9 research outputs found

    Peptide Technologies in the Development of Chemical Tools for Chromatin‐Associated Machinery

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    Discerning a mechanistic understanding of the cause‐and‐effect relationships between chromatin post‐translational modifications (PTMs) and DNA accessibility for replication, transcription, and repair is an elusive goal being pursued using molecular and cellular biology, biochemistry, and more recently chemical inhibition. Chemical intervention of the chromatin‐associated complexes that regulate PTM maintenance and chromatin structure faces numerous challenges due to the broad surface‐groove interactions between many of these proteins and histones; yet, the increasing interest in understanding chromatin‐modifying complexes suggests tractable lead compounds will be critical for elucidating the mechanisms of chromatin dysregulation in disease states and validating the druggability of these domains. Peptides and peptidomimetics afford several advantages to efficient inhibitor development including a rational starting point, modular assembly, and retention of secondary structure. Numerous peptide technologies have been employed in the chromatin field to characterize substrate interactions, evaluate ligand selectivity, and optimize potent peptidomimetic inhibitors. We describe the progress and advantages of these efforts, and provide a perspective on their implications for future chemical probe and drug discovery efforts. Drug Dev Res 78 : 300–312, 2017. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc

    Design, synthesis, and protein methyltransferase activity of a unique set of constrained amine containing compounds

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    Epigenetic alterations relate to various human diseases, and developing inhibitors of Kme regulatory proteins is considered to be a new frontier for drug discovery. We were inspired by the known multicyclic ligands, UNC669 and UNC926, which are the first reported small molecule ligands for a methyl-lysine binding domain. We hypothesized that reducing the conformational flexibility of the key amine moiety of UNC669 would result in a unique set of ligands. Twenty-five novel compounds containing a fused bi- or tricyclic amine or a spirocyclic amine were designed and synthesized. To gauge the potential of these amine-containing compounds to interact with Kme regulatory proteins, the compounds were screened against a panel of 24 protein methyltransferases. Compound 13 was discovered as a novel scaffold that interacts with SETD8 and could serve as a starting point for the future development of PKMT inhibitors

    Chromodomain Ligand Optimization via Target-Class Directed Combinatorial Repurposing

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    Efforts to develop strategies for small molecule chemical probe discovery against the readers of the methyl-lysine (Kme) post-translational modification have been met with limited success. Targeted disruption of these protein-protein interactions via peptidomimetic inhibitor optimization is a promising alternative to small molecule hit discovery; however, recognition of identical peptide motifs by multiple Kme reader proteins presents a unique challenge in the development of selective Kme reader chemical probes. These selectivity challenges are exemplified by the Polycomb repressive complex 1 (PRC1) chemical probe, UNC3866, which demonstrates sub-micromolar off-target affinity toward the non-PRC1 chromodomains CDYL2 and CDYL. Moreover, since peptidomimetics are challenging subjects for structure-activity relationship (SAR) studies, traditional optimization of UNC3866 would prove costly and time-consuming. Herein, we report a broadly applicable strategy for the affinity-based, target-class screening of chromodomains via the repurposing of UNC3866 in an efficient, combinatorial peptide library. A first-generation library yielded UNC4991, a UNC3866 analog that exhibits a distinct selectivity profile while maintaining sub-micromolar affinity toward the CDYL chromodomains. Additionally, in vitro pull-down experiments from HeLa nuclear lysates further demonstrate the selectivity and utility of this compound for future elucidation of CDYL protein function

    Discovery of Peptidomimetic Ligands of EED as Allosteric Inhibitors of PRC2

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    The function of EED within polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2) is mediated by a complex network of protein–protein interactions. Allosteric activation of PRC2 by binding of methylated proteins to the embryonic ectoderm development (EED) aromatic cage is essential for full catalytic activity, but details of this regulation are not fully understood. EED’s recognition of the product of PRC2 activity, histone H3 lysine 27 trimethylation (H3K27me3), stimulates PRC2 methyltransferase activity at adjacent nucleosomes leading to H3K27me3 propagation and, ultimately, gene repression. By coupling combinatorial chemistry and structure-based design, we optimized a low-affinity methylated jumonji, AT-rich interactive domain 2 (Jarid2) peptide to a smaller, more potent peptidomimetic ligand (<i>K</i><sub>d</sub> = 1.14 ± 0.14 ÎŒM) of the aromatic cage of EED. Our strategy illustrates the effectiveness of applying combinatorial chemistry to achieve both ligand potency and property optimization. Furthermore, the resulting ligands, UNC5114 and UNC5115, demonstrate that targeted disruption of EED’s reader function can lead to allosteric inhibition of PRC2 catalytic activity

    Design, synthesis, and protein methyltransferase activity of a unique set of constrained amine containing compounds

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    Epigenetic alterations relate to various human diseases, and developing inhibitors of Kme regulatory proteins is considered to be a new frontier for drug discovery. We were inspired by the known multicyclic ligands, UNC669 and UNC926, which are the first reported small molecule ligands for a methyl-lysine binding domain. We hypothesized that reducing the conformational flexibility of the key amine moiety of UNC669 would result in a unique set of ligands. Twenty-five novel compounds containing a fused bi- or tricyclic amine or a spirocyclic amine were designed and synthesized. To gauge the potential of these amine-containing compounds to interact with Kme regulatory proteins, the compounds were screened against a panel of 24 protein methyltransferases. Compound 13 was discovered as a novel scaffold that interacts with SETD8 and could serve as a starting point for the future development of PKMT inhibitors
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