NEW INSIGHTS INTO THE INHIBITION OF beta-GLUCURONIDASE
Shukufa JABBAROVA, Romy MASSFELLER, Khayala MAMMADOVA
Baku State University, Medical University
xayale81@yahoo.com, jabbarova.shukufa@mail.ru
β-Glucuronidase (β-D-glucuronide glucuronosohydrolase, (EC 3.2.1.31), belongs to the family of enzymes catalyzing
the hydrolyses of glycosaminoglycans. The enzyme occurs in animal cells and their body fluids as well as in bacterial
cells.Inhibition of β-glucuronidase has attracted considerable attention due to a number of diseases and disorders
associated with its elevated activity. Consequences of elevated levels of β–glucuronidase are numerous and have been
observed at urinary diseases, epilepsy, and rheumatoid arthritis, in some hepatic diseases, AIDS, and different neoplastic
conditions. Additionally, inhibition of symbiotic bacterial (E.coli) β-glucuronidase may alleviate cancer drug toxicity in
colon cancer therapy since the bacterial glucuronidase in the gut is responsible for the side effects of commonly used colon
cancer chemotherapeutics. Therefore, it is believed that the development of specific human and / or bacterial β –
glucuronidase inhibitors is of great importance for pharmacology. Obviously, the identification of new inhibitors of β-
glucuronidase and in silico design of new potent inhibitors need more insights for the mechanisms of β-glucuronidase
inhibition.
In this work 58 individual compounds, acylhydrazide Schiff bases (class I, 12 compounds), unsymmetrically
disubstituted ureas (class II, 10 compounds), aromatic sulfonyl hydrazides (class III, 28 compounds), and aromatic sulfones
(8 compounds) have been synthesized and screened for β-glucuronidase in vitro inhibition. 31 out of 58 compounds of I-III
showed inhibitory effect with IC
50
values in the range 2.3 - 155.8 μM. No effective inhibitors were found among aromatic
sulfones screened.
Molecular docking studies have been performed using Autodock-Vina software. The studies reveal two principal
binding modes of the inhibitors. Binding mode 1, characteristic for most inhibitors, occurs within the enzyme substrate
pocket and involves interactions with the enzyme amino acid residues Glu413, Glu504 and Tyr472. Dissimilarly, binding of
N-(3-chlorophenyl)-N’-(8-quinolinyl) urea (inhibitor II-4) occurs in the area adjacent, but beyond the canonical active
center of β-glucuronidase (binding mode 2). Binding mode 2 involves interactions with the residues His162, Val446,
Met447, Ser557 and other different from the residues forming the substrate binding pocket.Unusual binding of compound
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