Ankur Sarkar’s research while affiliated with University of Colorado Boulder and other places

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Publications (7)


Genetically Encoded Detection of Biosynthetic Protease Inhibitors
  • Article

December 2022

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26 Reads

ACS Synthetic Biology

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Ankur Sarkar

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Tom Foderaro

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[...]

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Proteases are an important class of drug targets that continue to drive inhibitor discovery. These enzymes are prone to resistance mutations, yet their promise for treating viral diseases and other disorders continues to grow. This study develops a general approach for detecting microbially synthesized protease inhibitors and uses it to screen terpenoid pathways for inhibitory compounds. The detection scheme relies on a bacterial two-hybrid (B2H) system that links protease inactivation to the transcription of a swappable reporter gene. This system, which can accomodate multiple biochemical outputs (i.e., luminescence and antibiotic resistance), permitted the facile incorporation of four disease-relevant proteases. A B2H designed to detect the inactivation of the main protease of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 enabled the identification of a terpenoid inhibitor of modest potency. An analysis of multiple pathways that make this terpenoid, however, suggested that its production was necessary but not sufficient to confer a survival advantage in growth-coupled assays. This finding highlights an important challenge associated with the use of genetic selection to search for inhibitors─notably, the influence of pathway toxicity─and underlines the value of including multiple pathways with overlapping product profiles in pathway screens. This study provides a detailed experimental framework for using microbes to screen libraries of biosynthetic pathways for targeted protease inhibitors.


Allosteric Inhibition of PTP1B by a Nonpolar Terpenoid

October 2022

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25 Reads

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11 Citations

The Journal of Physical Chemistry B

Protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs) are promising drug targets for treating a wide range of diseases such as diabetes, cancer, and neurological disorders, but their conserved active sites have complicated the design of selective therapeutics. This study examines the allosteric inhibition of PTP1B by amorphadiene (AD), a terpenoid hydrocarbon that is an unusually selective inhibitor. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations carried out in this study suggest that AD can stably sample multiple neighboring sites on the allosterically influential C-terminus of the catalytic domain. Binding to these sites requires a disordered α7 helix, which stabilizes the PTP1B-AD complex and may contribute to the selectivity of AD for PTP1B over TCPTP. Intriguingly, the binding mode of AD differs from that of the most well-studied allosteric inhibitor of PTP1B. Indeed, biophysical measurements and MD simulations indicate that the two molecules can bind simultaneously. Upon binding, both inhibitors destabilize the α7 helix by disrupting interactions at the α3-α7 interface and prevent the formation of hydrogen bonds that facilitate closure of the catalytically essential WPD loop. These findings indicate that AD is a promising scaffold for building allosteric inhibitors of PTP1B and illustrate, more broadly, how unfunctionalized terpenoids can engage in specific interactions with protein surfaces.


Evolution-Guided Biosynthesis of Terpenoid Inhibitors

August 2022

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44 Reads

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5 Citations

ACS Synthetic Biology

Terpenoids, the largest and most structurally diverse group of natural products, include a striking variety of biologically active compounds, from flavors to medicines. Despite their well-documented biochemical versatility, the evolutionary processes that generate new functional terpenoids are poorly understood and difficult to recapitulate in engineered systems. This study uses a synthetic biochemical objective─a transcriptional system that links the inhibition of protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B (PTP1B), a human drug target, to the expression of a gene for antibiotic resistance in Escherichia coli (E. coli)─to evolve a terpene synthase to produce enzyme inhibitors. Site saturation mutagenesis of poorly conserved residues on γ-humulene synthase (GHS), a promicuous enzyme, yielded mutants that improved fitness (i.e., the antibiotic resistance of E. coli) by reducing GHS toxicity and/or by increasing inhibitor production. Intriguingly, a combination of two mutations enhanced the titer of a minority product─a terpene alcohol that inhibits PTP1B─by over 50-fold, and a comparison of similar mutants enabled the identification of a site where mutations permit efficient hydroxylation. Findings suggest that the plasticity of terpene synthases enables an efficient sampling of structurally distinct starting points for building new functional molecules and provide an experimental framework for exploiting this plasticity in activity-guided screens.


Figure 4: Mutations in the helical triad tend to disrupt inhibition by AD and BBR. (A) An X-ray crystal structure of PTP1B bound to AD (PTPB entry 6W30) with several other binding sites overlaid: (i) the crystallographic binding site for BBR and (ii) two sites sampled by AD in MD simulations (loc 1 and loc2) carried out with a disordered α7 helix. To position the alternative sites, we aligned the PTP1B-AD complex (PDB entry 6W30) with the PTP1B-BBR complex (pdb entry 1T4J) and centroid structures from MD simulations (PyMol function "align"). Labels denote residues selected for site-directed mutagenesis with colors by helix. (B) The fractional change in inhibition (F) caused by mutations at the sites highlighted in A. Most mutations decreased the inhibitory effects of AD and BBR. Error bars denote propagated standard error for n=4 independent measurements.
Figure 6: Ligand binding disrupts inter-helical interactions. (A) Upon binding, AD and BBR disrupt non-bonded interactions between the α3, α6, and α7 helices. Highlights: (black) interactions disrupted in the WPD open conformation that are also disrupted when AD and BBR bind to the protein, (green) interactions disrupted by both ligands but present in both WPD closed and WPD open conformations, (purple) interactions disrupted by BBR alone, and (blue) interactions disrupted by AD alone (Figure S6). Most of the interactions disrupted by AD, BBR, and WPD open are located between the α3 and α7 helices. This overlap suggests that that the disruption of these interactions is crucial for allosteric inhibition. (B) Disruption of the interactions depicted in A destabilizes the α7 helix and prevents the formation of h-bonds required for closure of the WPD loop. The blue lines denote bonds that form with WPD closed but don't form with apo WPD open and are broken with ligand binding. The black line denotes the conserved bond T177-Y152 which connects the active and allosteric sites. (C-D) Upon binding, AD (dashed line) and BBR (dotted line) (C) increase the flexibility of the α7 helix and (D) decrease its α helicity to levels that resemble the W P D open conformation. Destabilization of the α7 helix is faster with BBR than with AD (Figure S9). In C-D, all MD trajectories start with the same ordered α7 helix conformation.
Allosteric Inhibition of PTP1B by a Nonpolar Terpenoid
  • Preprint
  • File available

May 2022

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29 Reads

Protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs) are promising drug targets for treating a wide range of diseases such as diabetes, cancer, and neurological disorders, but their conserved active sites have complicated the design of selective therapeutics. This study examines the inhibition of PTP1B by amorphadiene (AD), an unusually selective terpenoid inhibitor. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations in this study suggest that AD can sample two neighboring sites on the allosterically influential C-terminus of the catalytic domain. Binding to these sites requires a disordered α\alpha7 helix, which stabilizes the PTP1B-AD complex and may contribute to the selectivity of AD for PTP1B over TCPTP, its closest homologue. The binding mode of AD differs from that of a previously reported allosteric inhibitor; notably, biophysical measurements and MD simulations indicate that the two molecules can bind simultaneously. Upon binding, both inhibitors destabilize the α7 helix and disrupt hydrogen bonds that facilitate closure of the catalytically essential WPD loop. These findings suggest that AD is a promising scaffold for building allosteric inhibitors of PTP1B and illustrate, more broadly, how unfunctionalized terpenoids can engage in specific interactions with protein surfaces.

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Microbially guided discovery and biosynthesis of biologically active natural products

October 2020

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95 Reads

The design of small molecules that inhibit disease-relevant proteins represents a longstanding challenge of medicinal chemistry. Here, we describe an approach for encoding this challenge—the inhibition of a human drug target—into a microbial host and using it to guide the discovery and biosynthesis of targeted, biologically active natural products. This approach identified two previously unknown terpenoid inhibitors of protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B (PTP1B), an elusive therapeutic target for the treatment of diabetes and cancer. Both inhibitors target an allosteric site, which confers unusual selectivity, and can inhibit PTP1B in living cells. A screen of 24 uncharacterized terpene synthases from a pool of 4,464 genes uncovered additional hits, demonstrating a scalable discovery approach, and the incorporation of different PTPs into the microbial host yielded alternative PTP-specific detection systems. Findings illustrate the potential for using microbes to discover and build natural products that exhibit precisely defined biochemical activities yet possess unanticipated structures and/or binding sites.


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Microbially guided discovery and biosynthesis of biologically active natural products

October 2020

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97 Reads

The design of small molecules that inhibit disease-relevant proteins represents a longstanding challenge of medicinal chemistry. Here, we describe an approach for encoding this challenge—the inhibition of a human drug target—into a microbial host and using it to guide the discovery and biosynthesis of targeted, biologically active natural products. This approach identified two previously unknown terpenoid inhibitors of protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B (PTP1B), an elusive therapeutic target for the treatment of diabetes and cancer. Both inhibitors appear to target an allosteric site, which confers selectivity, and can inhibit PTP1B in living cells. A screen of 24 uncharacterized terpene synthases from a pool of 4,464 genes uncovered additional hits, demonstrating a scalable discovery approach, and the incorporation of different PTPs into the microbial host yielded alternative PTP-specific detection systems. Findings illustrate the potential for using microbes to discover and build natural products that exhibit precisely defined biochemical activities yet possess unanticipated structures and/or binding sites.

Citations (3)


... We centered each final trajectory on the protein, removed rotational and translational motions, and removed correlated samples with ruptures 1.1.6 (Friedman et al., 2022) as described previously. To examine the helicity of the α7 helix in our MD trajectories, we used the DSSP algorithm implemented in MDTraj 1.9.4 (McGibbon et al., 2015). ...

Reference:

Analysis of neutral mutational drift in an allosteric enzyme
Allosteric Inhibition of PTP1B by a Nonpolar Terpenoid
  • Citing Article
  • October 2022

The Journal of Physical Chemistry B

... There is an increasing need for antimicrobial coatings based on EOs as they offer a natural, effective solution for preventing microbial contamination and enhancing public health by reducing the spread of harmful pathogens on surfaces in various environments [6]. ...

Evolution-Guided Biosynthesis of Terpenoid Inhibitors
  • Citing Article
  • August 2022

ACS Synthetic Biology

... In prior work, we developed a bacterial two-hybrid (B2H) system that links the inhibition of PTP1B from Homo sapiens (H. sapiens) to the expression of a gene for antibiotic resistance in E. coli (Sarkar et al., 2021). Our original study details the development of this system and describes each of its components, including the promoters and ribosome binding sites. ...

Microbially Guided Discovery and Biosynthesis of Biologically Active Natural Products
  • Citing Article
  • May 2021

ACS Synthetic Biology