![]() |
|
|
Vol. 288, Issue 2, 490-501, February 1999
Departments of Chemistry and Medicine, Intestinal Disease Research
Programme, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
The responses of the canine colonic epithelium to histamine are
potentiated by O-alkylhydroxylamines. A study of a series of
such compounds suggested that active compounds had the structure R-O-NH2, substitution of a nitrogen led to total
loss of activity. The locus of the potentiation effect was traced to
the inhibition of diamine oxidase. A new series of aliphatic and
aromatic O-alkylhydroxylamines were synthesized to explore
further the structure-activity relations of this effect. The
potentiating effects of these compounds were determined by examining
the changes in short circuit current (Isc) produced by
histamine and from the activity of a soluble preparation of diamine
oxidase. We found that 1) branched compounds are less active than their
straight chain counterparts, 2) greater steric bulk of the aliphatic
substituent decreased activity, 3) the presence of a double bond had no
significant effect though a triple bond reduced activity, 4) longer
straight chain compounds were less active than the shorter chain
derivatives and 5) all benzylic compounds were less active than the
straight chain aliphatics. O-1-benzyl was inactive however
the meta or para oxygen substituted compounds as well as the
O-(1-E-Cinnamyl) derivative were active. A current model for
the action of diamine oxidase proposes a crucial role for a
trihydroxyphenylalanine quinone cofactor as part of the active site
together with a copper atom. Using molecular modeling based on our
inhibition data we are able to define the region of space that is just
beyond the reactive carbonyl of the trihydroxyphenylalanine residue at
the active site of diamine oxidase. We suggest that a negatively
charged species, such as an aspartate or a glutamate, resides in a
trough about 7 to 8 Å from the trihydroxyphenylalanine carbonyl carbon
and this species aids in the strong selective binding of substrates
such as putrescine and histamine.