Small-molecule inhibitor: Ac-Tyr-Val-Ala-Asp-H

Summary Literature

Name

Common name
Ac-Tyr-Val-Ala-Asp-H
Other names
L-709049; Ac-YVAD-CHO

Inhibition

History
Ac-Tyr-Val-Ala-Asp-H was described by Molineaux et al. (1993) as a potent inhibitor of caspase-1.
Peptidases inhibited
This is a very selective inhibitor of caspase-1. Values for Ki (nM) (Salvesen & Nagase, 2001) are: 0.76 (caspase-1), not inhibited (caspase-2), not inhibited (caspase-3), 362 (caspase-4), 163 (caspase-5), not inhibited (caspase-6), not inhibited (caspase-7), 352 (caspase-8), 970 (caspase-9).
Mechanism
Inhibition is reversible.

Chemistry

CID at PubChem
3034818
Structure
[Ac-Tyr-Val-Ala-Asp-H (C14.001 inhibitor) structure ]
Chemical/biochemical name
N-acetyl-tyrosyl-valyl-alanyl-aspartaldehyde
Formula weight
493

General

Inhibitor class
This is a compound of the aldehyde class. The discovery of leupeptin in the late 1960s drew attention to the potential of aldehydes as peptidase inhibitors, and the inhibition of papain by synthetic aldehydes was further studied by Wolfenden and co-workers (e.g. Westerik & Wolfenden, 1972). Many aldehydes are now known as inhibitors of serine, cysteine or threonine peptidases. They form hemiacetal or thiohemiacetal conjugates with the essential hydroxyl or thiol group of the enzyme that are transition state analogues (Bendall et al., 1977). The compounds exist predominantly in their hydrated forms in aqueous solution, but only the aldehyde is an effective inhibitor (Bendall et al., 1977). Peptide aldehydes and semicarbazones are valuable ligands for affinity chromatography of serine and cysteine peptidases (Rich et al., 1986; Dando & Barrett, 1992). Aldehydes can also act as inhibitors of metallopeptidases (Strater & Lipscomb, 1995).
Reviews
Garcia-Calvo et al. (1998)