BLVRA inhibitors target the enzyme biliverdin reductase A (BLVRA), a key enzyme in the heme degradation pathway. BLVRA catalyzes the conversion of biliverdin, a green tetrapyrrolic bile pigment, into bilirubin, a yellow compound. This reduction reaction requires NADPH as a cofactor, and it plays a crucial role in cellular redox balance. Bilirubin, the product of this enzymatic activity, has antioxidant properties. The inhibition of BLVRA disrupts this conversion, leading to the accumulation of biliverdin and reduced levels of bilirubin. As BLVRA is involved in maintaining oxidative stress balance, its inhibition can alter the redox environment within cells, potentially influencing various biochemical processes, such as the modulation of signaling pathways, stress responses, and cell metabolism.
Chemically, BLVRA inhibitors can encompass a wide variety of molecular structures that interact with the enzyme's active site, often targeting the binding site for biliverdin or NADPH. These compounds may act by steric hindrance, electrostatic interaction, or by chelating critical metal ions required for the enzyme's catalytic activity. By inhibiting the reductive function of BLVRA, these molecules create a shift in cellular heme catabolism, which in turn affects other heme-associated pathways. This impact on the broader heme cycle can influence intracellular iron management, heme oxygenase activity, and the production of reactive oxygen species. The chemical development of BLVRA inhibitors, therefore, involves detailed structural analysis of the enzyme's binding domains, alongside computational modeling to optimize inhibitor binding affinity and specificity.
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Product Name | CAS # | Catalog # | QUANTITY | Price | Citations | RATING |
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Succinylacetone | 51568-18-4 | sc-212963 sc-212963B | 10 mg 100 mg | $336.00 $418.00 | ||
Inhibits aminolevulinic acid dehydratase in heme synthesis, which can indirectly influence BLVRA activity. |