(Received for publication, April 7, 1997)
From the Departments of Biochemistry and
¶ Chemistry, Parke-Davis Pharmaceutical Research, Division of
Warner-Lambert Company, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48105
Investigation of the comparative activities of
various inhibitors of farnesyl:protein transferase (FPTase) has led to
the observation that the presence of phosphate or pyrophosphate ions in
the assay buffer increases the potency of farnesyl diphosphate (FPP)
competitive inhibitors. In addition to exploring the phenomenon of
phosphate synergy, we report here the effects of various other ions
including sulfate, bicarbonate, and chloride on the inhibitory ability
of three FPP competitive compounds:
Cbz-His-Tyr-Ser(OBn)TrpNH2 (2),
Cbz-HisTyr(OPO42)-Ser(OBn)TrpNH2
(3), and
-hydroxyfarnesyl phosphonic acid (4). Detailed
kinetic analysis of FPTase inhibition revealed a high degree of synergy
for compound 2 and each of these ions. Phosphorylation of 2 to give 3 completely eliminated any ionic synergistic effect. Moreover, these
ions have an antagonistic effect on the inhibitory potency of compound
4. The anions in the absence of inhibitor exhibit non-competitive
inhibition with respect to FPP. These results suggest that phosphate,
pyrophosphate, bicarbonate, sulfate, and chloride ions may be binding
at the active site of both free enzyme and product-bound enzyme with
normal substrates. These bound complexes increase the potency of FPP
competitive inhibitors and mimic an enzyme:product form of the
enzyme. None of the anions studied here proved to be synergistic with
respect to inhibition of geranylgeranyl transferase I. These findings
provide insight into the mechanism of action of FPP competitive
inhibitors for FPTase and point to enzymatic differences between FPTase
and geranylgeranyl transferase I that may facilitate the design of more
potent and specific inhibitors for these therapeutically relevant
target enzymes.
Since mutations rendering the Ras protein (p21) oncogene are
prevalent in many human cancers (1) and farnesylation of the C-terminal
region of the Ras protein is essential for activation of Ras function
in vivo (2, 3), a potential therapeutic approach to tumor
regression would be to inhibit the farnesylation reaction.
Farnesyl:protein transferase (FPTase)1
catalyzes the transfer of a 15-carbon group to several cellular proteins containing the requisite C-terminal CAAX
recognition sequence. The specificity for transfer of farnesyl relies
on the CAAX motif comprised of a cysteine followed by two
aliphatic amino acids and ending mainly with a methionine or serine.
FPTase isolated from rat brain is a 97-kDa heterodimeric protein
requiring both zinc and magnesium metal ions (4, 5). The reaction mechanism for this enzyme is shown in Fig. 1 where a
thioether bond is formed upon transfer of the farnesyl moiety of
farnesyl diphosphate (FPP) to the thiol of the cysteine residue. The
kinetic mechanism for the two-substrate reaction is functionally
ordered where FPP binds first onto FPTase (6, 7).
Several classes of compounds have been identified as potent inhibitors
of FPTase. These include peptide mimetic structures based on the
tetrapeptide CVFM (5, 8-11), bisubstrate analog structures (12), and
farnesyl pyrophosphate competitive compounds (13-15). These inhibitors
show a wide range of specificity with respect to other prenylating
enzymes including geranylgeranyl transferase. Geranylgeranyl
transferase I transfers a 20-carbon geranylgeranyl group to proteins
characterized by a CAAX motif, generally with a terminal
leucine. The subunit is identical for both rat FPTase and rat
geranylgeranyl transferase I while the
subunit has 30% sequence
identity (16).
Recently, the pentapeptide (1) was identified as a potent inhibitor of FPTase (17, 18). This compound was shown to be competitive with respect to FPP and was also demonstrated to be more potent in phosphate buffer than in a Hepes buffered system under otherwise identical conditions (19). In this study, the mechanism by which phosphate enhances inhibition of the tetrapeptide (2) was studied kinetically. We also wished to determine whether other anions (in particular product pyrophosphate) would cause this same enhancement, and whether other known FPP analog inhibitors share this anion requirement. Furthermore, we wanted to determine whether the phosphate enhancement of binding could be accomplished by covalently linking the phosphate to the inhibitor on an available tyrosine hydroxyl, and whether this abolished the enhancement by exogenous phosphate ion. Finally, we wanted to determine whether the phosphate enhancement of inhibitor binding was specific for FPTase compared with geranylgeranyl transferase I since distinguishing inhibition characteristics for these two similar enzymes may be critical in generating selective agents with distinctive cellular activities and further delineating the specificity by which these enzymes operate.
Tritiated farnesyl pyrophosphate and
geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate were obtained from American Radiolabeled
Chemicals (St. Louis, MO). Thr-Lys-Cys-Val-Ile-Met and
biotin-Aha-Thr-Lys-Cys-Val-Ile-Met were synthesized according to solid
phase peptide chemistry techniques (21, 22). -Hydroxyfarnesyl
phosphonic acid was synthesized as described (13). Compounds
1, 2, and 3 were synthesized as
described (20). Potassium phosphate and sodium sulfate were obtained
from Fisher and were the highest grade available. Sodium pyrophosphate
and potassium chloride were obtained from Sigma. Potassium bicarbonate
was obtained from Mallinckrodt and Hepes buffer was obtained from Life
Technologies, Inc. Geranylgeranyl transferase I was a gift from Dr.
Michael Gelb, University of Washington, Seattle, WA. FPTase was
expressed by baculovirus in SF9 cells and purified according to the
following procedure adapted from Reiss et al. (4).
SF9 cell
pellets from 1.5 liters of suspension growth were resuspended in buffer
containing 20 mM Tris chloride (pH 7.5), 50 mM
NaCl, 20 µM ZnCl2, and 1 mM DTT
(Buffer A) and homogenized by French Press at 700 kpsi. Homogenates
were centrifuged at 100,000 × g for 45 min and
supernatants adjusted to 55% saturation with ammonium sulfate.
Precipitated material was collected by spinning at 20,000 × g for 20 min and resuspended in Buffer A. Samples were then
dialyzed against 4 liters of Buffer A for 2 h and then 4 liters of
fresh Buffer A for 16 h. Dialyzed samples were then filtered (0.4 µm) and loaded onto a Q-Sepharose column (HiLoad 26/10) using an fast
protein liquid chromatography system (Pharmacia Biotech Inc.). The
column was washed with 220 ml of Buffer A followed by 60 ml of Buffer B
(20 mM Tris chloride (pH 7.5), 150 mM NaCl, 20 µM ZnCl2, and 1 mM DTT). The
enzyme was eluted with a linear gradient (440 ml) of buffer containing
150 mM to 1 M NaCl at a flow rate of 4 ml/min.
Fractions containing FPTase activity were pooled, brought to 10%
glycerol, and stored at 80 °C for later affinity purification.
The affinity column for FPTase purification was prepared by mixing 12.8 mg of CNBr-activated CH-Sepharose with 26 mg of the peptide Thr-Lys-Cys-Val-Ile-Met in 43 ml of coupling buffer (100 mM NaHCO3 and 500 mM NaCl (pH 8.2)) for 4 h with constant stirring at room temperature. The resin was then washed with 300 ml of Buffer C (50 mM Tris chloride, 100 mM NaCl, and 1 mM DTT) and poured into a column. The column was stored in 20 mM Tris chloride (pH 7.5), 0.02% sodium azide at 4 °C.
Prior to FPTase purification, the affinity column (2.5 × 12 cm) was washed with 300 ml of cold Buffer C. Thawed, active fast protein liquid chromatography fractions (80-100 ml) were then loaded onto the column and cycled through 3 times. The column was washed with 300 ml of Buffer D (50 mM Tris chloride, 100 mM NaCl, 1 mM DTT, and 0.2% PEG 8000) and the enzyme eluted with 300 ml of elution buffer (50 mM Tris succinate, 1 mM DTT, 500 mM NaCl, 0.2% PEG 8000, and 10% glycerol (pH 5)). The eluent was concentrated in an Amicon concentrator with a YM10 membrane to 5-10 ml, washed twice with 10 ml of Buffer E (50 mM Tris, 100 mM NaCl, 1 mM DTT, 0.2% PEG 8000, and 10% glycerol), and quick frozen in a dry ice-ethanol bath. The enzyme was a single band for each subunit by Coomassie Blue stain on a Novex 4-20% Tris glycine SDS-polyacrylamide electrophoresis gel.
Peptide Synthesis, Purification, and CharacterizationThe
peptide analogs were synthesized by solid phase peptide synthetic
methodologies (21, 22). The peptide analogs were prepared using an
N-Fmoc protecting group strategy on a
Rink-amide resin (4,2
,4
-dimethoxyphenyl-Fmoc-aminomethyl)-phenoxy resin) (23).
The N-Fmoc group was removed with 20%
piperidine in N-methylpyrrolidone prior to coupling with the
next protected amino acid. All amino acids were double coupled as their
N-hydroxybenzotriazole (HOBt) activated esters or as their
PyBOP-activated esters unless incomplete coupling was indicated by the
Kaiser test (24). The peptides were simultaneously deprotected and
cleaved from the resin by treatments with 25-70% trifluoroacetic acid
in methylene chloride, depending on the side chain protecting groups,
at room temperature for 2-3 h.
Crude peptides were then purified to homogeneity by preparative reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) eluting with a linear gradient of 0.1% aqueous trifluoroacetic acid with increasing concentrations of 0.1% trifluoroacetic acid in acetonitrile (CH3CN). Peptide fractions found to be homogeneous by analytical reversed-phase HPLC were combined, concentrated, and lyophilized. All the peptides were analyzed for homogeneity by analytical HPLC, and characterized by amino acid analysis, elemental analysis, fast atom bombardment or electrospray mass spectrometry, and proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1H NMR) spectroscopy.
Phosphorylation of the tyrosine residue was carried out while the peptide was still linked to the resin using an excess of di-t-butyl-N,N-diethylphosphoramidite and tetrazole, followed by oxidation with 70% t-butylperoxide in methylene chloride. The t-butyl groups were removed simultaneously under the cleavage conditions (60% trifluoroacetic acid in methylene chloride).
In Vitro FPTase Enzyme AssayEnzyme activity was monitored using scintillation proximity assay technology from Amersham. Standard reactions were carried out in a 100-µl volume containing 50 mM Hepes (pH 7.4), 5 mM MgCl2, 20 µM ZnCl2, 1 mM DTT, 0.1% PEG 8000, 200 nM peptide (biotin-Aha-Thr-Lys-Cys-Val-Ile-Met), 134 nM tritiated farnesylpyrophosphate, and 0.3-0.5 nM affinity purified farnesyl:protein transferase. Inhibitors were assayed at a final concentration of 5% dimethyl sulfoxide. When the effect of various ions were studied, buffered potassium phosphate, Na2P2O7, Na2SO4, KCl, or KHCO3 were added to the assay buffer at the indicated concentrations. All reactions were initiated with the addition of enzyme followed by incubation at 37 °C for 30 min. The reactions were terminated with the addition of 150 µl of stop reagent (prepared by diluting 20 mg/ml scintillation proximity assay beads (resuspended in phosphate-buffered saline + 0.05% NaN3) 1:10 with buffer containing 1.5 M magnesium acetate, 200 mM H3PO4, and 0.5% bovine serum albumin). Radioactive product was then counted on a Wallac Microbeta 1450 scintillation counter.
Data AnalysisInitial velocity data were obtained from the counts obtained from radiolabeled product using the scintillation proximity assay technology and analyzed using the kinetics software package KinetAsyst II (IntelleKintetics, Princeton, NJ) on a Macintosh computer. The data for the double inhibition experiments were fitted to Equation 1 where one inhibitor is noncompetitive for FPP, and the other inhibitor is competitive for FPP, and the inhibitors are not mutually exclusive (25),
![]() |
(Eq. 1) |
![]() |
(Eq. 2) |
![]() |
(Eq. 3) |
We have previously seen an
effect of phosphate anion on the inhibitory potency of the FPP
competitive pentapeptide (1). Truncation of this compound
yielded Cbz-His-Tyr-Ser(OBn)-Trp-NH2 (compound 2,
Fig. 2) which is equally potent and also competitive for
FPP. As shown in Table I, compound 2 has a
Ki of 984 nM when assayed in Hepes
buffer in the absence of phosphate. However, when 5 mM
potassium phosphate is added to this buffer system, the inhibition
becomes 53-fold more potent showing a Ki of 18 nM. Because of these large differences in inhibitory
potency against the enzyme, we wished to analyze kinetically this
phenomenon using compound 2 and several different
anions.
|
Table
II shows the inhibition constants of several anions
against FPTase. Each ion shows noncompetitive kinetics with respect to
FPP and an inhibition constant in the mM range.
Pyrophosphate is the most potent inhibitor shown with a
Ki of 1.4 mM due to the fact that
pyrophosphate is also a product inhibitor (13). When inhibitor
2 is tested in the presence in these anions, a significant
enhancement of inhibition is observed. By varying anion concentration
and compound 2, a kinetic analysis can be made based on
possible synergy of inhibition. The degree of synergy can be analyzed
using Equation 1 in a system where a competitive inhibitor and a
noncompetitive inhibitor may bind to the active site in combination
favorable to binding and resulting in an enhancement of inhibition
(25). A value is derived that is a measure of cooperativity and can
also be described as an interaction factor between the two molecules.
If
is greater than 1, the binding of one inhibitor is hindering the
binding of the other. If
is equal to 1, the binding of each species has no effect on the other, and if
is less than 1, then the binding
of the two species are synergistic. In Fig. 3, a Dixon plot of compound 2 versus varying concentrations of
phosphate anion show lines that intersect above the x axis
indicative of a synergy of inhibition and gives a
value = 0.012. The
value actually represents the reciprocal of the maximal
enhancement that can be observed, for the case of phosphate and
compound 2, this increase is over 80-fold. The
values
for several anions tested and their possible fold enhancement of
inhibition with compound 2 are listed in Table
III and all show synergy of inhibition.
|
|
Because of the large increase in
inhibition by phosphate anion on compound 2, a synthetic
strategy was devised to covalently link the phosphate group onto the
tyrosine hydroxyl group of 2. This yielded a much more
potent inhibitor (compound 3, Fig. 2) while retaining the
characteristic of being competitive for FPP as shown in Fig.
4. In addition to being a low nanomolar inhibitor, this
compound is unaffected by the presence of phosphate in the buffer. As
shown in Table I, the Ki values of this compound are
2.6 and 3.6 nM in a Hepes buffer system with and
without added phosphate. Comparing compound 2 and
3 where the only difference is the added phosphate group,
their Ki values in a Hepes buffer system are 984 and
2.6 nM, respectively. However, in the presence of 5 mM phosphate, the Ki for compound
2 is 53-fold lower while the Ki for
compound 3 remains relatively unchanged.
Inhibition of Farnesyl:Protein Transferase by (
(-Hydroxyfarnesyl)phosphonic acid (4) is shown
in Fig. 2 and is competitive with respect to FPP exhibiting a
Ki = 49 nM in a Hepes buffer system.
This value is consistent with that reported in the literature (13).
However, when 5 mM phosphate is added to the assay buffer,
the Ki of this compound increases 10-fold to 488 nM (see Table I) yet remains competitive with respect to
FPP. This result seems to imply that there is now mutual competition
between compound 4 and phosphate anion.
Compound 2 was also assayed against geranylgeranyl transferase I in the presence of the anions shown in this study. However, in this case, there was no increase in inhibition observed when any of the anions were included in the assay buffer.
As the ongoing search for potent inhibitors of FPTase continues, a
better understanding of the enzyme mechanism of FPTase is necessary to
provide insight into the design and synthesis of potent FPTase
inhibitors. Employing a phosphate buffer system, we identified several
compounds as very potent inhibitors of the farnesylation reaction.
Subsequent examination of their inhibitory potency in a nonphosphate
buffering system revealed significantly lower enzyme inhibition
in vitro. Further investigation showed that the phosphate
anion was acting in a synergistic way with certain inhibitors.
Moreover, this synergism was observed only for inhibitors that were
competitive with respect to farnesyl diphosphate. Using compound
2 we have kinetically analyzed the synergistic role played
by several anions. Not all FPP competitive inhibitors, however, were
synergistic with phosphate anion as evidenced by the behavior of
-hydroxyfarnesyl phosphonic acid (4).
In a
Hepes buffer system compound 2 is competitive with respect
to FPP having a Ki of 984 nM. In the
same buffer system plus 5 mM potassium phosphate, compound
2 is still competitive with respect to FPP but the
Ki is reduced 53-fold to 18 nM. This
effect could be indicative of synergy of inhibition between two
molecules operating together at the active site. Similar inhibitory
effects have been observed with phosphoenolpyruvate mutase (26) and
with phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase from Zea mays (27).
Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase proceeds through a random sequential
mechanism where a high level of synergism of binding of substrates is
observed. Very high levels of synergistic inhibition was found between
oxalate and carbamyl phosphate ( = 0.0013). In the case of
phosphoenolpyruvate mutase, synergy of inhibition between oxalate and
anions that alone were noncompetitive inhibitors suggested a
"combined presence" in the enzyme active site as a bimolecular
transition state analog. In both of these cases, the inhibitor oxalate
was a very close mimetic of the original substrate phosphoenolpyruvate.
In our case, the peptidic inhibitors bear little resemblance
intuitively to the original substrates.
Using affinity purified FPTase from rat brain, phosphate was
kinetically analyzed as an inhibitor. We found noncompetitive inhibition with respect to FPP in the high millimolar concentration range. In cases where one inhibitor is noncompetitive and the other is
competitive, the amount of synergism between two compounds can be
measured using a Dixon plot to arrive at an interaction value.
is a measure of the amount of synergistic cooperativity between the two
inhibitors. A Dixon plot is shown in Fig. 3 for the case of compound
2 and phosphate anion. Here,
is 0.012 showing that an
increase of over 80-fold (1/
) in inhibition is possible.
Because an improvement of inhibition with phosphate anion was observed with a tetrapeptide based molecule, other anions were used to test whether synergism would also be found. The anions sulfate, carbonate, chloride, and pyrophosphate were found to retain a synergistic effect with compound 2, whereas nitrate and acetate showed little or no effect. When the anions were tested for direct inhibition of FPTase, all showed noncompetitive inhibition with respect to farnesyl diphosphate. This kinetic pattern is consistent with these anions binding to two different forms of the enzyme. One logical binding site for phosphate, for example, could be at the portion of the active site of FPTase that actively binds the pyrophosphate group of farnesyl diphosphate known as the pyrophosphate binding pocket.
Evidence for Synergy of Inhibition at the Active Site of FPTaseThere are four pieces of supportive evidence that the
anion contributing to synergy of inhibition is acting at the enzyme active site. First, noncompetitive kinetics for phosphate was observed
with respect to FPP against farnesyl:protein transferase. Second, based
on the effect of phosphate anion on inhibition of FPTase, a second
inhibitor, compound 3, was synthesized which contained a
covalently linked phosphate group. For this compound, the effect of
phosphate anion to enhance inhibition was no longer found. The
inhibition of compound 3 itself against FPTase was 3 nM making this compound one of the most potent inhibitors
reported to date against FPTase (see Fig. 4). Third, when
-hydroxyfarnesyl phosphonate was studied, there appeared to be a
direct competition for this binding pocket and antisynergy was
observed. The Ki in Hepes buffer was 10-fold lower than that observed in the presence of 5 mM phosphate.
Finally, when inhibitors that are competitive with respect to the
peptide substrate were studied (CVFM for example), no phosphate effect was observed.
Kinetic analysis reveals that the anions are noncompetitive with
respect to FPP. Therefore, the phosphate must bind to two different
forms of the enzyme. Phosphate can bind to the free form of the enzyme
because the pyrophosphate pocket is still unoccupied. In considering
other forms of the enzyme to which phosphate could bind, the
E:FPP form of the enzyme where the pyrophosphate pocket is
already occupied seems unlikely. Furthermore, once the bulky peptide
substrate binds at the active site, catalysis happens extremely fast
and product release is thought to be rate-limiting (7). If there is an
ordered mechanism of product release, the pyrophosphate would leave
prior to the farnesylated peptide providing a second form of the enzyme
which would then be accessible to phosphate binding at the putative
pyrophosphate binding pocket of the active site. Fig. 5
shows how phosphate anion could exhibit noncompetitive kinetics of
inhibition with respect to FPP and bind to two different forms of the
enzyme. In this mechanistic scheme, phosphate binds to the free form of
the enzyme (I) because the pyrophosphate pocket is still unoccupied. In
addition, after release of pyrophosphate from the
E:farnesylated peptide:PPi form of the enzyme,
there would exist an E:farnesylated peptide form of the
enzyme (V) that would have a pyrophosphate binding pocket now
accessible to phosphate anion. If the inhibitor 2 was acting
like a farnesylated product (F-CAAX), then phosphate could bind to the enzyme:inhibitor form of the enzyme. The consequence would
presumably be a closely mimicked step of the enzyme catalytic mechanism. Since product release is rate-limiting, the
E:F-CAAX species would be a considered a
kinetically long lasting species. This may account for the synergy of
inhibition observed.
There are several examples in the literature of such synergism like phosphoenolpyruvate mutase (26) where many anions were used as a close substrate analog and synergy of inhibition was observed. In addition, synergy of inhibition with anions and a substrate analog was observed for phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (27). In both cases, the data could be analyzed in terms of a transition state analog. But in this case, the inhibitor is not a structural analog of either substrate in the enzyme catalyzed reaction. Nevertheless, anions have a dramatic impact on the degree of inhibition with certain FPP competitive compounds and may be used to design more effective inhibitors against the enzyme possibly as transition state analogs.
Comparison of Synergy of Inhibition for FPTase and Geranylgeranyl Transferase ISince FPTase and geranylgeranyl transferase I share
a common subunit and undergo very similar reactions (the length of the prenyl chain differing by five carbon units) it was of interest to
examine if there still existed the same synergy of inhibition. The
IC50 for compound 2 against geranylgeranyl
transferase I is 12 µM and no effect of phosphate or
other anions was found. The lack of an anion effect may point out
differences between these two enzymes that could be used to increase
specificity of inhibition for each respective protein. Since the two
enzymes share an identical subunit, the differences in synergy of
inhibition may lie elsewhere. One possibility may be that kinetically,
geranylgeranyl transferase I does not release PPi in an
ordered fashion leaving no room for any anions to combine with a
partial product form of an inhibitor. It would also be plausible
that the specific inhibitor 2 does not mimic a product
complex for geranylgeranyl transferase I.
It is interesting that phosphate has such an effect on FPTase-I as opposed to geranylgeranyl transferase I. The amount of phosphate found in vivo at the cellular level is thought to be in the low millimolar range (28-30). This anion would then be present in high enough concentrations to see an observable effect in cellular assays and could be used advantageously to increase the specificity of inhibition between the two prenyl transferases. Finally, enzymatic differences between these two catalytic enzymes may become more apparent based on the phosphate synergy phenomenon.
ConclusionWe have shown that in the presence of various anions there is a large increase in potency of inhibition for compound (2). This effect has been analyzed kinetically to reveal a synergy of inhibition in the case of FPTase that does not exist for geranylgeranyl transferase I. Furthermore, an inhibitor (3) has been designed to use this effect to increase potency against FPTase.