The HslVU protease-chaperone complex is a two component, proteasome-related system typical of eubacteria and well-known in eukaryotes. It is involved in intracellular degradation of a number of important proteins including transcription factors, cell cycle regulatory proteins and short-lived proteins. The HslVU is composed of multiple copies of two heat shock proteins, the 19 kDa HslV peptidase and the 50 kDa HslU, the ATPase and chaperone. The HslV is an N-terminal threonine protease related to the β-subunits of the 20S proteasome from eukaryotes and the archaebacteria. The HslV forms a barrel-shaped dodecameric complex by stacking two hexameric rings of HslV subunits and each of the HslV subunit contains an N-terminal Thr active site for proteolysis (
In the HslVU complex, the central pores of HslU and HslV are aligned, so that HslU transfers substrate poypeptides through the pores into inner proteolytic chamber of HslV. The HslV alone shows a very weak peptidase activity towards carbobenzoxy-Gly-Gly-Leu-7-amido-4-methyl coumarin (Z-GGL-AMC), a small fluorogenic peptide substrate, but its activity increases 1-2 orders of magnitude when it binds to HslU in the presence of ATP12. The HslU has increased affinity for HslV in the presence of protein substrate.
In the HslVU complex, the HslU carboxy-terminal octapeptide EDLSRFIL (termed as HslU C-tail) is intercalated into a cleft between adjacent HslV subunits with a network of interactions. Several polar amino acid residues (Lys28 and Arg35) and hydrophobic residues (Phe54) of HslV form electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions respectively with side chain and main chain atoms of C-tail residues (
Orthologues of prokaryotic HslV and HslU in parasitic protozoa i.e. Trypnosoma brucei (causative agent of sleeping sickness), Plasmodium falciparum (causative agent of malaria) and Leishmania species (causative agent of leishmaniasis) are novel drug target candidates. The genes homologous to protozoal HslVU are not present in human genome. Therefore, intracellular protein degradation by activation of HslVU system has been considered as a innovative strategy for development of new antiparasitic agents. No other molecule is known to be capable of activating HslV in the absence of its natural activator, HslU. We have identified quanazoline and chromone derivatives as HslV activators in the presence of HslU.
The HslVU is the proteasome-related two component system composed of HslV peptidase and HslU chaperone. It is involved in the degradation of an array of intracellular proteins. The presence of HslVU homologs in pathogenic microbes and its absence in human makes it an antimicrobial drug target. The functional HslVU complex forms when HslV dodecamer is flanked at both ends by HslU hexamers.
In the HslVU complex, eight residues at the carboxy termini of HslU subunits intercalate into a clefts between two adjacent HslV subunits causing a conformational change in the active site of HslV which in turn results in the allosteric activation of HslV peptidase. Here, small molecules capable of activating HslV peptidase in the absence of its natural activator HslU ATPase. For this purpose, virtual screening of an in-house library of synthetic and natural compounds was performed to find out ligands mimicking the interaction of HslU carboxy terminus with HslV dodecamer. The quinazoline and chromone derivatives were suggested by ligand docking to bind at the HslU carboxy termini intercalation pockets in the HslV dodecamer. The results showed for the first time that small, extracellular non-peptidic molecules can allosterically activate the peptide hydrolytic activity of HslV which in turn would initiate intracellular proteolysis.
We identified of two synthetic non-peptidic HslV peptidase activators. For this purpose, virtual screening was carried out by FlexX ligand docking software (version 2.0) using an in-house library of >1000 synthetic compounds and homology model of E. coli HslV. The 3D homology model was constructed by Modeller19 using the crystal structure of H. infleuinzae7 (PDB id: 1G3I) and pairwise alignment of HslV from E. coli and H. infleunzae (
Table I: Structures and ED50 values of HslV protease activating compounds.
E. coli HslV
Virtual screening predicted derivatives of quinazoline (compound 1) and chromone (compound 2) and as potential HslV activators by docking them into the C-tail intercalation site with highest scores. These compounds mimic the binding of HslU C-tail at the interface of two adjacent HslV protomers. These compounds were tested for HslV activation in the absence of its natural activator HslU or HslU C-tail. Synthetic procedures of these compounds have been reported elsewhere. The HslV activation assays were carried out with recombinant E. coli HslV and HslU. Recombinant HslV and HslU were expressed in E. coli BL21 (DE3) cells containing pET20B+ vector. Purification of both proteins was carried out using Ni-chelating and ion-exchange chromatography as reported elsewhere4. Activation of HslV by HslU was monitored where HslV alone was found to be capable of catalyzing slow hydrolysis of the fluorogenic peptide substrate (Z-Gly-Gly-Leu-AMC) due to its basal peptidase activity for smaller substrates. In the presence of HslU and HslU C-tail, the rate of peptide hydrolysis was increased showing the already reported allosteric activation of HslV by HslU (
A concentration dependent activation of HslV was observed by the hit compounds in the absence of HslU or C-tail. Plots of HslV peptidase activity as a function of compound concentrations were constructed (
Three dimensional structural analyses of the predicted binding modes of these compounds provided the basis of HslV activation from the structural point of view. The top five docking solutions of these compounds were modeled into the HslU C-tail binding site of HslV to investigate the interactions with protein residues. Analysis of docking solutions predicted the positioning of these compounds near the bottom of the HslV≡HslV protomer interface in the HslV dodecamer. HslV protomer interactions play a key role in HslV dodecamer stability and activity. It is well documented that protein-protein interactions depend on a few residues, or hot spots, at the binding interface. Dodecameric structure of HslV has “intra-ring” and “inter-ring” protomer interfaces. The HslU C-tail interaction site is at the “intra-ring” between two adjacent HslV protomers (or subunits; designated here as protomer A and B) (
2D maps of ligand-protein interactions were generated by options available in Discovery Studio 3.1 (www.accelrys.com). These 2D maps elaborated a number of intermolecular interactions predicted in ligand-HslV complex (
Ligand docking studies provided valuable information related to structural basis of binding of these compounds at the C-tail binding pocket in the HslV dodecamer. The HslV activation assays showed that synthetic, non-peptidic small molecules can bind and allosterically activate the peptide hydrolytic activity of HslV with ED50 values lower than HslU C-tail. For this reason, such compounds would initiate intracellular proteolysis in bacterial and protozoal cells and would provide a novel mechanism of antimicrobial action.