The protein tyrosine phosphatase (PTP) family of enzymes includes many attractive therapeutic targets, such as those in the leukocyte common antigen-related (LAR) subfamily of receptor PTPs. Synthesis and PTP inhibitory activity of illudalic acid and its methyl ether are described, with a focus on selective inhibition of LAR PTP relative to a small collection of other representative PTPs. The synthesis comprises 16 steps and provides illudalic acid in up to 12% overall yield from neopentylene-fused benzoate 1 (20 steps from commercial materials). Illudalic acid dose-dependently (measured IC50 = 2.1 ± 0.2 μM) and time-dependently inhibits LAR consistent with previous reports of covalent binding. The kinetics of LAR inhibition by illudalic acid are consistent with a two-step mechanism in which the inhibitor and enzyme first interact noncovalently (KI = 130 ± 50 μM), followed by covalent ligation at a rate kinact = 1.3 ± 0.4 min-1. The kinact/KI ratio of 104 corresponds to a t∞1/2 of 0.5 min, as discussed herein. The phenol methyl ether of illudalic acid was found to be less potent in our dose-response assays (measured IC50 = 55 ± 6 μM) but more selective for LAR, with a weaker initial noncovalent interaction and faster covalent ligation of LAR as compared to illudalic acid itself. A truncated analogue of illudalic acid that lacks the neopentylene ring fusion was found to be devoid of significant activity under our assay conditions, in contrast to previous reports. These observations collectively help inform further development of illudalic acid analogues as potent and selective inhibitors of the LAR subfamily of tyrosine phosphatases.
Read full abstract