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Development of novel cellular histone-binding and chromatin-displacement assays for bromodomain drug discovery

BACKGROUND: Proteins that ‘read’ the histone code are central elements in epigenetic control and bromodomains, which bind acetyl-lysine motifs, are increasingly recognized as potential mediators of disease states. Notably, the first BET bromodomain-based therapies have entered clinical trials and th...

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Autores principales: Zhan, Yanai, Kost-Alimova, Maria, Shi, Xi, Leo, Elisabetta, Bardenhagen, Jennifer P., Shepard, Hannah E., Appikonda, Srikanth, Vangamudi, Bhavatarini, Zhao, Shuping, Tieu, Trang N., Jiang, Shiming, Heffernan, Timothy P., Marszalek, Joseph R., Toniatti, Carlo, Draetta, Giulio, Tyler, Jessica, Barton, Michelle, Jones, Philip, Palmer, Wylie S., Geck Do, Mary K., Andersen, Jannik N.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4578755/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26396593
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13072-015-0026-4
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author Zhan, Yanai
Kost-Alimova, Maria
Shi, Xi
Leo, Elisabetta
Bardenhagen, Jennifer P.
Shepard, Hannah E.
Appikonda, Srikanth
Vangamudi, Bhavatarini
Zhao, Shuping
Tieu, Trang N.
Jiang, Shiming
Heffernan, Timothy P.
Marszalek, Joseph R.
Toniatti, Carlo
Draetta, Giulio
Tyler, Jessica
Barton, Michelle
Jones, Philip
Palmer, Wylie S.
Geck Do, Mary K.
Andersen, Jannik N.
author_facet Zhan, Yanai
Kost-Alimova, Maria
Shi, Xi
Leo, Elisabetta
Bardenhagen, Jennifer P.
Shepard, Hannah E.
Appikonda, Srikanth
Vangamudi, Bhavatarini
Zhao, Shuping
Tieu, Trang N.
Jiang, Shiming
Heffernan, Timothy P.
Marszalek, Joseph R.
Toniatti, Carlo
Draetta, Giulio
Tyler, Jessica
Barton, Michelle
Jones, Philip
Palmer, Wylie S.
Geck Do, Mary K.
Andersen, Jannik N.
author_sort Zhan, Yanai
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Proteins that ‘read’ the histone code are central elements in epigenetic control and bromodomains, which bind acetyl-lysine motifs, are increasingly recognized as potential mediators of disease states. Notably, the first BET bromodomain-based therapies have entered clinical trials and there is a broad interest in dissecting the therapeutic relevance of other bromodomain-containing proteins in human disease. Typically, drug development is facilitated and expedited by high-throughput screening, where assays need to be sensitive, robust, cost-effective and scalable. However, for bromodomains, which lack catalytic activity that otherwise can be monitored (using classical enzymology), the development of cell-based, drug-target engagement assays has been challenging. Consequently, cell biochemical assays have lagged behind compared to other protein families (e.g., histone deacetylases and methyltransferases). RESULTS: Here, we present a suite of novel chromatin and histone-binding assays using AlphaLISA, in situ cell extraction and fluorescence-based, high-content imaging. First, using TRIM24 as an example, the homogenous, bead-based AlphaScreen technology was modified from a biochemical peptide-competition assay to measure binding of the TRIM24 bromodomain to endogenous histone H3 in cells (AlphaLISA). Second, a target agnostic, high-throughput imaging platform was developed to quantify the ability of chemical probes to dissociate endogenous proteins from chromatin/nuclear structures. While overall nuclear morphology is maintained, the procedure extracts soluble, non-chromatin-bound proteins from cells with drug-target displacement visualized by immunofluorescence (IF) or microscopy of fluorescent proteins. Pharmacological evaluation of these assays cross-validated their utility, sensitivity and robustness. Finally, using genetic and pharmacological approaches, we dissect domain contribution of TRIM24, BRD4, ATAD2 and SMARCA2 to chromatin binding illustrating the versatility/utility of the in situ cell extraction platform. CONCLUSIONS: In summary, we have developed two novel complementary and cell-based drug-target engagement assays, expanding the repertoire of pharmacodynamic assays for bromodomain tool compound development. These assays have been validated through a successful TRIM24 bromodomain inhibitor program, where a micromolar lead molecule (IACS-6558) was optimized using cell-based assays to yield the first single-digit nanomolar TRIM24 inhibitor (IACS-9571). Altogether, the assay platforms described herein are poised to accelerate the discovery and development of novel chemical probes to deliver on the promise of epigenetic-based therapies. ELECTRONIC SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL: The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13072-015-0026-4) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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spelling pubmed-45787552015-09-23 Development of novel cellular histone-binding and chromatin-displacement assays for bromodomain drug discovery Zhan, Yanai Kost-Alimova, Maria Shi, Xi Leo, Elisabetta Bardenhagen, Jennifer P. Shepard, Hannah E. Appikonda, Srikanth Vangamudi, Bhavatarini Zhao, Shuping Tieu, Trang N. Jiang, Shiming Heffernan, Timothy P. Marszalek, Joseph R. Toniatti, Carlo Draetta, Giulio Tyler, Jessica Barton, Michelle Jones, Philip Palmer, Wylie S. Geck Do, Mary K. Andersen, Jannik N. Epigenetics Chromatin Methodology BACKGROUND: Proteins that ‘read’ the histone code are central elements in epigenetic control and bromodomains, which bind acetyl-lysine motifs, are increasingly recognized as potential mediators of disease states. Notably, the first BET bromodomain-based therapies have entered clinical trials and there is a broad interest in dissecting the therapeutic relevance of other bromodomain-containing proteins in human disease. Typically, drug development is facilitated and expedited by high-throughput screening, where assays need to be sensitive, robust, cost-effective and scalable. However, for bromodomains, which lack catalytic activity that otherwise can be monitored (using classical enzymology), the development of cell-based, drug-target engagement assays has been challenging. Consequently, cell biochemical assays have lagged behind compared to other protein families (e.g., histone deacetylases and methyltransferases). RESULTS: Here, we present a suite of novel chromatin and histone-binding assays using AlphaLISA, in situ cell extraction and fluorescence-based, high-content imaging. First, using TRIM24 as an example, the homogenous, bead-based AlphaScreen technology was modified from a biochemical peptide-competition assay to measure binding of the TRIM24 bromodomain to endogenous histone H3 in cells (AlphaLISA). Second, a target agnostic, high-throughput imaging platform was developed to quantify the ability of chemical probes to dissociate endogenous proteins from chromatin/nuclear structures. While overall nuclear morphology is maintained, the procedure extracts soluble, non-chromatin-bound proteins from cells with drug-target displacement visualized by immunofluorescence (IF) or microscopy of fluorescent proteins. Pharmacological evaluation of these assays cross-validated their utility, sensitivity and robustness. Finally, using genetic and pharmacological approaches, we dissect domain contribution of TRIM24, BRD4, ATAD2 and SMARCA2 to chromatin binding illustrating the versatility/utility of the in situ cell extraction platform. CONCLUSIONS: In summary, we have developed two novel complementary and cell-based drug-target engagement assays, expanding the repertoire of pharmacodynamic assays for bromodomain tool compound development. These assays have been validated through a successful TRIM24 bromodomain inhibitor program, where a micromolar lead molecule (IACS-6558) was optimized using cell-based assays to yield the first single-digit nanomolar TRIM24 inhibitor (IACS-9571). Altogether, the assay platforms described herein are poised to accelerate the discovery and development of novel chemical probes to deliver on the promise of epigenetic-based therapies. ELECTRONIC SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL: The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13072-015-0026-4) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. BioMed Central 2015-09-21 /pmc/articles/PMC4578755/ /pubmed/26396593 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13072-015-0026-4 Text en © Zhan et al. 2015 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Methodology
Zhan, Yanai
Kost-Alimova, Maria
Shi, Xi
Leo, Elisabetta
Bardenhagen, Jennifer P.
Shepard, Hannah E.
Appikonda, Srikanth
Vangamudi, Bhavatarini
Zhao, Shuping
Tieu, Trang N.
Jiang, Shiming
Heffernan, Timothy P.
Marszalek, Joseph R.
Toniatti, Carlo
Draetta, Giulio
Tyler, Jessica
Barton, Michelle
Jones, Philip
Palmer, Wylie S.
Geck Do, Mary K.
Andersen, Jannik N.
Development of novel cellular histone-binding and chromatin-displacement assays for bromodomain drug discovery
title Development of novel cellular histone-binding and chromatin-displacement assays for bromodomain drug discovery
title_full Development of novel cellular histone-binding and chromatin-displacement assays for bromodomain drug discovery
title_fullStr Development of novel cellular histone-binding and chromatin-displacement assays for bromodomain drug discovery
title_full_unstemmed Development of novel cellular histone-binding and chromatin-displacement assays for bromodomain drug discovery
title_short Development of novel cellular histone-binding and chromatin-displacement assays for bromodomain drug discovery
title_sort development of novel cellular histone-binding and chromatin-displacement assays for bromodomain drug discovery
topic Methodology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4578755/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26396593
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13072-015-0026-4
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