal Phosphate