A benzoic acid inhibitor induces a novel conformational change in the active site of Influenza B virus neuraminidase.

Article Details

Citation

Lommer BS, Ali SM, Bajpai SN, Brouillette WJ, Air GM, Luo M

A benzoic acid inhibitor induces a novel conformational change in the active site of Influenza B virus neuraminidase.

Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr. 2004 Jun;60(Pt 6):1017-23. Epub 2004 May 21.

PubMed ID
15159560 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Owing to the highly conserved nature of its active site, Influenza B virus neuraminidase (NA) has emerged as a major target for the design of novel anti-influenza drugs. A benzene-ring scaffold has been used in place of the pyranose ring of sialic acid to develop simpler NA inhibitors that contain a minimal number of chiral centers. A new compound belonging to this series, BANA 207, showed significant improvement in inhibitory activity against Influenza B virus NA compared with its parent compound. Here, the structural analysis of a complex of BANA 207 with influenza virus B/Lee/40 NA is reported. The results indicate that BANA 207 forms an unexpected interaction with the crucial active-site residue Glu275 that stabilizes the side chain of this residue in a conformation previously unobserved in NA-inhibitor complexes. This change in the side-chain orientation of Glu275 alters the topology of the triglycerol pocket, which accommodates an additional lipophilic substitution at the benzene ring and may provide an explanation for the increased activity of BANA 207 against Influenza B virus NA.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
NeuraminidaseP03474Details