nitrophenols has been researched along with tafamidis* in 2 studies
2 other study(ies) available for nitrophenols and tafamidis
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Inhibition of the mechano-enzymatic amyloidogenesis of transthyretin: role of ligand affinity, binding cooperativity and occupancy of the inner channel.
Dissociation of the native transthyretin (TTR) tetramer is widely accepted as the critical step in TTR amyloid fibrillogenesis. It is modelled by exposure of the protein to non-physiological low pH in vitro and is inhibited by small molecule compounds, such as the drug tafamidis. We have recently identified a new mechano-enzymatic pathway of TTR fibrillogenesis in vitro, catalysed by selective proteolytic cleavage, which produces a high yield of genuine amyloid fibrils. This pathway is efficiently inhibited only by ligands that occupy both binding sites in TTR. Tolcapone, which is bound with similar high affinity in both TTR binding sites without the usual negative cooperativity, is therefore of interest. Here we show that TTR fibrillogenesis by the mechano-enzymatic pathway is indeed more potently inhibited by tolcapone than by tafamidis but neither, even in large molar excess, completely prevents amyloid fibril formation. In contrast, mds84, the prototype of our previously reported bivalent ligand TTR 'superstabiliser' family, is notably more potent than the monovalent ligands and we show here that this apparently reflects the critical additional interactions of its linker within the TTR central channel. Our findings have major implications for therapeutic approaches in TTR amyloidosis. Topics: Amyloid; Benzophenones; Benzoxazoles; Binding Sites; Fenamates; Humans; Models, Molecular; Molecular Structure; Nitrophenols; Prealbumin; Protein Binding; Protein Multimerization; Proteolysis; Tolcapone | 2017 |
Quantification of quaternary structure stability in aggregation-prone proteins under physiological conditions: the transthyretin case.
The quaternary structure stability of proteins is typically studied under conditions that accelerate their aggregation/unfolding processes on convenient laboratory time scales. Such conditions include high temperature or pressure, chaotrope-mediated unfolding, or low or high pH. These approaches have the limitation of being nonphysiological and that the concentration of the protein in solution is changing as the reactions proceed. We describe a methodology to define the quaternary structure stability of the amyloidogenic homotetrameric protein transthyretin (TTR) under physiological conditions. This methodology expands from a described approach based on the measurement of the rate of subunit exchange of TTR with a tandem flag-tagged (FT₂) TTR counterpart. We demonstrate that subunit exchange of TTR with FT₂·TTR can be analyzed and quantified using a semi-native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis technique. In addition, we biophysically characterized two FT₂·TTR variants derived from wild-type and the amyloidogenic variant Val122Ile TTR, both of which are associated with cardiac amyloid deposition late in life. The FT₂·TTR variants have similar amyloidogenic potential and similar thermodynamic and kinetic stabilities compared to those of their nontagged counterparts. We utilized the methodology to study the potential of the small molecule SOM0226, a repurposed drug under clinical development for the prevention and treatment of the TTR amyloidoses, to stabilize TTR. The results enabled us to characterize the binding energetics of SOM0226 to TTR. The described technique is well-suited to study the quaternary structure of other human aggregation-prone proteins under physiological conditions. Topics: Amino Acid Substitution; Amyloid; Amyloidosis, Familial; Benzophenones; Benzoxazoles; Binding Sites; Drugs, Investigational; Fluorescent Dyes; Humans; Kinetics; Models, Molecular; Mutant Proteins; Nitrophenols; Nootropic Agents; Prealbumin; Protein Aggregation, Pathological; Protein Stability; Protein Structure, Quaternary; Protein Unfolding; Recombinant Proteins; Thermodynamics; Tolcapone | 2014 |