From the Department of Molecular Pharmacology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York 10461
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ABSTRACT |
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The effect of suramin, a well known
antitrypanosomal drug and a novel experimental agent for the treatment
of several cancers, on protein-tyrosine phosphatases (PTPases) has been
examined. Suramin is a reversible and competitive PTPase inhibitor with Kis values in the low µM range,
whereas the Kis for the dual specificity
phosphatase VHR is at least 10-fold higher. Although suramin can also
inhibit the activity of the potato acid phosphatase at a slightly
higher concentration, it is 2-3 orders of magnitude less effective
against the protein Ser/Thr phosphatase 1 and the bovine intestinal
alkaline phosphatase. Suramin binds to the active site of PTPases with
a binding stoichiometry of 1:1. Furthermore, when suramin is
bound to the active site of PTPases, its fluorescence is
enhanced approximately by 10-fold. This property has allowed the
determination of the binding affinity of suramin for PTPases and
several catalytically impaired mutant PTPases by fluorescence titration
techniques. Thus, the active site Cys to Ser mutants bind suramin with
similar affinity as the wild type, while the active site Arg to Ala
mutant exhibits a 20-fold reduced affinity toward suramin.
Interestingly, the general acid deficient Asp to Ala mutant PTPases
display an enhanced affinity toward suramin, which is in accord with
their use as improved "substrate-trapping" agents. That suramin is
a high affinity PTPase inhibitor is consistent with the observation
that suramin treatment of cancer cell lines leads to an increase in
tyrosine phosphorylation of several cellular proteins. Given the
pleiotropic effects of suramin on many enzyme systems and growth
factor-receptor interactions, the exact in vivo actions of
suramin require further detailed structure-activity investigation of
suramin and its structural analogs.
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INTRODUCTION |
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Suramin is a polysulfonated naphthylurea compound (see Fig.
1A) that has been widely used for the treatment of
trypanosomiasis (sleeping sickness) and onchocerciasis since the early
1920s (1). It was originally synthesized by Bayer AG in 1916 based on
the observation that trypan red and trypan blue exhibited trypanocidal activity (2, 3). Since the last decade, many new and therapeutically significant properties of this compound have been identified. For
example, suramin has been shown to prevent the infection of T
lymphocytes by human immunodeficiency virus in vitro (4). Suramin has also been shown to exert antiproliferative activities by
interfering with the binding of a number of growth factors, such as
platelet-derived growth factor, epidermal growth factor, basic
fibroblast growth factor, transforming growth factor- (5-9), and
tumor necrosis factor-
(10) to their corresponding receptors. The
ability of suramin to block the activity of several growth factors that
play important role in tumor cell biology has prompted studies directed
at the use of suramin as an antineoplastic agent (3). Indeed,
subsequent investigations have shown that suramin exhibits antitumor
activity against several metastatic cancers such as renal cancer,
adrenocarcinoma, lymphoma, and prostate cancer (11, 12).
If the antitumor property of suramin is solely due to its ability to antagonize the activity of growth factors that stimulate the intrinsic protein-tyrosine kinase activity of the receptors, one would expect a decrease in tyrosine phosphorylation in cancer cells upon exposure to suramin. Unexpectedly, suramin treatment of epidermal carcinoma and several prostate, breast, gastric, and colon cancer cell lines causes rapid and dramatic increase in tyrosine phosphorylation of several cellular proteins (13, 14). These observations cast doubt about the notion that the antitumor action of suramin simply arises from abrogation of growth factor functions and suggest the possibility that suramin may suppress cell growth by altering directly the enzymatic activity of protein-tyrosine kinases and protein-tyrosine phosphatases (PTPases).1 PTPases, in conjunction with protein-tyrosine kinases, control the state of tyrosine phosphorylation in cellular proteins, which regulate a wide variety of biological processes such as cell growth, differentiation and oncogenic transformation (15, 16). Although suramin is capable of reducing the activity of Ser/Thr kinases such as protein kinase C (17, 18) and Cdc2 (19), the effect of suramin on protein-tyrosine kinase activity is unknown. Interestingly, suramin has also been reported to enhance the tyrosine phosphorylation of Cdc2 kinase in a nuclear extract (19) and to inhibit the tyrosine phosphatase activity of a preparation of immunoprecipitated plasma membrane bound CD45 in a noncompetitive and irreversible manner (20).
Given the structural and chemical nature of suramin (Fig.
1A), we were intrigued by the observation that suramin
inhibits the CD45 phosphatase activity noncompetitively and
irreversibly. Suramin lacks a reactive functionality and possesses six
sulfonic acid groups attached directly to aromatic rings. Thus, it is
possible that suramin may bind the PTPase active site, which recognize phosphotyrosine (21), and acts as a competitive, reversible PTPase
inhibitor. This possibility together with the observation that suramin
enhances the tyrosine phosphorylation level of several proteins in
tumor cells and in Cdc2 prompted us to carry out detailed kinetic and
binding studies on homogeneous recombinant Yersinia PTPase,
the mammalian PTP1B, and several active site-directed mutant PTPases in
order to define the mode of action of suramin on PTPases. Furthermore,
we have also studied the effect of suramin on the reaction catalyzed by
the dual specificity phosphatase VHR, the protein Ser/Thr phosphatase
1, the potato acid phosphatase, and the bovine intestinal alkaline
phosphatase.
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EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES |
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Materials--
All chemicals were obtained from commercial
suppliers and used without further purification.
p-nitrophenyl phosphate (pNPP) was from Fluka Co.
Suramin (hexasodium
sym-bis[m-aminobenzoyl-m-amino-p-methylbenzoyl-L-naphthylamino-4,6,8-trisulfonate] carbamide, molecular weight = 1429) was a kind gift from Dr.
William Doug Figg at the National Cancer Institute, NIH. Sulfosalicylic acid (3-carboxy-4-hydroxybenzenesulfonic acid) was purchased from Fisher. Solutions were prepared using deionized and distilled water.
Acid phosphatase (potato) and alkaline phosphatase (bovine intestine)
were purchased from Sigma. Protein phosphatase 1 was a generous gift
from Dr. Ernest Lee at the University of Miami. Site-directed
mutagenesis kit was from Bio-Rad, and DNA sequencing kit from U. S.
Biochemical Corp.
Enzyme Preparation--
The catalytic domains of the
Yersinia PTPase (Yop51*/162, residues 163-468) (22),
PTP1B (residues 1-321) (23), and the full-length dual specificity
phosphatase VHR (24) were used in this study. The catalytic domains of
the Yersinia PTPase and PTP1B were kinetically
indistinguishable from the corresponding full-length native enzymes and
were the forms used in x-ray structural studies (25, 26). The
recombinant Yersinia PTPase, PTP1B, and VHR were expressed
in Escherichia coli and purified to homogeneity as described
previously (22-24). Protein concentration was determined from
absorbance measurement at 280 nm using an absorbance coefficient A2801 mg/ml of 0.493 for the
Yersinia PTPase, 1.24 for PTP1B, and 0.564 for VHR.
Site-directed Mutants-- Site-directed mutagenesis experiments that converted Asp-356 in the Yersinia PTPase to an Ala (Yersinia PTP/D356A) and Asp-181 in PTP1B to an Ala (PTP1B/D181A) were performed using the Muta-Gene in vitro mutagenesis kit from Bio-Rad. The oligonucleotide primers used were as follows: D356A, 5'-ATTGGCCCGCTCAGACCGC-3', and D181A, 5'-CATGGCCTGCCTTTGGAGT-3', where the underlined base indicates the change from the naturally occurring nucleotide. All mutations were confirmed by DNA sequencing. The Yersinia PTP/C403S (27), Yersinia PTP/R409A (28), and PTP1B/C215S (23) have been described. All of the mutant PTPases were purified using procedures similar to those employed for the wild type enzyme.
Inhibition Study--
The PTPase activity was assayed at
25 °C in a reaction mixture (0.2 ml) containing an appropriate
concentration of pNPP as substrate. The assay buffer
contained 50 mM 3,3-dimethylglutarate, pH 7.0 with
ionic strength of 0.15 M adjusted by sodium chloride (buffer A). The reaction was initiated by addition of the enzyme and
quenched after 2-3 min by addition of 1 ml of 1 N NaOH.
The nonenzymatic hydrolysis of the substrate was corrected by measuring the control without the addition of the enzyme. The amount of p-nitrophenol produced was determined from the absorbance at
405 nm using a molar extinction coefficient of 18,000 M1 cm
1. The inhibition
constants of suramin were determined for PTP1B, the Yersinia
PTPase and VHR in the following manner. At various fixed concentration
of suramin, the initial rate at various pNPP concentrations
was measured as described (29). The data was fitted to appropriate
equations using KINETASYST (IntelliKinetics, State College, PA) to
obtain the inhibition constant.
Fluorescence Spectroscopy-- A Perkin-Elmer LS50B spectrofluorimeter equipped with a thermostated cell holder was used for suramin fluorescence measurement. The sample contained 4 µM suramin and various concentrations of PTP1B or Yersinia PTPase in buffer A. Emission spectra from 370-480 nm were recorded with an excitation wavelength of 315 nm at 25 °C.
Time Course for Suramin Binding to the PTPases-- A sample of 2 µM suramin in buffer A was first placed in the cuvette at 25 °C as the reference. An aliquot (50 µl) of PTPase stock was then added and mixed with the suramin solution manually. The final protein concentration was 10 µM. The time course of suramin binding to the PTPase was followed by the increase in fluorescence emission at 405 nm with an excitation wavelength of 315 nm.
Stoichiometry of Suramin Binding to the PTPases-- In these experiments, the total concentration of suramin and the PTPase were kept constant at 20 µM while the ratio of suramin to the PTPase varied. The fluorescence of the mixture was measured as a function of the ratio of suramin to the PTPase at 25 °C in buffer A. The highest fluorescence intensity was observed when the ratio of suramin to protein equaled to the stoichiometry of the complex composition.
Reversibility of Suramin Binding to the PTPases-- To assess the reversibility of suramin binding to PTPases, the following experiments were performed. Concentrated PTP1B or the Yersinia PTPase (40 µM) and suramin (40 µM) was incubated together at 25 °C in buffer A for two hours and its fluorescence was recorded after a 100-fold dilution. A 20 µl aliquot of the diluted enzyme solution was also withdrew for activity measurement. Then a small volume of concentrated suramin was added to the 100-fold diluted sample so that the final concentration for suramin and the PTPase was 4.0 and 0.4 µM, respectively. The fluorescence of this sample was measured and compared with the control, which was prepared by adding 4.0 µM suramin directly to 0.4 µM fresh PTPase.
Binding Studies-- To determine the affinity of suramin to the PTPases, the fluorescence intensity of the bound suramin was followed as increasing amount of the PTPases was added to a solution of suramin at 25 °C in buffer A. The excitation wavelength was 315 nm and the fluorescence emission was monitored at 405 nm. The absorbance of both suramin and the proteins at 315 nm and 405 nm was less than 0.1 in the concentration range used for the study. The dissociation constant Kd was then calculated by a nonlinear square fit of the data to Equation 1
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(Eq. 1) |
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(Eq. 2) |
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(Eq. 3) |
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(Eq. 4) |
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(Eq. 5) |
Effect of Vanadate on Suramin Binding-- One mM vanadate was added to the mixture of suramin (2 µM) and PTP1B (10 µM) or the Yersinia PTPase (10 µM). Suramin fluorescence of this sample was measured and compared with the fluorescence of the sample in absence of vanadate.
Data Presentation-- All of the experiments were reproducible and were carried out in duplicate or triplicate. Each set of experiments were repeated at least three times with similar results. The details for data analysis is described above and the results are shown as means ± standard error.
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RESULTS |
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Suramin Is a Tight-binding and Competitive Inhibitor of PTPases-- Table I summarizes the steady state kinetic parameters for the reaction catalyzed by PTP1B, the Yersinia PTPase, and the dual specificity phosphatase VHR, using pNPP as a substrate at pH 7 and 25 °C. PTPases utilize an invariant Asp residue (Asp-181 in PTP1B and Asp-356 in the Yersinia PTPase) as a general acid/base to assist phosphate monoester hydrolysis (30-33). Replacement of Asp181 in PTP1B or Asp-356 in the Yersinia PTPase by an Ala reduced the kcat value by 300- and 900-fold, respectively. Interestingly, substitution of Asp-181 in PTP1B or Asp-356 in Yersinia PTPase with an Ala improved the Km for pNPP by 30- and 10-fold, respectively. Arg-409 of the Yersinia PTPase is a key residue in the PTPase signature motif (28). The guanidinium group in Arg-409 makes a bidentate hydrogen bond with the phosphoryl moiety of the substrate (26) and is involved in both substrate binding and catalysis (28). The Km value of the R409A mutant Yersinia PTPase increased by 20-fold while its kcat was reduced by 10,000-fold.
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Effects of Suramin on Other Phosphatases--
Is the inhibition by
suramin on PTPases specific? To answer this question, we have
determined the effect of suramin on pNPP hydrolysis
catalyzed by potato acid phosphatase, bovine intestinal alkaline
phosphatase, and protein Ser/Thr phosphatase 1. Suramin inhibited
the potato acid phosphatase-catalyzed reaction and the pattern of
inhibition was noncompetitive, with Kis = 9.3 ± 0.9 µM and Kii = 11.2 ± 0.6 µM, respectively. The pattern of inhibition for suramin
in the protein phosphatase 1
-catalyzed reaction was also
noncompetitive, but in this case, Kis = 250 ± 90 µM and Kii = 220 ± 60 µM. Interestingly, suramin acted as a competitive
inhibitor for the alkaline phosphatase-catalyzed reaction, with a
Kis value of 1.4 ± 0.1 mM.
Changes of Suramin Fluorescence upon Interaction with
PTPases--
Free suramin displayed a low fluorescence intensity when
excited at 315 nm (34). The fluorescence spectra of suramin in the
presence of increasing concentrations of PTP1B showed a pronounced increase in the emission intensity at the fluorescence maximum whereas
the maximum emission wavelength (max = 405 nm) of
suramin did not change2 (Fig.
3). Similar observations were also made
for the Yersinia PTPase and VHR. The fluorescence
enhancement was 10-fold for PTP1B at the ligand and enzyme
concentration of 4 and 16 µM, respectively. Such a
fluorescence enhancement of suramin upon the binding of PTPase can be
used to measure the affinity of suramin for PTPases using techniques of
fluorescence titration.
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Suramin Binding to PTP1B and the Yersinia PTPase Is Rapid and Reversible-- PTPase inhibition experiments indicate that suramin is a high affinity inhibitor for PTP1B and the Yersinia PTPase. In order to measure the binding constant by fluorescence titration, a fast and reversible binding is required. The fluorescence intensity of free suramin was low. When PTP1B was added to suramin, its fluorescence increased rapidly and reached 90% of its maximum within 30 s (which was the time required for the manual mixing, data not shown). The fluorescence then increased gradually and reached the maximum in 10 min. A similar time course was observed upon suramin binding to the Yersinia PTPase. These results indicate that suramin binding to PTPases is a fast process.
To assess the reversibility of the binding of suramin to the PTPases, the phosphatase activity and suramin fluorescence of the native PTPases were compared with those of PTPases released from the suramin bound complexes. PTP1B (40 µM) was first mixed with an equal amount of suramin, which should result in 73% of PTP1B in the suramin-bound form (this estimate was based on the Kis of suramin of ~4 µM for PTP1B). When the sample was diluted by 100-fold, more than 90% of PTP1B should be in the ligand-free form. The fluorescence spectrum of the diluted solution containing 0.4 µM suramin and 0.4 µM PTP1B is shown in Fig. 4 (spectrum 2). Suramin (4 µM) alone had little fluorescence (Fig. 4, spectrum 1). However, when 3.6 µM of suramin was added to the diluted PTP1B and suramin sample (Fig. 4, spectrum 3), the fluorescence increased and reached to the same level as the control (Fig. 4, spectrum 4), which was made of freshly mixed PTP1B (0.4 µM) and suramin (4.0 µM). This result suggests that PTP1B released from the PTP1B-suramin complex still has the native conformation and is able to bind suramin again. This conclusion is supported by measurements of the phosphatase activity of PTP1B released from the preformed PTP1B-suramin complex. When the 100-fold diluted PTP1B and suramin mixture was diluted 10-fold further for activity measurement, the enzyme activity of this 1,000-fold diluted sample was found to be exactly the same as the native PTP1B in the absence of suramin. This indicates that PTP1B released from the suramin-bound form possess full enzymatic activity. Similar results were also obtained with the Yersinia PTPase. Thus, the interaction between suramin and PTPases are rapid and reversible.
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Stoichiometry and Site of Interaction for Suramin Binding-- Suramin fluorescence increases when it binds to PTPases. To determine the stoichiometry of suramin binding to PTPases, the dependence of the fluorescence intensity of the PTPase-suramin mixture on the ratio of suramin to the protein was measured, while keeping the total concentration of suramin and the protein constant. Fig. 5 shows that suramin fluorescence reaches to the maximum at a suramin to PTP1B ratio of 1:1. A stoichiometry of 1:1 was also observed for suramin binding to the Yersinia PTPase, VHR and all of the mutants PTPases examined, including PTP1B/D181A, PTP1B/C215S, Yersinia PTP/D356A, Yersinia PTP/C403S and Yersinia PTP/R409A. These results indicate that these PTPases and their mutants possess only one binding site for suramin.
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Binding Constants for the Association of Suramin with PTPases Determined by Fluorescence Titration-- We have shown that suramin binds to the active site of PTPases rapidly and reversibly. The PTPase-bound suramin exhibits enhanced fluorescence emission at 405 nm when excited at 315 nm. These desirable properties have allowed us to determine the suramin binding constants for PTP1B, the Yersinia PTPase and several of the active site-directed mutants PTPases with low or no catalytic activities. A typical fluorescence titration curve for the determination of binding constant of suramin to PTP1B is shown in the inset of Fig. 3. The solid line was obtained by a nonlinear least square fit of the titration data to the 1:1 binding model as described under "Experimental Procedures." The dissociation constants for suramin binding to PTP1B, the Yersinia PTPase, and the mutants are listed in Table II. The Kd values determined by fluorescence titration for PTP1B and Yersinia PTPase were 1.4 and 3 µM, respectively, which were similar to the inhibition constants measured by steady state kinetics. The slight differences in the results between fluorescence titration and inhibition study might be caused by the differences in experimental conditions, such as enzyme concentrations.
The general acid deficient mutant PTPases (PTP1B/D181A and Yersinia PTP/D356A) and the active site Arg mutant (Yersinia PTP/R409A) display very low phosphatase activity. Furthermore, the active site Cys to Ser mutant PTPases (PTP1B/C215S and Yersinia PTP/C403S) possess no measurable phosphatase activity at all (27). Thus, direct measurements of the affinity of suramin toward these mutant PTPases by enzyme kinetic inhibition experiments can be difficult. The described fluorescence titration is an ideal method to measure suramin binding constants for these low activity PTPase mutants. Interestingly, both PTP1B/D181A and Yersinia PTP/D356A displayed higher affinity (5-fold) than the wild type enzyme toward suramin. Substitution of Cys-215 in PTP1B and Cys-403 in the Yersinia PTPase by a Ser did not change the PTPase's affinity for suramin, even though the phosphatase activity was completely abolished. The guanidinium side chain of Arg-409 in the Yersinia PTPase interacts with two oxygens in the phosphoryl moiety of a substrate or an oxyanion (26). Substitution of Arg-409 by an Ala in the Yersinia PTPase has been shown to decrease the affinity of the Yersinia PTPase toward pNPP (a substrate) and arsenate (an oxyanion competitive inhibitor) by 30- and 40-fold, respectively (28). Here we show that replacement of Arg-409 by an Ala in the Yersinia PTPase also resulted in a 20-fold decrease in the phosphatase's affinity toward suramin. These results suggest that the active site Arg residue interacts with the oxygens on the sulfonate group of suramin in the same manner as it interacts with the oxygens on the phosphoryl moiety, and is consistent with the conclusion that suramin binds the PTPase active site. ![]() |
DISCUSSION |
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We have examined the effect of suramin on two representative PTPases, human PTP1B and the Yersinia PTPase, both of which have been extensively characterized biochemically and structurally (36). Included in the PTPase superfamily is a subfamily of enzymes called dual specificity phosphatases that can catalyze the hydrolysis of not only phosphotyrosine but also phosphoserine/threonine (37). The effect of suramin on the human dual specificity phosphatase VHR, the best characterized member of this family of phosphatases, is also investigated. Using a variety of kinetic and fluorescence titration techniques, we show that suramin is indeed a high affinity PTPase inhibitor. In addition, we demonstrate that the mode of suramin inhibition is competitive and that the binding of suramin to the PTPases and VHR is rapid and reversible. Finally, we conclude that the binding stoichiometry of suramin to PTPases is 1:1 and suramin binds directly to the active site of the PTPases and VHR. These results are in direct contrast to a previous report that suramin inhibits the phosphatase activity of the receptor-like PTPase CD45 noncompetitively and irreversibly (20). We do not know the source for this discrepancy. We note that, in the early work, an immunoprecipitated plasma membrane-bound CD45 preparation was used, while in our experiments, homogeneous recombinant PTPases were employed.
Although the amino acid sequence of the Yersinia PTPase is only ~20% identical to PTP1B, it is clear that their structures share a common secondary structural scaffold, with close similarity in tertiary structure (25, 26). In addition, the majority of the residues conserved among PTPases are located in and around the phosphotyrosine-binding site. Thus it is not surprising that PTP1B and the Yersinia PTPase bind suramin with similar affinity. The dual specificity phosphatases share little sequence identity with the PTPases, except in the region of the active site phosphate binding loop. The three-dimensional structure of the dual specificity phosphatase VHR reveals a general fold that occurs in the PTPases, which retains many of the secondary and tertiary structural elements characteristic of PTPases (38). It appears that the dual specificity phosphatases and the PTPases also utilize a common chemical mechanism for phosphate monoester hydrolysis (36). Interestingly, the affinity of VHR for suramin is 10-40-fold lower than those of the PTPases.
To answer the question whether suramin displays a special affinity for
PTPases, we also examined the ability of suramin to inhibit
pNPP hydrolysis catalyzed by the nonspecific acid and alkaline phosphatases as well as protein phosphatase 1. At the pH
optima for activity measurement, suramin inhibits the potato acid
phosphatase-catalyzed reaction noncompetitively, with dissociation constants severalfold higher than those of the PTPases, whereas suramin
is not an effective inhibitor for protein phosphatase 1
and alkaline
phosphatase, with dissociation constants 2 and 3 orders of magnitude
higher than those of the PTPases. Thus it does not appear that suramin
inhibit phosphatases nondiscriminately.
We have also established that sulfosalicylic acid is a competitive inhibitor for the Yersinia PTPase. However, the affinity of sulfosalicylic acid for the Yersinia PTPase is 5,700-fold lower than that of suramin. This implies that structural features in addition to the aryl sulfonate motif in suramin are required for high affinity binding. It is known that the phosphotyrosine binding site (the active site) of PTP1B possesses significant plasticity so that substituted naphthalene derivatives containing a difluoromethylenephosphonyl group can also be accommodated (39). Thus, the polysubstituted sulfonyl naphthalene moiety may be responsible for the enhanced affinity of suramin for PTPases. It is possible that the additional polysubstituted sulfonyl naphthalene moiety and/or other functionalities in suramin are also important for the high affinity binding.
When suramin is bound to the active site of PTPases, its fluorescence is enhanced approximately 10-fold. This property makes suramin a valuable tool to study the ligand binding reaction for the catalytically impaired PTPase mutants. The active site Cys residue in PTPases acts as a nucleophile to attack the phosphorous atom on the substrate (40, 41). Although replacing the Cys residue with a Ser residue abolishes the PTPase activity (27), the mutant protein can still bind substrates, i.e. Tyr(P)-containing peptides/proteins (42-44). Consistent with these observations, our work shows that PTP1B/C215S and Yersinia PTP/C403S retain similar affinity for suramin as the wild type enzymes. Elimination of the guanidinium side chain of Arg-409 in the Yersinia PTPase, a residue important for the binding of the phosphate group in a substrate, reduces the affinity of the PTPase for suramin by 20-fold, which is consistent with the conclusion that suramin binds to the PTPase active site. When the invariant catalytic Asp residue is changed to an Ala, the phosphatase activity of the general acid/base-deficient PTPases is reduced dramatically. Interestingly, the affinity of PTP1B/D181A and Yersinia PTP/D356A for substrate and suramin increases by 5-30-fold. This is consistent with the observation that the general acid-deficient mutant PTPase is a better "substrate-trapping" reagent than is the active site Cys to Ser mutant for the identification of physiological PTPase substrates in vivo (45).
Suramin is being evaluated in phase II and III clinical trials for the treatment of prostate cancer and other solid tumors. It is believed that the beneficial effects of suramin treatment derive from its ability to block the activity of a number of growth factors. The concentration of suramin required for maximal effect was within clinically achievable and tolerable plasma suramin levels (300 µg/ml) (12). This concentration (200 µM) of suramin is 2 orders of magnitude higher than that required to shut down the in vitro activity of PTPases, which play important roles in regulating signal transduction processes initiated by growth factors. This large difference between the therapeutically effective serum suramin concentration and the concentration required to inhibit PTPases in vitro may not be too surprising for the following reasons. It is known that suramin is highly bound to plasma proteins such as albumin (46, 47), which may reduce the effective free suramin concentration in circulation. Furthermore, because of its charge, suramin is membrane impermeable and has to be actively transported into cells (12). Thus, the concentration of suramin inside the cell may well be much lower than the therapeutic suramin concentration in the serum. It is possible that the increase in tyrosine phosphorylation in cellular proteins and some of the beneficial effects by suramin treatment may come from the inhibition of PTPases.
In addition to the growth factors and PTPases, suramin also exerts
pleiotropic effects on a variety of enzyme systems. For example, within
the concentration range between 1 and 100 µM, suramin can
inhibit the activity of protein kinase C (17, 18) Cdc2 (19),
phosphatidylinositol kinase and diacylglycerol kinase (48), DNA and RNA
polymerase (49, 50), reverse transcriptase (51), DNA topoisomerase
(52), steroid 5-reductase (53), ATPase (54), and neutrophil serine
proteinases (34). Clearly, a detailed understanding of the effects of
suramin in vivo and which of these effects are important for
the antitumor activity requires further systematic structure-activity
studies of suramin and its structural analogs.
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FOOTNOTES |
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* This work was supported by a Pilot Research Project Award from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute-Research Resources Program for Medical Schools and a National Institutes of Health Grant CA69202 (to Z.-Y. Z.).The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Recipient of a Martin Foundation Fellowship.
§ Sinsheimer Scholar. To whom correspondence should be addressed: Dept. of Molecular Pharmacology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, 1300 Morris Park Ave., Bronx, NY 10461. Tel.: 718-430-4288; Fax: 718-430-8922; E-mail: zyzhang{at}aecom.yu.edu.
1 The abbreviations used are: PTPase, protein-tyrosine phosphatases; pNPP, p-nitrophenyl phosphate.
2 The maximum fluorescence emission wavelength of suramin did not change during titration with PTP1B. Similar observation has been made when neutrophil serine proteinases were added to a suramin solution (34). The slight increase in fluorescence at 380 nm in the spectra at high PTP1B concentrations was due to the small intrinsic fluorescence of PTP1B, which peaks at 340 nm (excitation wavelength 315 nm). In the fluorescence titration experiments, the contribution from the protein to the total fluorescence was corrected by subtraction (see "Experimental Procedures").
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REFERENCES |
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