Mj. Bossard et al., Mechanism of inhibition of cathepsin K by potent, selective 1,5-diacylcarbohydrazides: A new class of mechanism-based inhibitors of thiol proteases, BIOCHEM, 38(48), 1999, pp. 15893-15902
The nature of the inhibition of thiol proteases by a new class of mechanism
-based inhibitors, 1,5-diacylcarbohydrazides, is described. These potent, t
ime-dependent, active-site spanning inhibitors include compounds that are s
elective for cathepsin K, a cysteine protease unique to osteoclasts. The 1,
5- diacylcarbohydrazides are slow substrates for members of the papain supe
rfamily with inhibition resulting from slow enzyme decarbamylation. Enzyme-
catalyzed hydrolysis of 2,2'-N,N'-bis (benzyloxycarbonyl)-L-leucinylcarbohy
drazide is accompanied by formation of a hydrazide-containing product and a
carbamyl-enzyme intermediate that is sufficiently stable to be observed by
mass spectrometry and NMR. Stopped-flow studies yield a saturation limited
value of 43 s(-1) for the rate of cathepsin K acylation by 2,2'-N,N'-bis (
benzyloxycarbonyl)-L-leucinylcarbohydrazide. Inhibition potency varies amon
g pro teases tested as reflected by 2-3 orders of magnitude differences in
K-i and k(obs)/I, but all eventually form the same stable covalent intermed
iate. Reactivation rates are equivalent for all enzymes tested (1 x 10(-4)
s(-1)), indicating hydrolysis of a common carbamyl-enzyme form. NMR spectro
scopic studies with cathepsin K and 2,2'-N,N'-bis(benzyloxycarbonyl)-L-leuc
inylcarbohydrazide provide evidence of inhibitor cleavage to generate a cov
alent carbamyl-enzyme intermediate rather than a tetrahedral complex. The p
roduct Cbz-Leuhydrazide does not appear enzyme-bound after cleavage in the
NMR spectra, suggesting that the stable inhibited form of the enzyme is the
thioester complex. I,5-Diacylcarbohydrazides represent a new class of unre
active cysteine protease inhibitors that share a common mechanism of action
across members of the papain superfamily. Both S and S' subsite interactio
ns are exploited in achieving high selectivity and potency.