Publications (2)6.14 Total impact
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Article: Nitrogen-containing bisphosphonates as carbocation transition state analogs for isoprenoid biosynthesis.
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ABSTRACT: Nitrogen-containing bisphosphonates are potent bone antiresorptive agents as well as having herbicidal and antiparasitic activity, and are thought to act by inhibiting enzymes of the mevalonate pathway. Using molecular modeling and ab initio quantum chemical calculations, we show that bisphosphonates can act as aza-isoprenoid transition state analogs, thereby inhibiting isoprenoid biosynthesis. The two phosphonate groups of the 1,1-bisphosphonates readily dock into the diphosphate-Mg(2+) binding site in farnesyl diphosphate synthase, while the charged ammonium (or pyridinium or imidazolium) groups act as carbocation transition state analogs, whose binding is stabilized by a cluster of oxygen atoms in the active site cleft, and an overall negative electrostatic potential in this region. Enhanced activity is shown to correlate with increasing van der Waals stabilization due to N-alkylation, or the presence of a charged, planar (sp(2)-hybridized) aromatic residue in the carbocation binding site. These results are of general interest since they suggest a rational approach to bisphosphonate drug design.Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications 11/1999; 263(3):754-8. · 2.48 Impact Factor -
Article: A carbon-13 nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopic study of inter-proton pair order parameters: a new approach to study order and dynamics in phospholipid membrane systems.
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ABSTRACT: We report a simple new nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopic method to investigate order and dynamics in phospholipids in which inter-proton pair order parameters are derived by using high resolution 13C cross-polarization/magic angle spinning (CP/MAS) NMR combined with 1H dipolar echo preparation. The resulting two-dimensional NMR spectra permit determination of the motionally averaged interpair second moment for protons attached to each resolved 13C site, from which the corresponding interpair order parameters can be deducted. A spin-lock mixing pulse before cross-polarization enables the detection of spin diffusion amongst the different regions of the lipid molecules. The method was applied to a variety of model membrane systems, including 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DMPC)/sterol and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC)/sterol model membranes. The results agree well with previous studies using specifically deuterium labeled or predeuterated phospholipid molecules. It was also found that efficient spin diffusion takes place within the phospholipid acyl chains, and between the glycerol backbone and choline headgroup of these molecules. The experiment was also applied to biosynthetically 13C-labeled ergosterol incorporated into phosphatidylcholine bilayers. These results indicate highly restricted motions of both the sterol nucleus and the aliphatic side chain, and efficient spin exchange between these structurally dissimilar regions of the sterol molecule. Finally, studies were carried out in the lamellar liquid crystalline (L alpha) and inverted hexagonal (HII) phases of 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (DOPE). These results indicated that phosphatidylethanolamine lamellar phases are more ordered than the equivalent phases of phosphatidylcholines. In the HII (inverted hexagonal) phase, despite the increased translational freedom, there is highly constrained packing of the lipid molecules, particularly in the acyl chain region.Biophysical Journal 10/1998; 75(3):1372-83. · 3.65 Impact Factor