Publication: Zampanolide, a potent new microtubule-stabilizing agent, covalently reacts with the taxane luminal site in tubulin α,β-heterodimers and microtubules
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Elsevier
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Zampanolide and its less active analog dactylolide compete with paclitaxel for binding to microtubules and represent a new class of microtubule-stabilizing agent (MSA). Mass spectrometry demonstrated that the mechanism of action of both compounds involved covalent binding to β-tubulin at residues N228 and H229 in the taxane site of the microtubule. Alkylation of N228 and H229 was also detected in α,β-tubulin dimers. However, unlike cyclostreptin, the other known MSA that alkylates β-tubulin, zampanolide was a strong MSA. Modeling the structure of the adducts, using the NMR-derived dactylolide conformation, indicated that the stabilizing activity of zampanolide is likely due to interactions with the M-loop. Our results strongly support the existence of the luminal taxane site of microtubules in tubulin dimers and suggest that microtubule nucleation induction by MSAs may proceed through an allosteric mechanism.
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Antineoplastic Agents Binding Sites Bridged-Ring Compounds Cell Proliferation Dimerization Dose-Response Relationship, Drug Drug Screening Assays, Antitumor Humans Kinetics Macrolides Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Microtubules Models, Molecular Molecular Structure Structure-Activity Relationship Taxoids Tubulin Tumor Cells, Cultured
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Chem Biol. 2012; 19(6):686-98






