Discovery of Small-Molecule Autophagy Inhibitors by Disrupting the Protein–Protein Interactions Involving Autophagy-Related 5

One possible strategy for modulating autophagy is to disrupt the critical protein–protein interactions (PPIs) formed during this process. Our attention is on the autophagy-related 12 (ATG12)–autophagy-related 5 (ATG5)–autophagy-related 16-like 1 (ATG16L1) heterotrimer complex, which is responsible f...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of medicinal chemistry 2023-02, Vol.66 (4), p.2457-2476
Hauptverfasser: Xiang, Honggang, Liu, Ruiqi, Zhang, Xiangying, An, Ran, Zhou, Mi, Tan, Chang, Li, Qing, Su, Minyi, Guo, Chun, Zhou, Lu, Li, Yingxia, Wang, Renxiao
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:One possible strategy for modulating autophagy is to disrupt the critical protein–protein interactions (PPIs) formed during this process. Our attention is on the autophagy-related 12 (ATG12)–autophagy-related 5 (ATG5)–autophagy-related 16-like 1 (ATG16L1) heterotrimer complex, which is responsible for ATG8 translocation from ATG3 to phosphatidylethanolamine. In this work, we discovered a compound with an (E)-3-(2-furanylmethylene)-2-pyrrolidinone core moiety (T1742) that blocked the ATG5–ATG16L1 and ATG5–TECAIR interactions in the in vitro binding assay (IC50 = 1–2 μM) and also exhibited autophagy inhibition in cellular assays. The possible binding mode of T1742 to ATG5 was predicted through molecular modeling, and a batch of derivatives sharing essentially the same core moiety were synthesized and tested. The outcomes of the in vitro binding assay and the flow cytometry assay of those newly synthesized compounds were generally consistent. This work has validated our central hypothesis that small-molecule inhibitors of the PPIs involving ATG5 can tune down autophagy effectively, and their pharmaceutical potential may be further explored.
ISSN:0022-2623
1520-4804
DOI:10.1021/acs.jmedchem.2c01233