1. A Fluorescence Polarization Activity-Based Protein Profiling Assay in the Discovery of Potent, Selective Inhibitors for Human Nonlysosomal Glucosylceramidase.
- Author
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Lahav D, Liu B, van den Berg RJBHN, van den Nieuwendijk AMCH, Wennekes T, Ghisaidoobe AT, Breen I, Ferraz MJ, Kuo CL, Wu L, Geurink PP, Ovaa H, van der Marel GA, van der Stelt M, Boot RG, Davies GJ, Aerts JMFG, and Overkleeft HS
- Subjects
- Drug Evaluation, Preclinical methods, Enzyme Inhibitors chemistry, Glucosylceramidase, Humans, Imino Sugars chemistry, beta-Glucosidase metabolism, Enzyme Assays methods, Enzyme Inhibitors pharmacology, Fluorescence Polarization methods, Imino Sugars pharmacology, beta-Glucosidase antagonists & inhibitors
- Abstract
Human nonlysosomal glucosylceramidase (GBA2) is one of several enzymes that controls levels of glycolipids and whose activity is linked to several human disease states. There is a major need to design or discover selective GBA2 inhibitors both as chemical tools and as potential therapeutic agents. Here, we describe the development of a fluorescence polarization activity-based protein profiling (FluoPol-ABPP) assay for the rapid identification, from a 350+ library of iminosugars, of GBA2 inhibitors. A focused library is generated based on leads from the FluoPol-ABPP screen and assessed on GBA2 selectivity offset against the other glucosylceramide metabolizing enzymes, glucosylceramide synthase (GCS), lysosomal glucosylceramidase (GBA), and the cytosolic retaining β-glucosidase, GBA3. Our work, yielding potent and selective GBA2 inhibitors, also provides a roadmap for the development of high-throughput assays for identifying retaining glycosidase inhibitors by FluoPol-ABPP on cell extracts containing recombinant, overexpressed glycosidase as the easily accessible enzyme source.
- Published
- 2017
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