Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 20 de 25
Filter
Add more filters










Publication year range
1.
ACS Cent Sci ; 9(8): 1603-1610, 2023 Aug 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37637732

ABSTRACT

Encoded combinatorial library technologies have dramatically expanded the chemical space for screening but are usually only analyzed by affinity selection binding. It would be highly advantageous to reformat selection outputs to "one-bead-one-compound" solid-phase libraries, unlocking activity-based and cellular screening capabilities. Here, we describe hydrogel-encapsulated magnetic beads that enable such a transformation. Bulk emulsion polymerization of polyacrylamide hydrogel shells around magnetic microbeads yielded uniform particles (7 ± 2 µm diameter) that are compatible with diverse in-gel functionalization (amine, alkyne, oligonucleotides) and transformations associated with DNA-encoded library synthesis (acylation, enzymatic DNA ligation). In a case study of reformatting mRNA display libraries, transcription from DNA-templated magnetic beads encapsulated in gel particles colocalized both RNA synthesis via hybridization with copolymerized complementary DNA and translation via puromycin labeling. Two control epitope templates (V5, HA) were successfully enriched (50- and 99-fold, respectively) from an NNK5 library bead screen via FACS. Proximity-driven library synthesis in concert with magnetic sample manipulation provides a plausible means for reformatting encoded combinatorial libraries at scale.

2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(6)2022 02 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35110406

ABSTRACT

Nature evolves molecular interaction networks through persistent perturbation and selection, in stark contrast to drug discovery, which evaluates candidates one at a time by screening. Here, nature's highly parallel ligand-target search paradigm is recapitulated in a screen of a DNA-encoded library (DEL; 73,728 ligands) against a library of RNA structures (4,096 targets). In total, the screen evaluated ∼300 million interactions and identified numerous bona fide ligand-RNA three-dimensional fold target pairs. One of the discovered ligands bound a 5'GAG/3'CCC internal loop that is present in primary microRNA-27a (pri-miR-27a), the oncogenic precursor of microRNA-27a. The DEL-derived pri-miR-27a ligand was cell active, potently and selectively inhibiting pri-miR-27a processing to reprogram gene expression and halt an otherwise invasive phenotype in triple-negative breast cancer cells. By exploiting evolutionary principles at the earliest stages of drug discovery, it is possible to identify high-affinity and selective target-ligand interactions and predict engagements in cells that short circuit disease pathways in preclinical disease models.


Subject(s)
DNA/genetics , RNA, Untranslated/genetics , Carcinogenesis/drug effects , Carcinogenesis/genetics , Cell Line, Tumor , Cell Proliferation/genetics , Drug Discovery/methods , Gene Expression/genetics , Gene Library , Humans , Ligands , MicroRNAs/genetics , Oncogenes/genetics , Small Molecule Libraries/pharmacology , Triple Negative Breast Neoplasms/drug therapy , Triple Negative Breast Neoplasms/genetics
3.
ACS Comb Sci ; 22(11): 579-585, 2020 11 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32803953

ABSTRACT

Emulsions offer the means to miniaturize and parallelize high-throughput screening but require a robust method to localize activity-based fluorescent probes in each droplet. Multiplexing probes in droplets is impractical, though highly desirable for identifying library members that possess very specific activity. Here, we present multiplexed probe immobilization on library beads for emulsion screening. During library bead preparation, we quantitated ∼106 primers per bead by fluorescence in situ hybridization, however emulsion PCR yielded only ∼103 gene copies per bead. We leveraged the unextended bead-bound primers to hybridize complementary probe-oligonucleotide heteroconjugates to the library beads. The probe-hybridized bead libraries were then used to program emulsion in vitro transcription/translation reactions and analyzed by FACS to perform multiplexed activity-based screening of trypsin and chymotrypsin mutant libraries for novel proteolytic specificity. The approach's modularity should permit a high degree of probe multiplexing and appears extensible to other enzyme classes and library types.


Subject(s)
DNA/analysis , Emulsions/chemistry , Enzyme Activation/genetics , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , High-Throughput Screening Assays/methods , Chymotrypsin/chemistry , Combinatorial Chemistry Techniques , DNA Primers , Flow Cytometry , Gene Library , In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence , Multiplex Polymerase Chain Reaction , Mutation , Surface Properties , Trypsin/chemistry
4.
ACS Comb Sci ; 21(5): 425-435, 2019 05 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30884226

ABSTRACT

Robotic high-throughput compound screening (HTS) and, increasingly, DNA-encoded library (DEL) screening are driving bioactive chemical matter discovery in the postgenomic era. HTS enables activity-based investigation of highly complex targets using static compound libraries. Conversely, DEL grants efficient access to novel chemical diversity, although screening is limited to affinity-based selections. Here, we describe an integrated droplet-based microfluidic circuit that directly screens solid-phase DELs for activity. An example screen of a 67 100-member library for inhibitors of the phosphodiesterase autotaxin yielded 35 high-priority structures for nanomole-scale synthesis and validation (20 active), guiding candidate selection for synthesis at scale (5/5 compounds with IC50 values of 4-10 µM). We further compared activity-based hits with those of an analogous affinity-based DEL selection. This miniaturized screening platform paves the way toward applying DELs to more complex targets (signaling pathways, cellular response) and represents a distributable approach to small molecule discovery.


Subject(s)
DNA/chemistry , Small Molecule Libraries/analysis , Combinatorial Chemistry Techniques , Drug Evaluation, Preclinical , Electrochemical Techniques , High-Throughput Screening Assays , Peptides/chemical synthesis , Photochemical Processes , Solid-Phase Synthesis Techniques
5.
Anal Chem ; 89(24): 13227-13234, 2017 12 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29124927

ABSTRACT

Automated and reproducible sample handling is a key requirement for high-throughput compound screening and currently demands heavy reliance on expensive robotics in screening centers. Integrated droplet microfluidic screening processors are poised to replace robotic automation by miniaturizing biochemical reactions to the droplet scale. These processors must generate, incubate, and sort droplets for continuous droplet screening, passively handling millions of droplets with complete uniformity, especially during the key step of sample incubation. Here, we disclose an integrated microfluidic emulsion creamer that packs ("creams") assay droplets by draining away excess oil through microfabricated drain channels. The drained oil coflows with creamed emulsion and then reintroduces the oil to disperse the droplets at the circuit terminus for analysis. Creamed emulsion assay incubation time dispersion was 1.7%, 3-fold less than other reported incubators. The integrated, continuous emulsion creamer (ICEcreamer) was used to miniaturize and optimize measurements of various enzymatic activities (phosphodiesterase, kinase, bacterial translation) under multiple- and single-turnover conditions. Combining the ICEcreamer with current integrated microfluidic DNA-encoded library bead processors eliminates potentially cumbersome instrumentation engineering challenges and is compatible with assays of diverse target class activities commonly investigated in drug discovery.


Subject(s)
High-Throughput Screening Assays , Microfluidic Analytical Techniques , Emulsions/chemistry , Gene Library , High-Throughput Screening Assays/instrumentation , Microfluidic Analytical Techniques/instrumentation , Particle Size
8.
Cell Cycle ; 16(10): 940-946, 2017 May 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28296622

ABSTRACT

Cellular transitions are achieved by the concerted actions of regulated degradation pathways. In the case of the cell cycle, ubiquitin mediated degradation ensures unidirectional transition from one phase to another. For instance, turnover of the cell cycle regulator cyclin B1 occurs after metaphase to induce mitotic exit. To better understand pathways controlling cyclin B1 turnover, the N-terminal domain of cyclin B1 was fused to luciferase to generate an N-cyclin B1-luciferase protein that can be used as a reporter for protein turnover. Prior studies demonstrated that cell-based screens using this reporter identified small molecules inhibiting the ubiquitin ligase controlling cyclin B1-turnover. Our group adapted this approach for the G2-M regulator Wee1 where a Wee1-luciferase construct was used to identify selective small molecules inhibiting an upstream kinase that controls Wee1 turnover. In the present study we present a screening approach where cell cycle regulators are fused to luciferase and overexpressed with cDNAs to identify specific regulators of protein turnover. We overexpressed approximately 14,000 cDNAs with the N-cyclin B1-luciferase fusion protein and determined its steady-state level relative to other luciferase fusion proteins. We identified the known APC/C regulator Cdh1 and the F-box protein Fbxl15 as specific modulators of N-cyclin B1-luciferase steady-state levels and turnover. Collectively, our studies suggest that analyzing the steady-state levels of luciferase fusion proteins in parallel facilitates identification of specific regulators of protein turnover.


Subject(s)
Cadherins/genetics , Cell Cycle Proteins/genetics , Cyclin B1/genetics , F-Box Proteins/genetics , Antigens, CD , Cell Cycle/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , HeLa Cells , Humans , Luciferases/genetics , Mitosis/genetics , Nuclear Proteins/genetics , Protein-Tyrosine Kinases/genetics , Proteolysis , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/genetics , Ubiquitin/genetics
9.
ACS Comb Sci ; 19(1): 9-14, 2017 01 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28064476

ABSTRACT

Combinatorial bead libraries figure prominently in next-generation sequencing and are also important tools for in vitro evolution. The most common methodology for generating such bead libraries, emulsion PCR (emPCR), enzymatically extends bead-immobilized oligonucleotide PCR primers in emulsion droplets containing a single progenitor library member. Primers are almost always immobilized on beads via noncovalent biotin-streptavidin binding. Here, we describe covalent bead functionalization with primers (∼106 primers/2.8-µm-diameter bead) via either azide-alkyne click chemistry or Michael addition. The primers are viable polymerase substrates (4-7% bead-immobilized enzymatic extension product yield from one thermal cycle). Carbodiimide-activated carboxylic acid beads only react with oligonucleotides under conditions that promote nonspecific interactions (low salt, low pH, no detergent), comparably immobilizing primers on beads, but yielding no detectable enzymatic extension product. Click-functionalized beads perform satisfactorily in emPCR of a site-saturation mutagenesis library, generating monoclonal templated beads (104-105 copies/bead, 1.4-kb amplicons). This simpler, chemical approach to primer immobilization may spur more economical library preparation for high-throughput sequencing and enable more complex surface elaboration for in vitro evolution.


Subject(s)
Gene Library , Oligonucleotides/chemistry , Polymerase Chain Reaction/methods , Carbodiimides/chemistry , Carboxylic Acids/chemistry , Click Chemistry , Combinatorial Chemistry Techniques , DNA Primers , Emulsions/chemistry , Indicators and Reagents , Kinetics , Mutagenesis
10.
ACS Chem Biol ; 12(1): 234-243, 2017 01 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27957856

ABSTRACT

The circulating antibody repertoire encodes a patient's health status and pathogen exposure history, but identifying antibodies with diagnostic potential usually requires knowledge of the antigen(s). We previously circumvented this problem by screening libraries of bead-displayed small molecules against case and control serum samples to discover "epitope surrogates" (ligands of IgGs enriched in the case sample). Here, we describe an improved version of this technology that employs DNA-encoded libraries and high-throughput FACS-based screening to discover epitope surrogates that differentiate noninfectious/latent (LTB) patients from infectious/active TB (ATB) patients, which is imperative for proper treatment selection and antibiotic stewardship. Normal control/LTB (10 patients each, NCL) and ATB (10 patients) serum pools were screened against a library (5 × 106 beads, 448 000 unique compounds) using fluorescent antihuman IgG to label hit compound beads for FACS. Deep sequencing decoded all hit structures and each hit's occurrence frequencies. ATB hits were pruned of NCL hits and prioritized for resynthesis based on occurrence and homology. Several structurally homologous families were identified and 16/21 resynthesized representative hits validated as selective ligands of ATB serum IgGs (p < 0.005). The native secreted TB protein Ag85B (though not the E. coli recombinant form) competed with one of the validated ligands for binding to antibodies, suggesting that it mimics a native Ag85B epitope. The use of DNA-encoded libraries and FACS-based screening in epitope surrogate discovery reveals thousands of potential hit structures. Distilling this list down to several consensus chemical structures yielded a diagnostic panel for ATB composed of thermally stable and economically produced small molecule ligands in place of protein antigens.


Subject(s)
Immunoglobulin G/immunology , Latent Tuberculosis/immunology , Mycobacterium tuberculosis , Oligopeptides/immunology , Tuberculosis, Pulmonary/immunology , Acyltransferases/immunology , Antigens, Bacterial/immunology , Bacterial Proteins/immunology , DNA/genetics , Epitopes/immunology , Escherichia coli , High-Throughput Screening Assays , Humans , Immunoglobulin G/blood , Latent Tuberculosis/blood , Latent Tuberculosis/microbiology , Ligands , Oligopeptides/chemical synthesis , Peptide Library , Solid-Phase Synthesis Techniques , Structure-Activity Relationship , Tuberculosis, Pulmonary/blood , Tuberculosis, Pulmonary/microbiology
11.
Nat Chem Biol ; 13(1): 111-118, 2017 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27870835

ABSTRACT

Resistance to endocrine therapies remains a major clinical problem for the treatment of estrogen receptor-α (ERα)-positive breast cancer. On-target side effects limit therapeutic compliance and use for chemoprevention, highlighting an unmet need for new therapies. Here we present a full-antagonist ligand series lacking the prototypical ligand side chain that has been universally used to engender antagonism of ERα through poorly understood structural mechanisms. A series of crystal structures and phenotypic assays reveal a structure-based design strategy with separate design elements for antagonism and degradation of the receptor, and access to a structurally distinct space for further improvements in ligand design. Understanding structural rules that guide ligands to produce diverse ERα-mediated phenotypes has broad implications for the treatment of breast cancer and other estrogen-sensitive aspects of human health including bone homeostasis, energy metabolism, and autoimmunity.


Subject(s)
Antineoplastic Agents/pharmacology , Breast Neoplasms/drug therapy , Bridged Bicyclo Compounds, Heterocyclic/pharmacology , Receptors, Estrogen/antagonists & inhibitors , Antineoplastic Agents/chemistry , Breast Neoplasms/metabolism , Breast Neoplasms/pathology , Bridged Bicyclo Compounds, Heterocyclic/chemistry , Cell Line, Tumor , Cell Proliferation/drug effects , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Female , Humans , Ligands , Models, Molecular , Molecular Structure , Receptors, Estrogen/metabolism , Structure-Activity Relationship
12.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 113(51): 14686-14691, 2016 12 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27940920

ABSTRACT

Mapping posttranslational modifications (PTMs), which diversely modulate biological functions, represents a significant analytical challenge. The centerpiece technology for PTM site identification, mass spectrometry (MS), requires proteolytic cleavage in the vicinity of a PTM to yield peptides for sequencing. This requirement catalyzed our efforts to evolve MS-grade mutant PTM-directed proteases. Citrulline, a PTM implicated in epigenetic and immunological function, made an ideal first target, because citrullination eliminates arginyl tryptic sites. Bead-displayed trypsin mutant genes were translated in droplets, the mutant proteases were challenged to cleave bead-bound fluorogenic probes of citrulline-dependent proteolysis, and the resultant beads (1.3 million) were screened. The most promising mutant efficiently catalyzed citrulline-dependent peptide bond cleavage (kcat/KM = 6.9 × 105 M-1⋅s-1). The resulting C-terminally citrullinated peptides generated characteristic isotopic patterns in MALDI-TOF MS, and both a fragmentation product y1 ion corresponding to citrulline (176.1030 m/z) and diagnostic peak pairs in the extracted ion chromatograms of LC-MS/MS analysis. Using these signatures, we identified citrullination sites in protein arginine deiminase 4 (12 sites) and in fibrinogen (25 sites, two previously unknown). The unique mass spectral features of PTM-dependent proteolytic digest products promise a generalized PTM site-mapping strategy based on a toolbox of such mutant proteases, which are now accessible by laboratory evolution.


Subject(s)
Peptide Hydrolases/chemistry , Protein Processing, Post-Translational , Proteins/chemistry , Trypsin/chemistry , Arginine/chemistry , Citrulline/chemistry , Evolution, Molecular , Humans , Mass Spectrometry , Mutation , Oligonucleotides/chemistry , Peptides/chemistry , Protein-Arginine Deiminase Type 4 , Protein-Arginine Deiminases/chemistry , Proteomics , Rhodamines/chemistry , Trypsinogen/chemistry
13.
ACS Comb Sci ; 17(9): 518-34, 2015 Sep 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26290177

ABSTRACT

The promise of exploiting combinatorial synthesis for small molecule discovery remains unfulfilled due primarily to the "structure elucidation problem": the back-end mass spectrometric analysis that significantly restricts one-bead-one-compound (OBOC) library complexity. The very molecular features that confer binding potency and specificity, such as stereochemistry, regiochemistry, and scaffold rigidity, are conspicuously absent from most libraries because isomerism introduces mass redundancy and diverse scaffolds yield uninterpretable MS fragmentation. Here we present DNA-encoded solid-phase synthesis (DESPS), comprising parallel compound synthesis in organic solvent and aqueous enzymatic ligation of unprotected encoding dsDNA oligonucleotides. Computational encoding language design yielded 148 thermodynamically optimized sequences with Hamming string distance ≥ 3 and total read length <100 bases for facile sequencing. Ligation is efficient (70% yield), specific, and directional over 6 encoding positions. A series of isomers served as a testbed for DESPS's utility in split-and-pool diversification. Single-bead quantitative PCR detected 9 × 10(4) molecules/bead and sequencing allowed for elucidation of each compound's synthetic history. We applied DESPS to the combinatorial synthesis of a 75,645-member OBOC library containing scaffold, stereochemical and regiochemical diversity using mixed-scale resin (160-µm quality control beads and 10-µm screening beads). Tandem DNA sequencing/MALDI-TOF MS analysis of 19 quality control beads showed excellent agreement (<1 ppt) between DNA sequence-predicted mass and the observed mass. DESPS synergistically unites the advantages of solid-phase synthesis and DNA encoding, enabling single-bead structural elucidation of complex compounds and synthesis using reactions normally considered incompatible with unprotected DNA. The widespread availability of inexpensive oligonucleotide synthesis, enzymes, DNA sequencing, and PCR make implementation of DESPS straightforward, and may prompt the chemistry community to revisit the synthesis of more complex and diverse libraries.


Subject(s)
Combinatorial Chemistry Techniques/methods , DNA/chemistry , Drug Design , Solid-Phase Synthesis Techniques , Biotinylation , Buffers , Enzymes/chemistry , Isomerism , Polymerase Chain Reaction , Small Molecule Libraries , Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization , Thermodynamics
14.
Nat Commun ; 6: 8013, 2015 Aug 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26289479

ABSTRACT

A subset of nuclear receptors (NRs) function as obligate heterodimers with retinoid X receptor (RXR), allowing integration of ligand-dependent signals across the dimer interface via an unknown structural mechanism. Using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, x-ray crystallography and hydrogen/deuterium exchange (HDX) mass spectrometry, here we show an allosteric mechanism through which RXR co-operates with a permissive dimer partner, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR)-γ, while rendered generally unresponsive by a non-permissive dimer partner, thyroid hormone (TR) receptor. Amino acid residues that mediate this allosteric mechanism comprise an evolutionarily conserved network discovered by statistical coupling analysis (SCA). This SCA network acts as a signalling rheostat to integrate signals between dimer partners, ligands and coregulator-binding sites, thereby affecting signal transmission in RXR heterodimers. These findings define rules guiding how NRs integrate two ligand-dependent signalling pathways into RXR heterodimer-specific responses.


Subject(s)
Retinoid X Receptor alpha/metabolism , Signal Transduction/physiology , Animals , Cell Line , Cloning, Molecular , Crystallography, X-Ray , Gene Expression Regulation/physiology , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Models, Molecular , PPAR gamma/genetics , PPAR gamma/metabolism , Protein Conformation , Receptors, Thyroid Hormone/genetics , Receptors, Thyroid Hormone/metabolism , Retinoid X Receptor alpha/genetics
15.
Elife ; 3: e02057, 2014 Apr 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24771768

ABSTRACT

Resveratrol has beneficial effects on aging, inflammation and metabolism, which are thought to result from activation of the lysine deacetylase, sirtuin 1 (SIRT1), the cAMP pathway, or AMP-activated protein kinase. In this study, we report that resveratrol acts as a pathway-selective estrogen receptor-α (ERα) ligand to modulate the inflammatory response but not cell proliferation. A crystal structure of the ERα ligand-binding domain (LBD) as a complex with resveratrol revealed a unique perturbation of the coactivator-binding surface, consistent with an altered coregulator recruitment profile. Gene expression analyses revealed significant overlap of TNFα genes modulated by resveratrol and estradiol. Furthermore, the ability of resveratrol to suppress interleukin-6 transcription was shown to require ERα and several ERα coregulators, suggesting that ERα functions as a primary conduit for resveratrol activity.DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02057.001.


Subject(s)
Estrogen Receptor alpha/metabolism , Inflammation/metabolism , Signal Transduction/drug effects , Stilbenes/pharmacology , Adenylate Kinase/metabolism , Cyclic AMP/metabolism , Estrogen Receptor alpha/chemistry , Female , Humans , Interleukin-6/genetics , Ligands , MCF-7 Cells , Promoter Regions, Genetic , Protein Conformation , Resveratrol , Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha/metabolism
16.
Nat Chem Biol ; 9(5): 326-32, 2013 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23524984

ABSTRACT

Ligand-binding dynamics control allosteric signaling through the estrogen receptor-α (ERα), but the biological consequences of such dynamic binding orientations are unknown. Here, we compare a set of ER ligands having dynamic binding orientation (dynamic ligands) with a control set of isomers that are constrained to bind in a single orientation (constrained ligands). Proliferation of breast cancer cells directed by constrained ligands is associated with DNA binding, coactivator recruitment and activation of the estrogen-induced gene GREB1, reflecting a highly interconnected signaling network. In contrast, proliferation driven by dynamic ligands is associated with induction of ERα-mediated transcription in a DNA-binding domain (DBD)-dependent manner. Further, dynamic ligands showed enhanced anti-inflammatory activity. The DBD-dependent profile was predictive of these signaling patterns in a larger diverse set of natural and synthetic ligands. Thus, ligand dynamics directs unique signaling pathways and reveals a new role of the DBD in allosteric control of ERα-mediated signaling.


Subject(s)
Estrogen Receptor alpha/metabolism , Signal Transduction , Allosteric Regulation , Cell Proliferation , HEK293 Cells , Humans , Ligands , MCF-7 Cells , Models, Molecular , Molecular Dynamics Simulation , Molecular Structure
17.
Org Biomol Chem ; 10(43): 8692-700, 2012 Nov 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23033157

ABSTRACT

Compounds that block estrogen action through the estrogen receptor (ER) or downregulate ER levels are useful for the treatment of breast cancer and endocrine disorders. In our search for structurally novel estrogens having three-dimensional core scaffolds, we found some compounds with a 7-oxabicyclo[2.2.1]heptene core that bound well to the ERs. The best of these compounds, a phenyl sulfonate ester (termed OBHS for oxabicycloheptene sulfonate), was a partial antagonist on both ERα and ERß. Although OBHS bears no structural resemblance to other estrogen antagonists, it appears to achieve its partial antagonist character by stabilizing a novel conformation of the ER that involves a significant distortion of helix-11. To enhance the antagonist properties of these oxabicyclo[2.2.1]heptane core ligands, we expanded the functional diversity of OBHS by replacing the sulfonate with secondary or tertiary sulfonamides (-SO(2)NR-), isoelectronic and potentially isostructural molecular replacements. An array of 16 OBHS sulfonamide analogues were prepared through a Diels-Alder reaction of a 3,4-diarylfuran using various N-aryl vinyl sulfonamide dienophiles. While the more polar secondary sulphonamides were weak ligands, certain of the tertiary sulfonamides had very good ER binding affinity. In HepG2 cell reporter gene assays, the sulphonamides had moderate potency, but they showed lower intrinsic transcriptional activity on ERα than the selective estrogen receptor modulator (SERM) hydroxytamoxifen or OBHS, and they were inverse agonists on ERß. Thus, the behaviour of these OBH-sulfonamides more closely mirrors the activity of full antagonists like the drug fulvestrant (ICI 182 780), and their greater antagonist biocharacter appears to arise from an accentuated distortion of helix-11.


Subject(s)
Bridged Bicyclo Compounds/chemical synthesis , Bridged Bicyclo Compounds/pharmacology , Estrogens/pharmacology , Receptors, Estrogen/antagonists & inhibitors , Sulfonamides/chemistry , Sulfonamides/pharmacology , Bridged Bicyclo Compounds/chemistry , Estrogens/chemical synthesis , Estrogens/chemistry , Humans , Ligands , Models, Molecular , Molecular Structure , Structure-Activity Relationship , Sulfonamides/chemical synthesis
18.
ChemMedChem ; 7(6): 1094-100, 2012 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22517684

ABSTRACT

Previously, we discovered estrogen receptor (ER) ligands with a novel three-dimensional oxabicyclo[2.2.1]heptene core scaffold and good ER binding affinity act as partial agonists via small alkyl ester substitutions on the bicyclic core that indirectly modulate the critical switch helix in the ER ligand binding domain, helix 12, by interactions with helix 11. This contrasts with the mechanism of action of tamoxifen, which directly pushes helix 12 out of the conformation required for gene activation. We now report that a much larger substitution can be tolerated at this position of the bicyclic core scaffold, namely a phenyl sulfonate group, which defines a novel binding epitope for the estrogen receptor. We prepared an array of 14 oxabicycloheptene sulfonates, varying the phenyl sulfonate group. As with the parent compound, 5,6-bis-(4-hydroxyphenyl)-7-oxabicyclo[2.2.1]hept-5-ene-2-sulfonic acid phenyl ester (OBHS), these compounds showed preferential affinity for ERα, and the disposition and size of the phenyl substituents were important determinants of the binding affinity and selectivity of these compounds, with those having ortho substituents giving the highest, and para substituents the lowest affinities for ERα. A few analogues exhibit ERα binding affinities that are comparable to or, in the case of the ortho-chloro analogue, higher than that of OBHS itself. In cell-based studies, we found several compounds with activity profiles comparable to tamoxifen, but acting entirely as indirect antagonists, allosterically interfering with recruitment of coactivator proteins to the receptor. Thus, the OBHS binding epitope represents a novel approach to the development of estrogen receptor antagonists via an indirect mechanism of antagonism.


Subject(s)
Cycloheptanes/chemistry , Receptors, Estrogen/antagonists & inhibitors , Selective Estrogen Receptor Modulators/chemistry , Binding Sites , Computer Simulation , Crystallography, X-Ray , Hep G2 Cells , Humans , Ligands , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Receptors, Estrogen/genetics , Receptors, Estrogen/metabolism , Selective Estrogen Receptor Modulators/chemical synthesis , Selective Estrogen Receptor Modulators/pharmacology , Structure-Activity Relationship , Transcription, Genetic/drug effects , Transfection
19.
J Med Chem ; 55(5): 2324-41, 2012 Mar 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22283328

ABSTRACT

To develop estrogen receptor (ER) ligands having novel structures and activities, we have explored compounds in which the central hydrophobic core has a more three-dimensional topology than typically found in estrogen ligands and thus exploits the unfilled space in the ligand-binding pocket. Here, we build upon our previous investigations of 7-oxabicyclo[2.2.1]heptene core ligands, by replacing the oxygen bridge with a sulfoxide. These new 7-thiabicyclo[2.2.1]hept-2-ene-7-oxides were conveniently prepared by a Diels-Alder reaction of 3,4-diarylthiophenes with dienophiles in the presence of an oxidant and give cycloadducts with endo stereochemistry. Several new compounds demonstrated high binding affinities with excellent ERα selectivity, but unlike oxabicyclic compounds, which are transcriptional antagonists, most thiabicyclic compounds are potent, ERα-selective agonists. Modeling suggests that the gain in activity of the thiabicyclic compounds arises from their endo stereochemistry that stabilizes an active ER conformation. Further, the disposition of methyl substituents in the phenyl groups attached to the bicyclic core unit contributes to their binding affinity and subtype selectivity.


Subject(s)
Bridged Bicyclo Compounds, Heterocyclic/chemical synthesis , Cycloheptanes/chemical synthesis , Receptors, Estrogen/metabolism , Bridged Bicyclo Compounds, Heterocyclic/chemistry , Bridged Bicyclo Compounds, Heterocyclic/pharmacology , Cycloheptanes/chemistry , Cycloheptanes/pharmacology , Drug Partial Agonism , Estradiol/pharmacology , Estrogen Receptor alpha/agonists , Estrogen Receptor alpha/antagonists & inhibitors , Estrogen Receptor alpha/metabolism , Estrogen Receptor beta/agonists , Estrogen Receptor beta/antagonists & inhibitors , Estrogen Receptor beta/metabolism , Estrogens/pharmacology , Hep G2 Cells , Humans , Ligands , Luciferases/genetics , Luciferases/metabolism , Models, Molecular , Protein Conformation , Radioligand Assay , Receptors, Estrogen/agonists , Receptors, Estrogen/antagonists & inhibitors , Response Elements , Stereoisomerism , Structure-Activity Relationship , Thiophenes/chemical synthesis , Thiophenes/chemistry , Thiophenes/pharmacology , Transcription, Genetic/drug effects
20.
J Biol Chem ; 285(9): 6761-9, 2010 Feb 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20038582

ABSTRACT

Cell cycle progression is dependent upon coordinate regulation of kinase and proteolytic pathways. Inhibitors of cell cycle transitions are degraded to allow progression into the subsequent cell cycle phase. For example, the tyrosine kinase and Cdk1 inhibitor Wee1 is degraded during G(2) and mitosis to allow mitotic progression. Previous studies suggested that the N terminus of Wee1 directs Wee1 destruction. Using a chemical mutagenesis strategy, we report that multiple regions of Wee1 control its destruction. Most notably, we find that the activation domain of the Wee1 kinase is also required for its degradation. Mutations in this domain inhibit Wee1 degradation in somatic cell extracts and in cells without affecting the overall Wee1 structure or kinase activity. More broadly, these findings suggest that kinase activation domains may be previously unappreciated sites of recognition by the ubiquitin proteasome pathway.


Subject(s)
Cell Cycle Proteins/metabolism , Nuclear Proteins/metabolism , Protein-Tyrosine Kinases/metabolism , Cell Cycle , Enzyme Activation , HeLa Cells , Humans , Mutation , Proteasome Endopeptidase Complex/metabolism , Protein Stability , Ubiquitin
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...