Bicyclic Helical Peptides as Dual Inhibitors Selective for Bcl2A1 and Mcl‑1 Proteins

A 26-residue peptide BimBH3 binds indiscriminately to multiple oncogenic Bcl2 proteins that regulate apoptosis of cancer cells. Specific inhibition of the BimBH3-Bcl2A1 protein–protein interaction was obtained in vitro and in cancer cells by shortening the peptide to 14 residues, inserting two cycli...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of medicinal chemistry 2018-04, Vol.61 (7), p.2962-2972
Hauptverfasser: D. de Araujo, Aline, Lim, Junxian, Wu, Kai-Chen, Xiang, Yibin, Good, Andrew C, Skerlj, Renato, Fairlie, David P
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A 26-residue peptide BimBH3 binds indiscriminately to multiple oncogenic Bcl2 proteins that regulate apoptosis of cancer cells. Specific inhibition of the BimBH3-Bcl2A1 protein–protein interaction was obtained in vitro and in cancer cells by shortening the peptide to 14 residues, inserting two cyclization constraints to stabilize a water-stable α-helix, and incorporating an N-terminal acrylamide electrophile for selective covalent bonding to Bcl2A1. Mass spectrometry of trypsin-digested bands on electrophoresis gels established covalent bonding of an electrophilic helix to just one of the three cysteines in Bcl2A1, the one (Cys55) at the BimBH3-Bcl2A1 protein–protein interaction interface. Optimizing the helix-inducing constraints and the sequence subsequently enabled electrophile removal without loss of inhibitor potency. The bicyclic helical peptides were potent, cell permeable, plasma-stable, dual inhibitors of Bcl2A1 and Mcl-1 with high selectivity over other Bcl2 proteins. One bicyclic peptide was shown to inhibit the interaction between a pro-apoptotic protein (Bim) and either endogenous Bcl2A1 or Mcl-1, to induce apoptosis of SKMel28 human melanoma cells, and to sensitize them for enhanced cell death by the anticancer drug etoposide. These approaches look promising for chemically silencing intracellular proteins.
ISSN:0022-2623
1520-4804
DOI:10.1021/acs.jmedchem.8b00010