scholarly journals Screening for Small-Molecule Modulators of Long Noncoding RNA-Protein Interactions Using AlphaScreen

2015 ◽  
Vol 20 (9) ◽  
pp. 1132-1141 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roya Pedram Fatemi ◽  
Sultan Salah-Uddin ◽  
Farzaneh Modarresi ◽  
Nathalie Khoury ◽  
Claes Wahlestedt ◽  
...  

Long non–protein coding RNAs (lncRNAs) are an important class of molecules that help orchestrate key cellular events. Although their functional roles in cells are not well understood, thousands of lncRNAs and a number of possible mechanisms by which they act have been reported. LncRNAs can exert their regulatory function in cells by interacting with epigenetic enzymes. In this study, we developed a tool to study lncRNA-protein interactions for high-throughput screening of small-molecule modulators using AlphaScreen technology. We tested the interaction of two lncRNAs: brain-derived neurotrophic factor antisense ( BDNF-AS) and Hox transcript antisense RNA ( HOTAIR), with Enhancer of zeste homolog 2 (EZH2), a histone methyltransferase against a phytochemical library, to look for small-molecule inhibitors that can alter the expression of downstream target genes. We identified ellipticine, a compound that up-regulates BDNF transcription. Our study shows the feasibility of using high-throughput screening to identify modulators of lncRNA-protein interactions and paves the road for targeting lncRNAs that are dysregulated in human disorders using small-molecule therapies.

Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 4811-4811
Author(s):  
Joanna S. Yi ◽  
Alex Federation ◽  
Jun Qi ◽  
Sirano Dhe-Paganon ◽  
Michael Hadler ◽  
...  

Abstract Cooperation between several epigenetic modulators defines MLL-rearranged leukemia as an epigenomic-driven cancer. Wild type MLL catalyzes trimethylation of lysine 4 on histone 3 from the methyl donor S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) at homeobox and other genes important for hematopoiesis, promoting their expression during development. However, in MLL-rearrangements, its methyltransferase domain is ubiquitously lost and replaced with >70 known fusion partners. Many of these fusion partners recruit DOT1L, the only known SAM-dependent lysine methyltransferase responsible for the methylation of lysine 79 of histone 3 (H3K79)—a mark associated with most actively transcribed genes. Therefore, the recruitment of DOT1L by MLL fusion partners to MLL-target genes leads to aberrant H3K79 hypermethylation at these loci, resulting in inappropriate gene expression and leukemogenesis. DOT1L as a therapeutic target in MLL has been genetically validated by several groups, leading to the development of SAM-competitive small molecule inhibitors of DOT1L. These inhibitors exhibit excellent biochemical activity and selectivity, yet have delayed cellular activity and needing relatively high doses, with viability effects requiring 7-10 days and EC50s for H3K79 methylation depletion of 1-3 μM in cell lines. In animal studies, this translates to a modest survival benefit while requiring high doses through continuous osmotic subcutaneous infusion. Further optimization of DOT1L inhibitors is therefore needed. To date, development of DOT1L inhibitors has been slow, perhaps related to inadequacy of discovery chemistry assay technologies. All biochemical assays are radioactivity-based and are not miniaturizeable; low-throughput and delayed cellular effects of DOT1L inhibition all hamper the discovery of improved inhibitors. Therefore a pressing need towards improved DOT1L inhibitor discovery is a robust, accessible, and rapid profiling platform. Toward this goal, we synthesized both FITC- and biotin-tagged DOT1L probe ligands. We confirmed by structural studies that binding of the probes were similar to our previously published inhibitor, depleted H3K79 methylation, and had antiproliferative effects in MLL-rearranged cell lines. We then utilized the probes to devise two non-radioactive, orthogonal biochemical assays to competitively profile putative inhibitors: one employing bead-based, proxmity fluorescence technology and the second using fluorescence polarization technology. These assays are robust and adaptable to high-throughput screening. We also designed a miniaturizable high-content imaging, immunofluorescence-based assay to assess the effect of DOT1L inhibitors on H3K79 methylation, reporting cellular IC50s after just four days of treatment. These three assays were validated against three known DOT1L inhibitors of different potencies, accurately differentiating between the compounds. Together, these orthogonal assays define an accessible platform capability to discover and optimize DOT1L inhibitors. Our platform rank-ordered a library of SAM derivatives that we synthesized, indicating that large substituents off the SAM base does not affect DOT1L binding. We also explored other features of the SAM core structure, identifying several chlorinated probes that had increased cellular potency (IC50 values ~10nM) relative to the initial compounds published, without losing specificity for DOT1L. The inhibitory effect on MLL-target gene expression correlated to the H3K79me2 decrease reported in high content assay, validating that our high-content assay accurately reports on downstream biology seen later in treatment. And as expected, the high-content potencies of our chlorinated DOT1L probes also correlated to increased anti-proliferative effect in MLL cells. Overall, we utilized chemistry, biology, and chemical biology tools to develop this profiling platform capability for more rapid discovery and optimization of small molecule DOT1L inhibitors. These assays can additionally be used to screen for non-SAM competitive inhibitors in high-throughput fashion. Furthermore, the DOT1L inhibitors and probes synthesized here (available as open-source tools) are useful in deeper mechanistic studies of the DOT1L complex and its role in MLL. Disclosures Armstrong: Epizyme: Consultancy.


2003 ◽  
Vol 8 (6) ◽  
pp. 676-684 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bart W. Nieuwenhuijsen ◽  
Youping Huang ◽  
Yuren Wang ◽  
Fernando Ramirez ◽  
Gary Kalgaonkar ◽  
...  

To study the biology of regulators of G-protein signaling (RGS) proteins and to facilitate the identification of small molecule modulators of RGS proteins, the authors recently developed an advanced yeast 2-hybrid (YTH) assay format for GαZand RGS-Z1. Moreover, they describe the development of a multiplexed luciferase-based assay that has been successfully adapted to screen large numbers of small molecule modulators of protein-protein interactions. They generated and evaluated 2 different luciferase reporter gene systems for YTH interactions, a Gal4 responsive firefly luciferase reporter gene and a Gal4 responsive Renilla luciferase reporter gene. Both the firefly and Renilla luciferase reporter genes demonstrated a 40-to 50-fold increase in luminescence in strains expressing interacting YTH fusion proteins versus negative control strains. Because the firefly and Renilla luciferase proteins have different substrate specificity, the assays were multiplexed. The multiplexed luciferase-based YTH platform adds speed, sensitivity, simplicity, quantification, and efficiency to YTH high-throughput applications and therefore greatly facilitates the identification of small molecule modulators of protein-protein interactions as tools or potential leads for drug discovery efforts.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthias Christen ◽  
Cassandra Kamischke ◽  
Hemantha D. Kulasekara ◽  
Kathleen C. Olivas ◽  
Bridget R. Kulasekara ◽  
...  

The bacterial second messenger cyclic diguanosine monophosphate (c-di-GMP) is a key regulator of cellular motility, the cell cycle, and biofilm formation with its resultant antibiotic tolerance, which may make chronic infections difficult to treat. Therefore, diguanylate cyclases, which regulate the spatiotemporal production of c-di-GMP, may be attractive drug targets to control biofilm formation that is part of chronic infections. In this paper, we present a FRET-based biochemical high-throughput screening approach coupled with detailed structure-activity studies to identify synthetic small molecule modulators of the diguanylate cyclase, DgcA, from Caulobacter crescentus. We identified a set of 7 small molecules that in the low µM range regulate DgcA enzymatic activity. Subsequent structure activity studies on selected scaffolds revealed a remarkable diversity of modulatory behaviors, including slight chemical substitutions that revert the effects from allosteric enzyme inhibition to activation. The compounds identified represent novel chemotypes and are potentially developable into chemical genetic tools for the dissection of c-di-GMP signaling networks and alteration of c-di-GMP associated phenotypes. In sum, our studies underline the importance for detailed mechanism of action studies for inhibitors of c-di-GMP signaling and demonstrate the complex interplay between synthetic small molecules and the regulatory mechanisms that control the activity of diguanylate cyclases.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christina K. Kim ◽  
Kelvin F. Cho ◽  
Min Woo Kim ◽  
Alice Y. Ting

Technologies that convert transient protein-protein interactions (PPIs) into stable expression of a reporter gene are useful for genetic selections, high-throughput screening, and multiplexing with omics technologies. We previously reported SPARK (Kim et al., 2017), a transcription factor that is activated by the coincidence of blue light and a PPI. Here, we report an improved, second-generation SPARK2 that incorporates a luciferase moiety to control the light-sensitive LOV domain. SPARK2 can be temporally gated by either external light or addition of a small-molecule luciferin, which causes luciferase to open LOV via proximity-dependent BRET. Furthermore, the nested “AND” gate design of SPARK2—in which both protease recruitment to the membrane-anchored transcription factor and LOV domain opening are regulated by the PPI of interest—yields a lower-background system and improved PPI specificity. We apply SPARK2 to high-throughput screening for GPCR agonists and for the detection of trans-cellular contacts, all with versatile transcriptional readout.


ChemBioChem ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 394-407 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthias Christen ◽  
Cassandra Kamischke ◽  
Hemantha D. Kulasekara ◽  
Kathleen C. Olivas ◽  
Bridget R. Kulasekara ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 94-101 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew F. Voter ◽  
Michael P. Killoran ◽  
Gene E. Ananiev ◽  
Scott A. Wildman ◽  
F. Michael Hoffmann ◽  
...  

Antibiotic-resistant bacterial infections are increasingly prevalent worldwide, and there is an urgent need for novel classes of antibiotics capable of overcoming existing resistance mechanisms. One potential antibiotic target is the bacterial single-stranded DNA binding protein (SSB), which serves as a hub for DNA repair, recombination, and replication. Eight highly conserved residues at the C-terminus of SSB use direct protein–protein interactions (PPIs) to recruit more than a dozen important genome maintenance proteins to single-stranded DNA. Mutations that disrupt PPIs with the C-terminal tail of SSB are lethal, suggesting that small-molecule inhibitors of these critical SSB PPIs could be effective antibacterial agents. As a first step toward implementing this strategy, we have developed orthogonal high-throughput screening assays to identify small-molecule inhibitors of the Klebsiella pneumonia SSB-PriA interaction. Hits were identified from an initial screen of 72,474 compounds using an AlphaScreen (AS) primary screen, and their activity was subsequently confirmed in an orthogonal fluorescence polarization (FP) assay. As an additional control, an FP assay targeted against an unrelated eukaryotic PPI was used to confirm specificity for the SSB-PriA interaction. Nine potent and selective inhibitors produced concentration–response curves with IC50 values of <40 μM, and two compounds were observed to directly bind to PriA, demonstrating the success of this screen strategy.


2003 ◽  
Vol 315 (1) ◽  
pp. 134-137 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kathleen Baker ◽  
Debleena Sengupta ◽  
Gilda Salazar-Jimenez ◽  
Virginia W. Cornish

2020 ◽  
Vol 69 (5) ◽  
pp. 818-826
Author(s):  
Yu Lu ◽  
Loïc Deblais ◽  
Gireesh Rajashekara ◽  
Sally A. Miller ◽  
Yorsa A. Helmy ◽  
...  

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