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A high-throughput screen to identify novel small molecule inhibitors of the Werner Syndrome Helicase-Nuclease (WRN)

Werner syndrome (WS), an autosomal recessive genetic disorder, displays accelerated clinical symptoms of aging leading to a mean lifespan less than 50 years. The WS helicase-nuclease (WRN) is involved in many important pathways including DNA replication, recombination and repair. Replicating cells a...

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Autores principales: Sommers, Joshua A., Kulikowicz, Tomasz, Croteau, Deborah L., Dexheimer, Thomas, Dorjsuren, Dorjbal, Jadhav, Ajit, Maloney, David J., Simeonov, Anton, Bohr, Vilhelm A., Brosh, Robert M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6326523/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30625228
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0210525
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author Sommers, Joshua A.
Kulikowicz, Tomasz
Croteau, Deborah L.
Dexheimer, Thomas
Dorjsuren, Dorjbal
Jadhav, Ajit
Maloney, David J.
Simeonov, Anton
Bohr, Vilhelm A.
Brosh, Robert M.
author_facet Sommers, Joshua A.
Kulikowicz, Tomasz
Croteau, Deborah L.
Dexheimer, Thomas
Dorjsuren, Dorjbal
Jadhav, Ajit
Maloney, David J.
Simeonov, Anton
Bohr, Vilhelm A.
Brosh, Robert M.
author_sort Sommers, Joshua A.
collection PubMed
description Werner syndrome (WS), an autosomal recessive genetic disorder, displays accelerated clinical symptoms of aging leading to a mean lifespan less than 50 years. The WS helicase-nuclease (WRN) is involved in many important pathways including DNA replication, recombination and repair. Replicating cells are dependent on helicase activity, leading to the pursuit of human helicases as potential therapeutic targets for cancer treatment. Small molecule inhibitors of DNA helicases can be used to induce synthetic lethality, which attempts to target helicase-dependent compensatory DNA repair pathways in tumor cells that are already genetically deficient in a specific pathway of DNA repair. Alternatively, helicase inhibitors may be useful as tools to study the specialized roles of helicases in replication and DNA repair. In this study, approximately 350,000 small molecules were screened based on their ability to inhibit duplex DNA unwinding by a catalytically active WRN helicase domain fragment in a high-throughput fluorometric assay to discover new non-covalent small molecule inhibitors of the WRN helicase. Select compounds were screened to exclude ones that inhibited DNA unwinding by other helicases in the screen, bound non-specifically to DNA, acted as irreversible inhibitors, or possessed unfavorable chemical properties. Several compounds were tested for their ability to impair proliferation of cultured tumor cells. We observed that two of the newly identified WRN helicase inhibitors inhibited proliferation of cancer cells in a lineage-dependent manner. These studies represent the first high-throughput screen for WRN helicase inhibitors and the results have implications for anti-cancer strategies targeting WRN in different cancer cells and genetic backgrounds.
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spelling pubmed-63265232019-01-18 A high-throughput screen to identify novel small molecule inhibitors of the Werner Syndrome Helicase-Nuclease (WRN) Sommers, Joshua A. Kulikowicz, Tomasz Croteau, Deborah L. Dexheimer, Thomas Dorjsuren, Dorjbal Jadhav, Ajit Maloney, David J. Simeonov, Anton Bohr, Vilhelm A. Brosh, Robert M. PLoS One Research Article Werner syndrome (WS), an autosomal recessive genetic disorder, displays accelerated clinical symptoms of aging leading to a mean lifespan less than 50 years. The WS helicase-nuclease (WRN) is involved in many important pathways including DNA replication, recombination and repair. Replicating cells are dependent on helicase activity, leading to the pursuit of human helicases as potential therapeutic targets for cancer treatment. Small molecule inhibitors of DNA helicases can be used to induce synthetic lethality, which attempts to target helicase-dependent compensatory DNA repair pathways in tumor cells that are already genetically deficient in a specific pathway of DNA repair. Alternatively, helicase inhibitors may be useful as tools to study the specialized roles of helicases in replication and DNA repair. In this study, approximately 350,000 small molecules were screened based on their ability to inhibit duplex DNA unwinding by a catalytically active WRN helicase domain fragment in a high-throughput fluorometric assay to discover new non-covalent small molecule inhibitors of the WRN helicase. Select compounds were screened to exclude ones that inhibited DNA unwinding by other helicases in the screen, bound non-specifically to DNA, acted as irreversible inhibitors, or possessed unfavorable chemical properties. Several compounds were tested for their ability to impair proliferation of cultured tumor cells. We observed that two of the newly identified WRN helicase inhibitors inhibited proliferation of cancer cells in a lineage-dependent manner. These studies represent the first high-throughput screen for WRN helicase inhibitors and the results have implications for anti-cancer strategies targeting WRN in different cancer cells and genetic backgrounds. Public Library of Science 2019-01-09 /pmc/articles/PMC6326523/ /pubmed/30625228 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0210525 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Sommers, Joshua A.
Kulikowicz, Tomasz
Croteau, Deborah L.
Dexheimer, Thomas
Dorjsuren, Dorjbal
Jadhav, Ajit
Maloney, David J.
Simeonov, Anton
Bohr, Vilhelm A.
Brosh, Robert M.
A high-throughput screen to identify novel small molecule inhibitors of the Werner Syndrome Helicase-Nuclease (WRN)
title A high-throughput screen to identify novel small molecule inhibitors of the Werner Syndrome Helicase-Nuclease (WRN)
title_full A high-throughput screen to identify novel small molecule inhibitors of the Werner Syndrome Helicase-Nuclease (WRN)
title_fullStr A high-throughput screen to identify novel small molecule inhibitors of the Werner Syndrome Helicase-Nuclease (WRN)
title_full_unstemmed A high-throughput screen to identify novel small molecule inhibitors of the Werner Syndrome Helicase-Nuclease (WRN)
title_short A high-throughput screen to identify novel small molecule inhibitors of the Werner Syndrome Helicase-Nuclease (WRN)
title_sort high-throughput screen to identify novel small molecule inhibitors of the werner syndrome helicase-nuclease (wrn)
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6326523/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30625228
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0210525
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