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Reversible Dual-Covalent Molecular Locking of the 14-3-3/ERRγ Protein–Protein Interaction as a Molecular Glue Drug Discovery Approach

[Image: see text] Molecules that stabilize protein–protein interactions (PPIs) are invaluable as tool compounds for biophysics and (structural) biology, and as starting points for molecular glue drug discovery. However, identifying initial starting points for PPI stabilizing matter is highly challen...

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Autores principales: Somsen, Bente A., Schellekens, Rick J.C., Verhoef, Carlo J.A., Arkin, Michelle R., Ottmann, Christian, Cossar, Peter J., Brunsveld, Luc
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2023
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10064330/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36926879
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.2c12781
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author Somsen, Bente A.
Schellekens, Rick J.C.
Verhoef, Carlo J.A.
Arkin, Michelle R.
Ottmann, Christian
Cossar, Peter J.
Brunsveld, Luc
author_facet Somsen, Bente A.
Schellekens, Rick J.C.
Verhoef, Carlo J.A.
Arkin, Michelle R.
Ottmann, Christian
Cossar, Peter J.
Brunsveld, Luc
author_sort Somsen, Bente A.
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Molecules that stabilize protein–protein interactions (PPIs) are invaluable as tool compounds for biophysics and (structural) biology, and as starting points for molecular glue drug discovery. However, identifying initial starting points for PPI stabilizing matter is highly challenging, and chemical optimization is labor-intensive. Inspired by chemical crosslinking and reversible covalent fragment-based drug discovery, we developed an approach that we term “molecular locks” to rapidly access molecular glue-like tool compounds. These dual-covalent small molecules reversibly react with a nucleophilic amino acid on each of the partner proteins to dynamically crosslink the protein complex. The PPI between the hub protein 14-3-3 and estrogen-related receptor γ (ERRγ) was used as a pharmacologically relevant case study. Based on a focused library of dual-reactive small molecules, a molecular glue tool compound was rapidly developed. Biochemical assays and X-ray crystallographic studies validated the ternary covalent complex formation and overall PPI stabilization via dynamic covalent crosslinking. The molecular lock approach is highly selective for the specific 14-3-3/ERRγ complex, over other 14-3-3 complexes. This selectivity is driven by the interplay of molecular reactivity and molecular recognition of the composite PPI binding interface. The long lifetime of the dual-covalent locks enabled the selective stabilization of the 14-3-3/ERRγ complex even in the presence of several other competing 14-3-3 clients with higher intrinsic binding affinities. The molecular lock approach enables systematic, selective, and potent stabilization of protein complexes to support molecular glue drug discovery.
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spelling pubmed-100643302023-04-01 Reversible Dual-Covalent Molecular Locking of the 14-3-3/ERRγ Protein–Protein Interaction as a Molecular Glue Drug Discovery Approach Somsen, Bente A. Schellekens, Rick J.C. Verhoef, Carlo J.A. Arkin, Michelle R. Ottmann, Christian Cossar, Peter J. Brunsveld, Luc J Am Chem Soc [Image: see text] Molecules that stabilize protein–protein interactions (PPIs) are invaluable as tool compounds for biophysics and (structural) biology, and as starting points for molecular glue drug discovery. However, identifying initial starting points for PPI stabilizing matter is highly challenging, and chemical optimization is labor-intensive. Inspired by chemical crosslinking and reversible covalent fragment-based drug discovery, we developed an approach that we term “molecular locks” to rapidly access molecular glue-like tool compounds. These dual-covalent small molecules reversibly react with a nucleophilic amino acid on each of the partner proteins to dynamically crosslink the protein complex. The PPI between the hub protein 14-3-3 and estrogen-related receptor γ (ERRγ) was used as a pharmacologically relevant case study. Based on a focused library of dual-reactive small molecules, a molecular glue tool compound was rapidly developed. Biochemical assays and X-ray crystallographic studies validated the ternary covalent complex formation and overall PPI stabilization via dynamic covalent crosslinking. The molecular lock approach is highly selective for the specific 14-3-3/ERRγ complex, over other 14-3-3 complexes. This selectivity is driven by the interplay of molecular reactivity and molecular recognition of the composite PPI binding interface. The long lifetime of the dual-covalent locks enabled the selective stabilization of the 14-3-3/ERRγ complex even in the presence of several other competing 14-3-3 clients with higher intrinsic binding affinities. The molecular lock approach enables systematic, selective, and potent stabilization of protein complexes to support molecular glue drug discovery. American Chemical Society 2023-03-16 /pmc/articles/PMC10064330/ /pubmed/36926879 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.2c12781 Text en © 2023 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Permits the broadest form of re-use including for commercial purposes, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Somsen, Bente A.
Schellekens, Rick J.C.
Verhoef, Carlo J.A.
Arkin, Michelle R.
Ottmann, Christian
Cossar, Peter J.
Brunsveld, Luc
Reversible Dual-Covalent Molecular Locking of the 14-3-3/ERRγ Protein–Protein Interaction as a Molecular Glue Drug Discovery Approach
title Reversible Dual-Covalent Molecular Locking of the 14-3-3/ERRγ Protein–Protein Interaction as a Molecular Glue Drug Discovery Approach
title_full Reversible Dual-Covalent Molecular Locking of the 14-3-3/ERRγ Protein–Protein Interaction as a Molecular Glue Drug Discovery Approach
title_fullStr Reversible Dual-Covalent Molecular Locking of the 14-3-3/ERRγ Protein–Protein Interaction as a Molecular Glue Drug Discovery Approach
title_full_unstemmed Reversible Dual-Covalent Molecular Locking of the 14-3-3/ERRγ Protein–Protein Interaction as a Molecular Glue Drug Discovery Approach
title_short Reversible Dual-Covalent Molecular Locking of the 14-3-3/ERRγ Protein–Protein Interaction as a Molecular Glue Drug Discovery Approach
title_sort reversible dual-covalent molecular locking of the 14-3-3/errγ protein–protein interaction as a molecular glue drug discovery approach
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10064330/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36926879
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.2c12781
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