W. Steinmetz, Brett L Shapiro, J. J. Roberts
Oct 1, 2002
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0
Influential Citations
21
Citations
Journal
Journal of medicinal chemistry
Abstract
Erythromycin enol ether is a potent mimic of the peptide hormone motilin. To understand its biological activity, its three-dimensional structure in CD(2)Cl(2) was determined from constrained molecular mechanics using constraints derived from NMR spectra. The structure of the enol ether is well defined by 10 structures that minimize the energy and satisfy the NMR data. We infer the molecular basis for its activity as a motilide from a comparison of its structure with that of motilin. The macrolide ring of the enol ether is a beta-turn mimic of the peptide. Furthermore, a superposition of the structures of the enol ether and motilin shows a striking overlap of the sugar rings attached to the macrolide ring with essential aromatic side chains in the peptide.