Distinction between 2'- and 3'-Phosphate Isomers of a Fluorescent NADPH Analogue Led to Strong Inhibition of Cancer Cells Migration

Antioxidants (Basel). 2021 May 4;10(5):723. doi: 10.3390/antiox10050723.

Abstract

Specific inhibition of NADPH oxidases (NOX) and NO-synthases (NOS), two enzymes associated with redox stress in tumor cells, has aroused great pharmacological interest. Here, we show how these enzymes distinguish between isomeric 2'- and 3'-phosphate derivatives, a difference used to improve the specificity of inhibition by isolated 2'- and 3'-phosphate isomers of our NADPH analogue NS1. Both isomers become fluorescent upon binding to their target proteins as observed by in vitro assay and in vivo imaging. The 2'-phosphate isomer of NS1 exerted more pronounced effects on NOS and NOX-dependent physiological responses than the 3'-phosphate isomer did. Docking and molecular dynamics simulations explain this specificity at the level of the NADPH site of NOX and NOS, where conserved arginine residues distinguished between the 2'-phosphate over the 3'-phosphate group, in favor of the 2'-phosphate.

Keywords: NADPH oxidases; NO-synthases; cancer cell migration; fluorescence; in vivo imaging; molecular modeling.