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Protein Domain Specific Covalent Inhibition of Human DNA Polymerase β.

Shelby C YuhasAnanya MajumdarMarc M Greenberg
Published in: Chembiochem : a European journal of chemical biology (2021)
DNA polymerase β (Pol β) is a frequently overexpressed and/or mutated bifunctional repair enzyme. Pol β possesses polymerase and lyase active sites, that are employed in two steps of base excision repair. Pol β is an attractive therapeutic target for which there is a need for inhibitors. Two mechanistically inspired covalent inhibitors (1, IC50 =21.0 μM; 9, IC50 =18.7 μM) that modify lysine residues in different Pol β active sites are characterized. Despite modifying lysine residues in different active sites, 1 and 9 inactivate the polymerase and lyase activities of Pol β. Fluorescence anisotropy experiments indicate that they do so by preventing DNA binding. Inhibitors 1 and 9 provide the basis for a general approach to preparing domain selective inhibitors of bifunctional polymerases. Such molecules could prove to be useful tools for studying the role of wild type and mutant forms of Pol β and other polymerases in DNA repair.
Keyphrases
  • wild type
  • dna repair
  • dna binding
  • single molecule
  • structural basis
  • circulating tumor
  • endothelial cells
  • cell free
  • transcription factor
  • amino acid
  • pluripotent stem cells
  • circulating tumor cells