A dual inhibitor against prolyl isomerase Pin1 and cyclophilin discovered by a novel real-time fluorescence detection method

2011 
Research highlights: {yields} A Pin1 (prolyl isomerase) inhibitor, TME-001, has been discovered by using a new established high-throughput screening method. {yields} The TME-001 showed a cell-active inhibition with lower cytotoxic effect than known Pin1 inhibitors. {yields} Kinetic analyses revealed that the TME-001 is the first compound that exhibits dual inhibition of Pin1 and another type of prolyl isomerase, cyclophilin. {yields} Thus, similarities of structure and reaction mechanism between Pin1 and cyclophilin are proposed. -- Abstract: Pin1, a peptidyl prolyl cis/trans isomerase (PPIase), is a potential target molecule for cancer, infectious disease, and Alzheimer's disease. We established a high-throughput screening method for Pin1 inhibitors, which employs a real-time fluorescence detector. This screening method identified 66 compounds that inhibit Pin1 out of 9756 compounds from structurally diverse chemical libraries. Further evaluations of surface plasmon resonance methods and a cell proliferation assay were performed. We discovered a cell-active inhibitor, TME-001 (2-(3-chloro-4-fluoro-phenyl)-isothiazol-3-one). Surprisingly, kinetic analyses revealed that TME-001 is the first compound that exhibits dual inhibition of Pin1 (IC{sub 50} = 6.1 {mu}M) and cyclophilin, another type of PPIase, (IC{sub 50} = 13.7 {mu}M). This compound does not inhibit FKBP. This finding suggests the existence of similarities of structure and reaction mechanism between Pin1more » and cyclophilin, and may lead to a more complete understanding of the active sites of PPIases.« less
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