Identification of Allosteric Inhibitors against Active Caspase-6

Caspase-6 is a cysteine protease that plays essential roles in programmed cell death, axonal degeneration, and development. The excess neuronal activity of Caspase-6 is associated with Alzheimer disease neuropathology and age-dependent cognitive impairment. Caspase-6 inhibition is a promising strate...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scientific reports 2019-04, Vol.9 (1), p.5504, Article 5504
Hauptverfasser: Tubeleviciute-Aydin, Agne, Beautrait, Alexandre, Lynham, Jeffrey, Sharma, Gyanesh, Gorelik, Alexei, Deny, Ludovic J., Soya, Naoto, Lukacs, Gergely L., Nagar, Bhushan, Marinier, Anne, LeBlanc, Andrea C.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Caspase-6 is a cysteine protease that plays essential roles in programmed cell death, axonal degeneration, and development. The excess neuronal activity of Caspase-6 is associated with Alzheimer disease neuropathology and age-dependent cognitive impairment. Caspase-6 inhibition is a promising strategy to stop early stage neurodegenerative events, yet finding potent and selective Caspase-6 inhibitors has been a challenging task due to the overlapping structural and functional similarities between caspase family members. Here, we investigated how four rare non-synonymous missense single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), resulting in amino acid substitutions outside human Caspase-6 active site, affect enzyme structure and catalytic efficiency. Three investigated SNPs were found to align with a putative allosteric pocket with low sequence conservation among human caspases. Virtual screening of 57,700 compounds against the putative Caspase-6 allosteric pocket, followed by in vitro testing of the best virtual hits in recombinant human Caspase-6 activity assays identified novel allosteric Caspase-6 inhibitors with IC 50 and K i values ranging from ~2 to 13 µM. This report may pave the way towards the development and optimisation of novel small molecule allosteric Caspase-6 inhibitors and illustrates that functional characterisation of rare natural variants holds promise for the identification of allosteric sites on other therapeutic targets in drug discovery.
ISSN:2045-2322
2045-2322
DOI:10.1038/s41598-019-41930-7