Ritonavir inhibition of calcium-activated neutral proteases

W Wan, PB DePetrillo - Biochemical pharmacology, 2002 - Elsevier
W Wan, PB DePetrillo
Biochemical pharmacology, 2002Elsevier
Calpains (EC 3.4. 22.17) are intracellular calcium-activated cysteine proteases that mediate
tissue injury following post-ischemic and post-traumatic stress. Both human HIV protease
and calpains share a similar secondary structure, where the active site is flanked by
hydrophobic regions. The present study demonstrates that ritonavir, a hydrophobic HIV
protease inhibitor, also inhibits calpain activity. In PC12 cell extracts assayed for calpain at
maximal activity (2mM calcium), ritonavir exhibited competitive inhibition with a Ki of 11±7.0 …
Calpains (EC 3.4.22.17) are intracellular calcium-activated cysteine proteases that mediate tissue injury following post-ischemic and post-traumatic stress. Both human HIV protease and calpains share a similar secondary structure, where the active site is flanked by hydrophobic regions. The present study demonstrates that ritonavir, a hydrophobic HIV protease inhibitor, also inhibits calpain activity. In PC12 cell extracts assayed for calpain at maximal activity (2mM calcium), ritonavir exhibited competitive inhibition with a Ki of 11±7.0μM. Experiments with purified enzymes showed inhibition for both m- and μ-calpain isoforms (m-calpain, Ki=9.2±1.2μM; μ-calpain, Ki=5.9±1.4μM). Ritonavir also inhibited calcium-stimulated calpain activity in PC12 cells in situ. These results suggest that ritonavir or analogues of the drug should be investigated as cytoprotective agents in conditions where cell death or injury is mediated via calpain activation.
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