The Pseudo-Natural Product Tafbromin Selectively Targets the TAF1 Bromodomain 2.
Sohan PatilGregor S CremosnikLara DötschJana FlegelBritta SchulteKerstin C MaierKristina ŽumerPatrick CramerPetra JanningSonja SieversSlava ZieglerHerbert WaldmannPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2024)
Phenotypic assays detect small-molecule bioactivity at functionally relevant cellular sites, and inherently cover a variety of targets and mechanisms of action. They can uncover new small molecule-target pairs and may give rise to novel biological insights. By means of an osteoblast differentiation assay which employs a Hedgehog (Hh) signaling agonist as stimulus and which monitors an endogenous marker for osteoblasts, we identified a pyrrolo[3,4-g]quinoline (PQ) pseudo-natural product (PNP) class of osteogenesis inhibitors. The most potent PQ, termed Tafbromin, impairs canonical Hh signaling and modulates osteoblast differentiation through binding to the bromodomain 2 of the TATA-box binding protein-associated factor 1 (TAF1). Tafbromin is the most selective TAF1 bromodomain 2 ligand and promises to be an invaluable tool for the study of biological processes mediated by TAF1(2) bromodomains.