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Vol. 57, Issue 3, 619-624, March 2000
Department of Biochemistry, Uppsala University, Biomedical Center,
Uppsala, Sweden
-L-Glutamyl-S-(benzyl)-L-cysteinyl-R-(
)-phenylglycine
(TER 117) has previously been developed for selective inhibition of human glutathione S-transferase P1-1 (GST P1-1) based on the
postulated contribution of this isoenzyme to the development of drug
resistance in cancer cells. In the present investigation, the
inhibitory effect of TER 117 on the human glyoxalase system was
studied. Although designed as an inhibitor specific for GST P1-1, TER
117 also competitively inhibits glyoxalase I
(KI = 0.56 µM). In contrast, no
inhibition of glyoxalase II was detected. Reduced glyoxalase activity
is expected to raise intracellular levels of toxic 2-oxoaldehydes otherwise eliminated by glyoxalase I. The resulting toxicity would accompany the potentiation of cytostatic drugs, caused by inhibition of
the detoxication effected by GST P1-1. TER 117 was designed for
efficient inhibition of the most abundant form GST P1-1/Ile105. Therefore, the inhibitory effect of TER 117 on a second allelic variant
GST P1-1/Val105 was also studied. TER 117 was shown to competitively
inhibit both GST P1-1 variants. The apparent
KI values at glutathione concentrations
relevant to the intracellular milieu were in the micromolar range for
both enzyme forms. Extrapolation to free enzyme produced
KI values of approximately 0.1 µM for both
isoenzymes, reflecting the high affinity of GST P1-1 for the inhibitor.
Thus, the allelic variation in position 105 of GST P1-1 does not affect
the inhibitory potency of TER 117. The inhibitory effects of TER 117 on
GST P1-1 and glyoxalase I activities may act in synergy in the cell and
improve the effectiveness of chemotherapy.