Deciphering the Cellular Targets of Bioactive Compounds
Using a Chloroalkane Capture Tag
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Abstract
Phenotypic screening of compound
libraries is a significant trend in drug discovery, yet success can
be hindered by difficulties in identifying the underlying cellular
targets. Current approaches rely on tethering bioactive compounds
to a capture tag or surface to allow selective enrichment of interacting
proteins for subsequent identification by mass spectrometry. Such
methods are often constrained by ineffective capture of low affinity
and low abundance targets. In addition, these methods are often not
compatible with living cells and therefore cannot be used to verify
the pharmacological activity of the tethered compounds. We have developed
a novel chloroalkane capture tag that minimally affects compound potency
in cultured cells, allowing binding interactions with the targets
to occur under conditions relevant to the desired cellular phenotype.
Subsequent isolation of the interacting targets is achieved through
rapid lysis and capture onto immobilized HaloTag protein. Exchanging
the chloroalkane tag for a fluorophore, the putative targets identified
by mass spectrometry can be verified for direct binding to the compound
through resonance energy transfer. Using the interaction between histone
deacetylases (HDACs) and the inhibitor, Vorinostat (SAHA), as a model
system, we were able to identify and verify all the known HDAC targets
of SAHA as well as two previously undescribed targets, ADO and CPPED1.
The discovery of ADO as a target may provide mechanistic insight into
a reported connection between SAHA and Huntington’s disease