ChemBioChem, volume 22, issue 3, pages 516-522
Characterization of Apo‐Form Selective Inhibition of Indoleamine 2,3‐Dioxygenase**
Rodrigo F Ortiz Meoz
1
,
Liping Wang
1
,
Rosalie Matico
1
,
Anna Rutkowska Klute
2
,
Martha De La Rosa
3
,
Sabrina Bédard
1
,
Robert Midgett
1
,
Katrin Strohmer
2
,
DOUGLAS THOMSON
2
,
Cunyu Zhang
1
,
Makda Mebrahtu
1
,
Jeffrey Guss
1
,
Rachel Totoritis
1
,
Thomas Consler
1
,
Nino Campobasso
1
,
David Taylor
1
,
Tia Lewis
1
,
Kurt Weaver
1
,
Marcel Muelbaier
2
,
John Seal
1
,
Richard M. Dunham
3
,
W Kazmierski
3
,
David Favre
3
,
Giovanna Bergamini
2
,
Lisa Shewchuk
1
,
Alan Rendina
1
,
Guofeng Zhang
1
1
Drug Design and Selection, GlaxoSmithKline 1250 S. Collegeville Road Collegeville, PA 19426 USA
|
2
Cellzome GmbH, GlaxoSmithKline Meyerhofstrasse 1 69117 Heidelberg Germany
|
3
Infectious Diseases TAU GlaxoSmithKline Five Moore Drive, Research Triangle Park NC 27709 USA
|
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2020-11-16
Journal:
ChemBioChem
scimago Q1
wos Q3
SJR: 0.809
CiteScore: 6.1
Impact factor: 2.6
ISSN: 14394227, 14397633
Organic Chemistry
Biochemistry
Molecular Biology
Molecular Medicine
Abstract
Indoleamine-2,3-dioxygenase 1 (IDO1) is a heme-containing enzyme that catalyzes the rate-limiting step in the kynurenine pathway of tryptophan (TRP) metabolism. As it is an inflammation-induced immunoregulatory enzyme, pharmacological inhibition of IDO1 activity is currently being pursued as a potential therapeutic tool for the treatment of cancer and other disease states. As such, a detailed understanding of the mechanism of action of IDO1 inhibitors with various mechanisms of inhibition is of great interest. Comparison of an apo-form-binding IDO1 inhibitor (GSK5628) to the heme-coordinating compound, epacadostat (Incyte), allows us to explore the details of the apo-binding inhibition of IDO1. Herein, we demonstrate that GSK5628 inhibits IDO1 by competing with heme for binding to a heme-free conformation of the enzyme (apo-IDO1), whereas epacadostat coordinates its binding with the iron atom of the IDO1 heme cofactor. Comparison of these two compounds in cellular systems reveals a long-lasting inhibitory effect of GSK5628, previously undescribed for other known IDO1 inhibitors. Detailed characterization of this apo-binding mechanism for IDO1 inhibition might help design superior inhibitors or could confer a unique competitive advantage over other IDO1 inhibitors vis-a-vis specificity and pharmacokinetic parameters.
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