2-Chloro-2'-deoxyadenosine

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CAS: 4291-63-8
MF: C10H12N5O3Cl
MW: 285.68698
Synonyms: 2-Chloro-2'-deoxyadenosine

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Michelle R. Arkin

University of California San Francisco
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Yimon Aye

Cornell University
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Co-reporter: Somsinee Wisitpitthaya, Yi Zhao, Marcus J. C. Long, Minxing Li, Elaine A. Fletcher, William A. Blessing, Robert S. Weiss, and Yimon Aye
pp: 2021
Publication Date(Web):May 9, 2016
DOI: 10.1021/acschembio.6b00303
The enzyme ribonucleotide reductase (RNR) is a major target of anticancer drugs. Until recently, suicide inactivation in which synthetic substrate analogs (nucleoside diphosphates) irreversibly inactivate the RNR-α2β2 heterodimeric complex was the only clinically proven inhibition pathway. For instance, this mechanism is deployed by the multifactorial anticancer agent gemcitabine diphosphate. Recently reversible targeting of RNR-α-alone coupled with ligand-induced RNR-α-persistent hexamerization has emerged to be of clinical significance. To date, clofarabine nucleotides are the only known example of this mechanism. Herein, chemoenzymatic syntheses of the active forms of two other drugs, phosphorylated cladribine (ClA) and fludarabine (FlU), allow us to establish that reversible inhibition is common to numerous drugs in clinical use. Enzyme inhibition and fluorescence anisotropy assays show that the di- and triphosphates of the two nucleosides function as reversible (i.e., nonmechanism-based) inhibitors of RNR and interact with the catalytic (C site) and the allosteric activity (A site) sites of RNR-α, respectively. Gel filtration, protease digestion, and FRET assays demonstrate that inhibition is coupled with formation of conformationally diverse hexamers. Studies in 293T cells capable of selectively inducing either wild-type or oligomerization-defective mutant RNR-α overexpression delineate the central role of RNR-α oligomerization in drug activity, and highlight a potential resistance mechanism to these drugs. These data set the stage for new interventions targeting RNR oligomeric regulation.

Rajesh Belani

Scripps Research Institute
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Kelly Bethel

Scripps Research Institute
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Dennis R. Burton

The Scripps Research Institute
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Michael Kosty

Scripps Research Institute
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Jorge Nieva

Scripps Research Institute
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Floyd E. Romesberg

Department of Chemistry The Scripps Research Institute 10550 N. Torrey Pines Road
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Florence McCarthy

University College of Cork
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Hong-min Liu

Zhengzhou University
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