2 research outputs found
Metabolically Labile Fumarate Esters Impart Kinetic Selectivity to Irreversible Inhibitors
Electrophilic
small molecules are an important class of chemical
probes and drugs that produce biological effects by irreversibly modifying
proteins. Examples of electrophilic drugs include covalent kinase
inhibitors that are used to treat cancer and the multiple sclerosis
drug dimethyl fumarate. Optimized covalent drugs typically inactivate
their protein targets rapidly in cells, but ensuing time-dependent,
off-target protein modification can erode selectivity and diminish
the utility of reactive small molecules as chemical probes and therapeutics.
Here, we describe an approach to confer kinetic selectivity to electrophilic
drugs. We show that an analogue of the covalent Bruton’s tyrosine
kinase (BTK) inhibitor Ibrutinib bearing a fumarate ester electrophile
is vulnerable to enzymatic metabolism on a time-scale that preserves
rapid and sustained BTK inhibition, while thwarting more slowly accumulating
off-target reactivity in cell and animal models. These findings demonstrate
that metabolically labile electrophilic groups can endow covalent
drugs with kinetic selectivity to enable perturbation of proteins
and biochemical pathways with greater precision
Chemical Proteomic Profiling of Human Methyltransferases
Methylation
is a fundamental mechanism used in Nature to modify
the structure and function of biomolecules, including proteins, DNA,
RNA, and metabolites. Methyl groups are predominantly installed into
biomolecules by a large and diverse class of <i>S</i>-adenosyl
methionine (SAM)-dependent methyltransferases (MTs), of which there
are ∼200 known or putative members in the human proteome. Deregulated
MT activity contributes to numerous diseases, including cancer, and
several MT inhibitors are in clinical development. Nonetheless, a
large fraction of the human MT family remains poorly characterized,
underscoring the need for new technologies to characterize MTs and
their inhibitors in native biological systems. Here, we describe a
suite of <i>S</i>-adenosyl homocysteine (SAH) photoreactive
probes and their application in chemical proteomic experiments to
profile and enrich a large number of MTs (>50) from human cancer
cell
lysates with remarkable specificity over other classes of proteins.
We further demonstrate that the SAH probes can enrich MT-associated
proteins and be used to screen for and assess the selectivity of MT
inhibitors, leading to the discovery of a covalent inhibitor of nicotinamide <i>N</i>-methyltransferase (NNMT), an enzyme implicated in cancer
and metabolic disorders. The chemical proteomics probes and methods
for their utilization reported herein should prove of value for the
functional characterization of MTs, MT complexes, and MT inhibitors
in mammalian biology and disease