Nikolai Galitsky
Woodward, Inc.
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Featured researches published by Nikolai Galitsky.
Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2002
Vivian Cody; Nikolai Galitsky; Joseph R. Luft; Walter Pangborn; Andre Rosowsky; Sherry F. Queener
Structural data are reported for N-(2,4-diaminopteridin-6-yl)methyldibenz[b,f]azepine (PT653), an example of structure-based inhibitor design with 21-fold selectivity for Pneumocystis carinii dihydrofolate reductase (pcDHFR) relative to rat liver dihydrofolate reductase (rlDHFR). These data test the hypothesis that 2,4-diaminopteridines with a bulky N,N-diarylaminomethyl side chain at the 6-position could fit better into the larger active site of pcDHFR than into that of mammalian DHFR. The crystal structure of the ternary complex of NADPH, PT653 and pcDHFR, refined to 2.4 A resolution, reveals that PT653 binds in a different orientation than predicted from modeling studies reported previously [Rosowsky et al. (1999), J. Med. Chem. 42, 4853-4860]. These crystal data show that the pteridine-ring plane is tilted compared with that observed in the crystal structure of the pcDHFR methotrexate (MTX) NADPH ternary complex used as a template to model PT653 binding. Also, as a result of this tilt, the dibenzoazepine ring is bound deeper into the p-aminobenzoyl folate binding pocket of pcDHFR, thereby relieving close intermolecular contacts predicted from the modeling data. By far the most significant structural change, but more subtle in magnitude, is the ligand-induced conformational shift of 1.2 A away from the inhibitor of residues 61-66 in helix C. The other major effect is the unwinding of the short helical segment involving loop 47 which has a different conformation to that observed in other pcDHFR complexes [Cody et al. (1999), Biochemistry, 38, 4303-4312]. The favorable pcDHFR selectivity of PT653 could be a result of ligand-induced fit of the large hydrophobic dibenzazepine ring which occupies regions of the enzyme active site not probed by other antifolates and which take advantage of sequence and conformational differences between the structures of human and pcDHFR. These data suggest that such hydrophobic analogs could be used as lead compounds in the design of more pcDHFR-selective antifolates. Enzyme inhibition data also show that PT653 is 102-fold selective for Toxoplasma gondii (tg) DHFR relative to rlDHFR. Homology-modeling studies of the tgDHFR structure suggest that differences in ligand-binding orientation and enzyme sequence could influence the enhanced selectivity of PT653 for tgDHFR.
Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2001
Nikolai Galitsky; Vivian Cody; Andrzej Wojtczak; Debashis Ghosh; Joseph R. Luft; Walter Pangborn; Leigh English
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1995
William S Lewis; Vivian Cody; Nikolai Galitsky; Joseph R. Luft; Walter Pangborn; S.K. Chunduru; H.T. Spencer; J.R. Appleman; Raymond L. Blakley
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2000
Aleem Gangjee; Jianming Yu; John J. McGuire; Vivian Cody; Nikolai Galitsky; Roy L. Kisliuk; Sherry F. Queener
Biochemistry | 2000
Vivian Cody; Nikolai Galitsky; Dawn Rak; Joseph R. Luft; Walter Pangborn; Sherry F. Queener
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 1999
Andre Rosowsky; Vivian Cody; Nikolai Galitsky; Hongning Fu; and Andrew T. Papoulis; Sherry F. Queener
Biochemistry | 1997
Vivian Cody; Nikolai Galitsky; Joseph R. Luft; Walter Pangborn; Andre Rosowsky; Raymond L. Blakley
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 1998
Aleem Gangjee; Anup Vidwans; Anil Vasudevan; Sherry F. Queener; Roy L. Kisliuk; Vivian Cody; Ruming Li; Nikolai Galitsky; Joseph R. Luft; Walter Pangborn
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 1998
Aleem Gangjee; Xin Guo; Sherry F. Queener; Vivian Cody; Nikolai Galitsky; Joseph R. Luft; Walter Pangborn
Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 1997
Vivian Cody; Nikolai Galitsky; Joseph R. Luft; Walter Pangborn; Aleem Gangjee; Rajesh Devraj; Sherry F. Queener; Raymond L. Blakley