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Dive into the research topics where Galina I. Lepesheva is active.

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Featured researches published by Galina I. Lepesheva.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

CYP51 from Trypanosoma cruzi A PHYLA-SPECIFIC RESIDUE IN THE B′ HELIX DEFINES SUBSTRATE PREFERENCES OF STEROL 14α-DEMETHYLASE

Galina I. Lepesheva; Natalia G. Zaitseva; W. David Nes; Wenxu Zhou; Miharu Arase; Jialin Liu; George C. Hill; Michael R. Waterman

A potential drug target for treatment of Chagas disease, sterol 14α-demethylase from Trypanosoma cruzi (TCCYP51), was found to be catalytically closely related to animal/fungi-like CYP51. Contrary to the ortholog from Trypanosoma brucei (TB), which like plant CYP51 requires C4-monomethylated sterol substrates, TCCYP51 prefers C4-dimethylsterols. Sixty-six CYP51 sequences are known from bacteria to human, their sequence homology ranging from ∼25% between phyla to ∼80% within a phylum. TC versus TB is the first example of two organisms from the same phylum, in which CYP51s (83% amino acid identity) have such profound differences in substrate specificity. Substitution of animal/fungi-like Ile105 in the B′ helix to Phe, the residue found in this position in all plant and the other six CYP51 sequences from Trypanosomatidae, dramatically alters substrate preferences of TCCYP51, converting it into a more plant-like enzyme. The rates of 14α-demethylation of obtusifoliol and its 24-demethyl analog 4α-,4α-dimethylcholesta-8,24-dien-3β-ol(norlanosterol) increase 60- and 150-fold, respectively. Turnover of the three 4,4-dimethylated sterol substrates is reduced ∼3.5-fold. These catalytic properties correlate with the sterol binding parameters, suggesting that Phe in this position provides necessary interactions with C4-monomethylated substrates, which Ile cannot. The CYP51 substrate preferences imply differences in the post-squalene portion of sterol biosynthesis in TC and TB. The phyla-specific residue can be used to predict preferred substrates of new CYP51 sequences and subsequently for the development of new artificial substrate analogs, which might serve as highly specific inhibitors able to kill human parasites.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Crystal Structures of Trypanosoma brucei Sterol 14α-Demethylase and Implications for Selective Treatment of Human Infections

Galina I. Lepesheva; Hee-Won Park; Tatiana Y. Hargrove; Benoit Vanhollebeke; Zdzislaw Wawrzak; Joel M. Harp; Munirathinam Sundaramoorthy; W. David Nes; Etienne Pays; Minu Chaudhuri; Fernando Villalta; Michael R. Waterman

Sterol 14α-demethylase (14DM, the CYP51 family of cytochrome P450) is an essential enzyme in sterol biosynthesis in eukaryotes. It serves as a major drug target for fungal diseases and can potentially become a target for treatment of human infections with protozoa. Here we present 1.9 Å resolution crystal structures of 14DM from the protozoan pathogen Trypanosoma brucei, ligand-free and complexed with a strong chemically selected inhibitor N-1-(2,4-dichlorophenyl)-2-(1H-imidazol-1-yl)ethyl)-4-(5-phenyl-1,3,4-oxadi-azol-2-yl)benzamide that we previously found to produce potent antiparasitic effects in Trypanosomatidae. This is the first structure of a eukaryotic microsomal 14DM that acts on sterol biosynthesis, and it differs profoundly from that of the water-soluble CYP51 family member from Mycobacterium tuberculosis, both in organization of the active site cavity and in the substrate access channel location. Inhibitor binding does not cause large scale conformational rearrangements, yet induces unanticipated local alterations in the active site, including formation of a hydrogen bond network that connects, via the inhibitor amide group fragment, two remote functionally essential protein segments and alters the heme environment. The inhibitor binding mode provides a possible explanation for both its functionally irreversible effect on the enzyme activity and its selectivity toward the 14DM from human pathogens versus the human 14DM ortholog. The structures shed new light on 14DM functional conservation and open an excellent opportunity for directed design of novel antiparasitic drugs.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Structural Insights into Inhibition of Sterol 14α-Demethylase in the Human Pathogen Trypanosoma cruzi

Galina I. Lepesheva; Tatiana Y. Hargrove; Spencer Anderson; Yuliya Y. Kleshchenko; Vyacheslav Furtak; Zdzislaw Wawrzak; Fernando Villalta; Michael R. Waterman

Trypanosoma cruzi causes Chagas disease (American trypanosomiasis), which threatens the lives of millions of people and remains incurable in its chronic stage. The antifungal drug posaconazole that blocks sterol biosynthesis in the parasite is the only compound entering clinical trials for the chronic form of this infection. Crystal structures of the drug target enzyme, Trypanosoma cruzi sterol 14α-demethylase (CYP51), complexed with posaconazole, another antifungal agent fluconazole and an experimental inhibitor, (R)-4′-chloro-N-(1-(2,4-dichlorophenyl)-2-(1H-imid-azol-1-yl)ethyl)biphenyl-4-carboxamide (VNF), allow prediction of important chemical features that enhance the drug potencies. Combined with comparative analysis of inhibitor binding parameters, influence on the catalytic activity of the trypanosomal enzyme and its human counterpart, and their cellular effects at different stages of the Trypanosoma cruzi life cycle, the structural data provide a molecular background to CYP51 inhibition and azole resistance and enlighten the path for directed design of new, more potent and selective drugs to develop an efficient treatment for Chagas disease.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009

Rational Modification of a Candidate Cancer Drug for Use Against Chagas Disease

James M. Kraus; Christophe L. M. J. Verlinde; Mandana Karimi; Galina I. Lepesheva; Michael H. Gelb; Frederick S. Buckner

Chagas disease is one of the major neglected diseases of the world. Existing drug therapies are limited, ineffective, and highly toxic. We describe a novel strategy of drug discovery of adapting an existing clinical compound with excellent pharmaceutical properties to target a pathogenic organism. The protein farnesyltransferase (PFT) inhibitor tipifarnib, now in phase III anticancer clinical trials, was previously found to kill Trypanosoma cruzi by blocking sterol 14 alpha-demethylase (14DM). We rationally developed tipifarnib analogues that display reduced affinity for human PFT to reduce toxicity while increasing affinity for parasite 14DM. The lead compound has picomolar activity against cultured T. cruzi and is efficacious in a mouse model of acute Chagas disease.


Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology | 2004

CYP51--the omnipotent P450.

Galina I. Lepesheva; Michael R. Waterman

Sterol 14 alpha-demethylase (CYP51) is the single cytochrome P450 (CYP) required for sterol biosynthesis in different phyla, and it is the most widely distributed P450 gene family being found in all biological kingdoms. It catalyzes the first step following cyclization in sterol biosynthesis such as removal of the 14 alpha-methyl group from lanosterol in the cholesterol biosynthetic pathway, leading to formation of the initial substrate in steroid hormone biosynthesis. CYP51 from different phyla have low sequence similarity across kingdoms and contain only about 40 conserved amino acid residues in the whole family. An attempt to predict the possible role of these conserved residues is being made by a combination of the results of site-directed mutagenesis and information from the known crystal structure of sterol 14 alpha-demethylase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2011

Structural basis for conservation in the CYP51 family.

Galina I. Lepesheva; Michael R. Waterman

Sterol 14α-demethylases (14DM) comprise the CYP51 cytochrome P450 genome family. The 14DM reaction is essential for the biosynthesis of sterols which are necessary for production of cellular membranes. This is the most widely distributed P450, being present in all biological kingdoms. From one kingdom to another the primary amino acid sequence identity usually ranges between 30 and 20%. In this minireview we describe the conservation of specific amino acids and the various CYP51 orthologs and indicate the roles that they may play in the structure/function of this monooxygenase. The prediction of the roles of different amino acids in 14DM is based on high resolution tertiary structures of these enzymes which set the stage for detailed understanding of the 14α-demethylase reaction and its selective, phyla-specific inhibition which is crucial for the design of potent inhibitors for treatment of infection by pathogenic microbes.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2013

VNI Cures Acute and Chronic Experimental Chagas Disease

Fernando Villalta; Mark C. Dobish; Pius N. Nde; Yulia Y. Kleshchenko; Tatiana Y. Hargrove; Candice A. Johnson; Michael R. Waterman; Jeffrey N. Johnston; Galina I. Lepesheva

Chagas disease is a deadly infection caused by the protozoan parasite Trypanosoma cruzi. Afflicting approximately 8 million people in Latin America, Chagas disease is now becoming a serious global health problem proliferating beyond the traditional geographical borders, mainly because of human and vector migration. Because the disease is endemic in low-resource areas, industrial drug development has been lethargic. The chronic form remains incurable, there are no vaccines, and 2 existing drugs for the acute form are toxic and have low efficacy. Here we report the efficacy of a small molecule, VNI, including evidence of its effectiveness against chronic Chagas disease. VNI is a potent experimental inhibitor of T. cruzi sterol 14α-demethylase. Nontoxic and highly selective, VNI displays promising pharmacokinetics and administered orally to mice at 25 mg/kg for 30 days cures, with 100% cure rate and 100% survival, the acute and chronic T. cruzi infection.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Substrate Preferences and Catalytic Parameters Determined by Structural Characteristics of Sterol 14α-Demethylase (CYP51) from Leishmania infantum

Tatiana Y. Hargrove; Zdzislaw Wawrzak; Jialin Liu; W. David Nes; Michael R. Waterman; Galina I. Lepesheva

Leishmaniasis is a major health problem that affects populations of ∼90 countries worldwide, with no vaccine and only a few moderately effective drugs. Here we report the structure/function characterization of sterol 14α-demethylase (CYP51) from Leishmania infantum. The enzyme catalyzes removal of the 14α-methyl group from sterol precursors. The reaction is essential for membrane biogenesis and therefore has great potential to become a target for antileishmanial chemotherapy. Although L. infantum CYP51 prefers C4-monomethylated sterol substrates such as C4-norlanosterol and obtusifoliol (Vmax of ∼10 and 8 min−1, respectively), it is also found to 14α-demethylate C4-dimethylated lanosterol (Vmax = 0.9 min−1) and C4-desmethylated 14α-methylzymosterol (Vmax = 1.9 min−1). Binding parameters with six sterols were tested, with Kd values ranging from 0.25 to 1.4 μm. Thus, L. infantum CYP51 is the first example of a plant-like sterol 14α-demethylase, where requirements toward the composition of the C4 atom substituents are not strict, indicative of possible branching in the postsqualene portion of sterol biosynthesis in the parasite. Comparative analysis of three CYP51 substrate binding cavities (Trypanosoma brucei, Trypanosoma cruzi, and L. infantum) suggests that substrate preferences of plant- and fungal-like protozoan CYP51s largely depend on the differences in the enzyme active site topology. These minor structural differences are also likely to underlie CYP51 catalytic rates and drug susceptibility and can be used to design potent and specific inhibitors.


Advances in Parasitology | 2011

Targeting Trypanosoma cruzi Sterol 14α-Demethylase (CYP51)

Galina I. Lepesheva; Fernando Villalta; Michael R. Waterman

There are at least two obvious features that must be considered upon targeting specific metabolic pathways/enzymes for drug development: the pathway must be essential and the enzyme must allow the design of pharmacologically useful inhibitors. Here, we describe Trypanosoma cruzi sterol 14α-demethylase as a promising target for anti-Chagasic chemotherapy. The use of anti-fungal azoles, which block sterol biosynthesis and therefore membrane formation in fungi, against the protozoan parasite has turned out to be highly successful: a broad spectrum anti-fungal drug, the triazole compound posaconazole, is now entering phase II clinical trials for treatment of Chagas disease. This review summarizes comparative information on anti-fungal azoles and novel inhibitory scaffolds selective for Trypanosomatidae sterol 14α-demethylase through the lens of recent structure/functional characterization of the target enzyme. We believe our studies open wide opportunities for rational design of novel, pathogen-specific and therefore more potent and efficient anti-trypanosomal drugs.


Journal of Virology | 2009

The first virally encoded cytochrome p450.

David C. Lamb; Li Lei; Andrew G. S. Warrilow; Galina I. Lepesheva; Jonathan G. L. Mullins; Michael R. Waterman; Steven L. Kelly

ABSTRACT The genome sequence of the giant virus Acanthamoeba polyphaga mimivirus revealed the presence of two putative cytochrome P450 (CYP) genes. The product of one of the two predicted CYP genes (YP_143162) showed low-level homology to sterol 14-demethylase (CYP51) and contained a C-terminal polypeptide domain of unknown function. YP_143162 expression (without an N-terminal membrane binding domain) in Escherichia coli yields a CYP protein which gives a reduced CO difference maximum at 448 nm and was formally demonstrated as the first viral cytochrome P450. Analysis of binding of lipid and sterol substrates indicated no perturbation in CYP heme environment, and an absence of activity was seen when 14-methyl sterols were used as a substrate. The function of the CYP protein and its C-terminal domain remain unknown.

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Sergey A. Usanov

National Academy of Sciences of Belarus

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N. V. Strushkevich

National Academy of Sciences of Belarus

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