Abstract

Cathepsin K (CatK) is a cysteine protease that plays an important role in mammalian intra- and extracellular protein turnover and is known for its unique and potent collagenase activity. Through studies on the mechanism of its collagenase activity, selective ectosteric sites were identified that are remote from the active site. Inhibitors targeting these ectosteric sites are collagenase selective and do not interfere with other proteolytic activities of the enzyme. Potential ectosteric inhibitors were identified using a computational approach to screen the druggable subset of and the entire 281,987 compounds comprising Chemical Repository library of the National Cancer Institute-Developmental Therapeutics Program (NCI-DTP). Compounds were scored based on their affinity for the ectosteric site. Here we compared the scores of three individual molecular docking methods with that of a composite score of all three methods together. The composite docking method was up to five-fold more effective at identifying potent collagenase inhibitors (IC50 < 20 μM) than the individual methods. Of 160 top compounds tested in enzymatic assays, 28 compounds revealed blocking of the collagenase activity of CatK at 100 μM. Two compounds exhibited IC50 values below 5 μM corresponding to a molar protease:inhibitor concentration of <1:12. Both compounds were subsequently tested in osteoclast bone resorption assays where the most potent inhibitor, 10-[2-[bis(2-hydroxyethyl)amino]ethyl]-7,8-diethylbenzo[g]pteridine-2,4-dione, (NSC-374902), displayed an inhibition of bone resorption with an IC50-value of approximately 300 nM and no cell toxicity effects.

Highlights

  • Thiol-dependent cathepsins are found in all life forms and have a vital role in mammalian intra- and extracellular protein turnover [1]

  • We have recently demonstrated that the selective inhibition of the enzyme’s collagenase activity in osteoclast bone-resorption assays and in an osteoporosis mouse model can be achieved without blocking its TGF-ß1 degrading activity correlated to some of the side effects seen in Cathepsin K (CatK) inhibitor clinical trials [17, 18]

  • Previous studies of the mechanism of the collagenase activity in CatK have implicated ectosteric site 1 as a site required for efficient collagen cleavage [16, 28]

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Summary

Introduction

Thiol-dependent cathepsins are found in all life forms and have a vital role in mammalian intra- and extracellular protein turnover [1]. They are members of the papain-like family (CA clan, C1 family) and have 11 proteases encoded in the human genome Identification of ectosteric inhibitors of cathepsin K through composite docking. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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