A Systematic Approach to the Discovery of Protein–Protein Interaction Stabilizers

Dysregulation of protein–protein interactions (PPIs) commonly leads to disease. PPI stabilization has only recently been systematically explored for drug discovery despite being a powerful approach to selectively target intrinsically disordered proteins and hub proteins, like 14-3-3, with multiple i...

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Veröffentlicht in:ACS central science 2023-05, Vol.9 (5), p.937-946
Hauptverfasser: Kenanova, Dyana N., Visser, Emira J., Virta, Johanna M., Sijbesma, Eline, Centorrino, Federica, Vickery, Holly R., Zhong, Mengqi, Neitz, R. Jeffrey, Brunsveld, Luc, Ottmann, Christian, Arkin, Michelle R.
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container_end_page 946
container_issue 5
container_start_page 937
container_title ACS central science
container_volume 9
creator Kenanova, Dyana N.
Visser, Emira J.
Virta, Johanna M.
Sijbesma, Eline
Centorrino, Federica
Vickery, Holly R.
Zhong, Mengqi
Neitz, R. Jeffrey
Brunsveld, Luc
Ottmann, Christian
Arkin, Michelle R.
description Dysregulation of protein–protein interactions (PPIs) commonly leads to disease. PPI stabilization has only recently been systematically explored for drug discovery despite being a powerful approach to selectively target intrinsically disordered proteins and hub proteins, like 14-3-3, with multiple interaction partners. Disulfide tethering is a site-directed fragment-based drug discovery (FBDD) methodology for identifying reversibly covalent small molecules. We explored the scope of disulfide tethering for the discovery of selective PPI stabilizers (molecular glues) using the hub protein 14-3-3σ. We screened complexes of 14-3-3 with 5 biologically and structurally diverse phosphopeptides derived from the 14-3-3 client proteins ERα, FOXO1, C-RAF, USP8, and SOS1. Stabilizing fragments were found for 4/5 client complexes. Structural elucidation of these complexes revealed the ability of some peptides to conformationally adapt to make productive interactions with the tethered fragments. We validated eight fragment stabilizers, six of which showed selectivity for one phosphopeptide client, and structurally characterized two nonselective hits and four fragments that selectively stabilized C-RAF or FOXO1. The most efficacious fragment increased 14-3-3σ/C-RAF phosphopeptide affinity by 430-fold. Disulfide tethering to the wildtype C38 in 14-3-3σ provided diverse structures for future optimization of 14-3-3/client stabilizers and highlighted a systematic method to discover molecular glues.
doi_str_mv 10.1021/acscentsci.2c01449
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subjects 14-3-3 protein
Adhesives
Binding sites
Chemical bonds
Disease
Drug discovery
FOXO1 protein
Fragments
Glues
Mass spectrometry
Metabolic disorders
Natural products
Neurodegeneration
Peptides
Protein interaction
Proteins
Scientific imaging
Tethering
title A Systematic Approach to the Discovery of Protein–Protein Interaction Stabilizers
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