Structure-Based Drug Design of a Novel Family of PPARγ Partial Agonists:  Virtual Screening, X-ray Crystallography, and in Vitro/in Vivo Biological Activities

I-Lin Lu(National Defense Medical Center), Chien-Fu Huang(National Defense Medical Center), Yi‐Hui Peng(National Tsing Hua University), Ying‐Ting Lin(National Defense Medical Center), Hsing‐Pang Hsieh(National Health Research Institutes), Chiung‐Tong Chen(National Health Research Institutes), Tzu‐Wen Lien(National Defense Medical Center), Hwei‐Jen Lee(National Defense Medical Center), Neeraj Mahindroo(National Health Research Institutes), Ekambaranellore Prakash(National Tsing Hua University), Andrew Yueh(National Defense Medical Center), Hsin-Yi Chen(National Health Research Institutes), Chandra Goparaju(National Tsing Hua University), Xin Chen(National Defense Medical Center), Chun-Chen Liao(National Tsing Hua University), Yu‐Sheng Chao(National Tsing Hua University), John T.-A. Hsu(National Health Research Institutes), Su‐Ying Wu(National Tsing Hua University)
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry
April 7, 2006
Cited by 98Open Access
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Abstract

Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARgamma) is well-known as the receptor of thiazolidinedione antidiabetic drugs. In this paper, we present a successful example of employing structure-based virtual screening, a method that combines shape-based database search with a docking study and analogue search, to discover a novel family of PPARgamma agonists based upon pyrazol-5-ylbenzenesulfonamide. Two analogues in the family show high affinity for, and specificity to, PPARgamma and act as partial agonists. They also demonstrate glucose-lowering efficacy in vivo. A structural biology study reveals that they both adopt a distinct binding mode and have no H-bonding interactions with PPARgamma. The absence of H-bonding interaction with the protein provides an explanation why both function as partial agonists since most full agonists form conserved H-bonds with the activation function helix (AF-2 helix) which, in turn, enhances the recruitment of coactivators. Moreover, the structural biology and computer docking studies reveal the specificity of the compounds for PPARgamma could be due to the restricted access to the binding pocket of other PPAR subtypes, i.e., PPARalpha and PPARdelta, and steric hindrance upon the ligand binding.


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