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    Sulfonamide drugs binding to the colchicine site of tubulin: Thermodynamic analysis of the drug-tubulin interactions by isothermal titration calorimetry

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    jm0494974.pdf (253.8Kb)
    Date
    2005-01-27
    Author
    Banerjee, M.
    Poddar, A.
    Mitra, G.
    Surolia, A.
    Owa, T.
    Bhattacharyya, Bhabatarak
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    Abstract
    The discovery of several sulfonamide drugs paved the way toward the synthesis of 6 (N-12-[(4-hydroxyphenyl)amino]-3-pyridinyl]-4-methoxybenzenesulfonamide: E7010) and 7 (N-(3fluoro-4-methoxyphenyl)pentafluorobenzenesulfonamide, T138067), both of which inhibit, tubulin polymerization and are under clinical development. A series of diarylsulforiamides containing an indole scaffold was also found to have antimitotic properties, but, their mode of interactions with tubulin has remained unidentified so far. In this study: we demonstrate that these sulfonamide drugs bind to the colchicine site of tubulin in a reversible manner. They quenched intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence of tubulin presumably due to drug-induced conformational changes in the protein, but were unable to modulate GTPase activity of tubulin in contrast to colchicine that enhances the same enzymatic activity. Further investigation using isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) revealed that 5 (N-(5-chloro-7-indolyl)-4-methoxybenzenesulfonamide) afforded a large positive value of heat capacity change (DeltaC(p) = +264, cal mol(-1) K-1) on binding to tubulin, suggesting a substantial conformational transition in the protein along with partial enthalpy- entropy compensation. On the other hand. the 2-chloro regioisomer 2 gave a large negative value of DeltaC(p) (-589 cal mol(-1) K-1) along with complete enthalpyentropy compensation. This thermodynamic profile was thought to be attributable to a prominent contribution of van der Waals interaction and hydrogen bonding between Specific groups in the drug-tubulin complex. These results indicate that a mere alteration in the position of a single substituent chlorine on the indole scaffold has a great influence on the drug-tublin binding thermodynamics.
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    1. Full Text Link ->
    http://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdfplus/10.1021/jm0494974
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    2. Scopus : Citation Link ->
    http://www.scopus.com/record/display.url?eid=2-s2.0-12344326693&origin=resultslist&sort=plf-f&src=s&sid=115EC66AA6E6B3EB782B2E5221C62A49.WlW7NKKC52nnQNxjqAQrlA%3a70&sot=aut&sdt=a&sl=48&s=AU-ID%28%22Bhattacharyya%2c+Bhabatarak+D.%22+7103102085%29&relpos=17&relpos=17&searchTerm=AU-ID%28%5C%26quot%3BBhattacharyya%2C+Bhabatarak+D.%5C%26quot%3B+7103102085%29
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