Abstract

Cytidine 5'-triphosphate synthase catalyzes the ATP-dependent formation of CTP from UTP using either NH(3) or l-glutamine (Gln) as the source of nitrogen. GTP acts as an allosteric effector promoting Gln hydrolysis but inhibiting Gln-dependent CTP formation at concentrations of >0.15 mM and NH(3)-dependent CTP formation at all concentrations. A structure-activity study using a variety of GTP and guanosine analogues revealed that only a few GTP analogues were capable of activating Gln-dependent CTP formation to varying degrees: GTP approximately 6-thio-GTP > ITP approximately guanosine 5'-tetraphosphate > O(6)-methyl-GTP > 2'-deoxy-GTP. No activation was observed with guanosine, GMP, GDP, 2',3'-dideoxy-GTP, acycloguanosine, and acycloguanosine monophosphate, indicating that the 5'-triphosphate, 2'-OH, and 3'-OH are required for full activation. The 2-NH(2) group plays an important role in binding recognition, whereas substituents at the 6-position play an important role in activation. The presence of a 6-NH(2) group obviates activation, consistent with the inability of ATP to substitute for GTP. Nucleotide and nucleoside analogues of GTP and guanosine, respectively, all inhibited NH(3)- and Gln-dependent CTP formation (often in a cooperative manner) to a similar extent (IC(50) approximately 0.2-0.5 mM). This inhibition appeared to be due solely to the purine base and was relatively insensitive to the identity of the purine with the exception of inosine, ITP, and adenosine (IC(50) approximately 4-12 mM). 8-Oxoguanosine was the best inhibitor identified (IC(50) = 80 microM). Our findings suggest that modifying 2-aminopurine or 2-aminopurine riboside may serve as an effective strategy for developing cytidine 5'-triphosphate synthase inhibitors.

Highlights

  • CTP from UTP using either L-glutamine (Gln) or NH3 as the nitrogen source (Scheme 1) [1, 2]

  • The de novo biosynthesis of pyrimidine nucleotides is highly regulated in E. coli, and CTPS is regulated in a complex fashion [1]

  • GTP is required as a positive allosteric effector to increase the efficiency of Gln-dependent CTP synthesis [10] by stabilizing the enzyme conformation that binds the tetrahedral intermediates formed during Gln hydrolysis [11]

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Summary

Activation and Inhibition of CTPS

Mutational analysis of the residues Arg359 and Gly360 (Arg356 and Gly357 in E. coli) that reside near the oxyanion hole of L. lactis CTPS suggests that these residues play a role in binding GTP and mediate the allosteric effects of GTP on the glutaminase activity [24]. These observations are consistent with GTP binding at the site identified by Baldwin and co-workers [3]. Ent activation of CTPS need only be derivatives of 2-aminopurine and that the ribose and 5Ј-triphosphate groups are not required for effective inhibition

MATERIALS AND METHODS
NH O
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
GMP GDP GTP GtetraPd
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