Back to Search Start Over

Leveraging Fungal Calcineurin-Inhibitor Structures, Biophysics and Dynamics to Design Selective and Non-Immunosuppressive FK506 Analogs

Authors :
William J. Steinbach
Sophie M. C. Gobeil
D. Christopher Cole
Leonard D. Spicer
Praveen R. Juvvadi
Benjamin G. Bobay
Ronald A. Venters
Joseph Heitman
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

Calcineurin is a critical enzyme in fungal pathogenesis and antifungal drug tolerance and, therefore, an attractive antifungal target. Current clinically-accessible calcineurin inhibitors, such as FK506, are immunosuppressive to humans, so exploiting calcineurin inhibition as an antifungal strategy necessitates fungal-specificity in order to avoid inhibiting the human pathway. Harnessing fungal calcineurin-inhibitor crystal structures, we recently developed a less immunosuppressive FK506 analog, APX879, with broad-spectrum antifungal activity and demonstrable efficacy in a murine model of invasive fungal infection. Our overarching goal is to better understand, at a molecular level, the interaction determinants of the human and fungal FK506-binding proteins (FKBP12) required for calcineurin inhibition in order to guide the design of fungal-selective, non-immunosuppressive FK506 analogs. To this end, we characterized high-resolution structures of theM. circinelloidesFKBP12 bound to FK506, and of theA. fumigatus, M. circinelloidesand human FKBP12 proteins bound to the FK506 analog, APX879, which exhibits enhanced selectivity for fungal pathogens. Combining structural, genetic and biophysical methodologies with molecular dynamics simulations, we identify critical variations in these structurally similar FKBP12-ligand complexes that will guide the rational design of inhibitors with enhanced fungal-selectivity.Significance statementInvasive fungal infections are a leading cause of death in the immunocompromised patient population. The rise in drug resistance to current antifungals highlights the urgent need to develop more efficacious and highly selective agents. Numerous investigations of major fungal pathogens have confirmed the critical role of the calcineurin pathway for fungal virulence, making it an attractive target for antifungal development. Although FK506 inhibits calcineurin, it is immunosuppressive in humans and cannot be used as an antifungal. By combining structural, genetic, biophysical, andin silicomethodologies, we pinpoint regions of FK506 and a less immunosuppressive analog, APX879, that could be altered to enhance fungal selectivity. This work represents a significant advancement toward realizing calcineurin as a viable target for antifungal drug discovery.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........b7df2ab3706cf7d93ef679d9192cbcea
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.04.14.039800