Affinity-Based Selectivity Profiling of an In-Class Selective Competitive Inhibitor of Acyl Protein Thioesterase 2

Activity-based protein profiling (ABPP) has revolutionized the discovery and optimization of active-site ligands across distinct enzyme families, providing a robust platform for in-class selectivity profiling. Nonetheless, this approach is less straightforward for profiling reversible inhibitors and...

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Veröffentlicht in:ACS medicinal chemistry letters 2017-02, Vol.8 (2), p.215-220
Hauptverfasser: Won, Sang Joon, Eschweiler, Joseph D., Majmudar, Jaimeen D., Chong, Fei San, Hwang, Sin Ye, Ruotolo, Brandon T., Martin, Brent R.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Activity-based protein profiling (ABPP) has revolutionized the discovery and optimization of active-site ligands across distinct enzyme families, providing a robust platform for in-class selectivity profiling. Nonetheless, this approach is less straightforward for profiling reversible inhibitors and does not access proteins outside the ABPP probe’s target profile. While the active-site competitive acyl protein thioesterase 2 inhibitor ML349 (K i = 120 nM) is highly selective within the serine hydrolase enzyme family, it could still interact with other cellular targets. Here we present a chemoproteomic workflow to enrich and profile candidate ML349-binding proteins. In human cell lysates, biotinylated-ML349 enriches a recurring set of proteins, including metabolite kinases and flavin-dependent oxidoreductases that are potentially enhanced by avidity-driven multimeric interactions. Confirmatory assays by native mass spectrometry and fluorescence polarization quickly rank-ordered these weak off-targets, providing justification to explore ligand interactions and stoichiometry beyond ABPP.
ISSN:1948-5875
1948-5875
DOI:10.1021/acsmedchemlett.6b00441