15 research outputs found

    Direct selection of DNA-encoded libraries for biased agonists of GPCRs on live cells

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    G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are the largest superfamily of human membrane target proteins for approved drugs. GPCR ligands can have a complex array of pharmacological activities. Among these activities, biased agonists have potential to serve as both chemical probes to understand specific aspects of receptor signaling and therapeutic leads with more specific, desired activity. Challenges exist, however, in the development of new biased activators due, in part, to the low throughput of traditional screening approaches. DNA-encoded chemical libraries (DELs) dramatically improve the throughput of drug discovery by allowing a collective selection, rather than discrete screening, of large compound libraries. The use of DELs has been largely limited to affinity-based selections against purified protein targets, which identify binders only. Herein, we report a split protein complementation approach that allows direct identification of DNA-linked molecules that induce the dimerization of two proteins. We used this selection with a DEL against opioid receptor GPCRs on living cells for the identification of small molecules that possess the specific function of activation of either β-arrestin or G protein signaling pathways. This approach was applied to δ-, μ-, and κ-opioid receptors and enabled the discovery of compound [66,66], a selective, G-protein-biased agonist of the κ-opioid receptor (E

    Spleen tyrosine kinase-mediated autophagy is required for epithelial-mesenchymal plasticity and metastasis in breast cancer

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    The ability of breast cancer cells to transiently transition between epithelial and mesenchymal states contributes to their metastatic potential. Therefore, driving tumor cells into a stable mesenchymal state, as opposed to complete tumor cell eradication, presents an opportunity to pharmacologically limit disease progression by promoting an asymptomatic state of dormancy. Here we compare a reversible model of epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) induced by TGF-β to a stable mesenchymal phenotype induced by chronic exposure to the ErbB kinase inhibitor lapatinib. Only cells capable of returning to an epithelial phenotype resulted in skeletal metastasis. Gene expression analyses of the two mesenchymal states indicated similar transition expression profiles. A potently downregulated gene in both datasets was spleen tyrosine kinase (SYK). In contrast to this similar diminution in mRNA, kinome analyses using a peptide array and DNA-conjugated peptide substrates showed a robust increase in SYK activity upon TGF-β-induced EMT only. SYK was present in cytoplasmic RNA processing depots known as P-bodies formed during the onset of EMT, and SYK activity was required for autophagy-mediated clearance of P-bodies during mesenchymal-epithelial transition (MET). Genetic knockout of autophagy related 7 (ATG7) or pharmacological inhibition of SYK activity with fostamatib, a clinically approved inhibitor of SYK, prevented P-body clearance and MET, inhibiting metastatic tumor outgrowth. Overall, the current study suggests assessment of SYK activity as a biomarker for metastatic disease and the use of fostamatinib as a means to stabilize the latency of disseminated tumor cells

    Directed Chemical Evolution with an Outsized Genetic Code

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    <div><p>The first demonstration that macromolecules could be evolved in a test tube was reported twenty-five years ago. That breakthrough meant that billions of years of chance discovery and refinement could be compressed into a few weeks, and provided a powerful tool that now dominates all aspects of protein engineering. A challenge has been to extend this scientific advance into synthetic chemical space: to enable the directed evolution of abiotic molecules. The problem has been tackled in many ways. These include expanding the natural genetic code to include unnatural amino acids, engineering polyketide and polypeptide synthases to produce novel products, and tagging combinatorial chemistry libraries with DNA. Importantly, there is still no small-molecule analog of directed protein evolution, i.e. a substantiated approach for optimizing complex (≥ 10^9 diversity) populations of synthetic small molecules over successive generations. We present a key advance towards this goal: a tool for genetically-programmed synthesis of small-molecule libraries from large chemical alphabets. The approach accommodates alphabets that are one to two orders of magnitude larger than any in Nature, and facilitates evolution within the chemical spaces they create. This is critical for small molecules, which are built up from numerous and highly varied chemical fragments. We report a proof-of-concept chemical evolution experiment utilizing an outsized genetic code, and demonstrate that fitness traits can be passed from an initial small-molecule population through to the great-grandchildren of that population. The results establish the practical feasibility of engineering synthetic small molecules through accelerated evolution.</p></div

    Accuracy of hit detection.

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    <p>The plots show the number of RRSFL encoding genes (y-axis) contained within the top N total genes (x-axis) of a list ranked by enrichment ratio. If the gene ranking had been perfect, the curves would have gone straight up the y-axis and then cut right on the x-axis at the top of the plot. The solid black line shows how RRSFL genes accumulate at a 90% false discovery rate (i.e. when every tenth gene is a hit). The y-value at the intersection of each curve with the solid black line corresponds to the number of RRSFL genes that would have been detected below a 90% false discovery threshold. <b>A.</b> Improved gene ranking over successive generations. The number of RRSFL genes at the top of ranked lists from the zeroth (yellow), second (red), third (green) and fourth (blue) generations is shown. None of the RRSFL genes could be detected below a 90% false discovery threshold in the zeroth or second generations, whereas 207 and 505 out of 1296 total could be detected in the third and fourth generations respectively. <b>B.</b> Dependence of gene ranking on sequencing depth. The effect of using increasingly small fractions of the total sequencing data to rank genes is shown. 505, 416, 319 and 188 of the RRSFL genes could be detected below a 90% false discovery threshold given 3 million, 1.5 million, 0.75 million and 0.3 million sequencing reads respectively. The discovered fraction of RRSFL genes grew roughly in proportion to the square root of the number of reads. <b>C.</b> Improved gene ranking with a redundant genetic code. The ranking of RRSFL gene sets based on 187500 gene reads and a two codon-per- amino acid genetic code is shown. In one case, the reads used for the analysis were restricted to genes containing a single codon from each codon pair. In this single-codon case, 32 of the 81 RRSFL genes sets could be detected below a 90% false discovery threshold. Alternatively, an identical number of gene reads were used for the analysis, but the reads included genes containing both codons of each codon pair. In the two-codon case, 58 of the 81 RRSFL genes sets could be detected. The two-codon genetic code revealed 70% of the RRSFL gene sets, while the one-codon code revealed only 40%.</p

    Population maturation.

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    <p><b>A.</b> The peptide-DNA conjugate library converged to PKA substrates over four generations. A histogram of the fold-enrichment ratios for the top 1000 genes in generations 2–4 is shown. Genes lacking a consensus motif are colored black, genes that encoded peptides with one of the two PKA consensus motifs (RR*[S/T]* or RRSF*) are colored silver, and genes that encoded the top RRSFL peptide are colored gold. See also <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0154765#pone.0154765.s004" target="_blank">S4 Fig</a>. <b>B</b>. The DNA sequence of genes with synonymous codon substitutions influenced the enrichment of peptide-DNA conjugates. A histogram plot with blue bars shows the observed distribution of log fold-enrichment ratios for 830 different genes that encoded the same RRFSL peptide (95% are contained between 4.4 and 6). If all of the RRSFL-encoding genes had been equally enriched, the black distribution would have been expected (this computed distribution reflects Poisson noise from sparse gene sampling). The excess width of the observed distribution suggests the existence of a selection bias for or against different synonymous codons. The Poisson distribution was reduced to 0.63 of its full area for clarity of the plot.</p

    Gene structure.

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    <p>The genes that programed the synthesis of specific tetrapeptides were made up of four amino-acid coding regions (VA-VD, rainbow bars). 384 distinct DNA codon sequences were present at each coding region. Unlike the natural genetic code, each coding region used a set of codon sequences that were distinct from the codon sequences at the adjacent coding regions. Consequently, a total of 1536 different codon sequences were present in the library. The different codons at each coding position directed the addition of one amino acid from a set of seventeen different Fmoc-protected amino acids. An arginine dimer was included as an 18th amino acid in the fourth and final synthetic step, so some of the products were pentapeptides. An extra bar code (VE, black/white bar) specified whether the gene product would be subjected to a kinase substrate selection or to a control selection. Each peptide was coupled through a 5' polyethylene glycol linker to the gene that programmed its synthesis.</p

    DNA-programmed combinatorial library synthesis.

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    <p>For each of four synthetic steps, the DNA genes were split into 384 sub-pools by hybridization of the codons in one of the coding regions to a spatially arrayed set of complementary oligonucleotides. The DNA genes were then transferred in a one-to-one fashion from the hybridization array into a 384-well filter plate loaded with DEAE-Sepharose resin. The DEAE resin acted as a solid support that retained the DNA genes during chemical reactions. One of seventeen different Fmoc-protected amino acids (dependent on the sub-pool position within the 384-well plate) was then coupled to the growing peptide chain linked to the DNA. After the chemical step, the genes were pooled, and the split-pool process was repeated until all of the coding regions had been chemically translated.</p
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