Login / Signup

Fragment Screening Yields a Small-Molecule Stabilizer of 14-3-3 Dimers That Modulates Client Protein Interactions.

Hendrik J BrinkRick RiemensStephanie TheeBerend BeishuizenDaniel da Costa PereiraMaikel WijtmansIwan de EschMartine J SmitAlbertus H de Boer
Published in: Chembiochem : a European journal of chemical biology (2022)
The development of protein-protein interaction (PPI) inhibitors has been a successful strategy in drug development. However, the identification of PPI stabilizers has proven much more challenging. Here we report a fragment-based drug screening approach using the regulatory hub-protein 14-3-3 as a platform for identifying PPI stabilizers. A homogenous time-resolved FRET assay was used to monitor stabilization of 14-3-3/peptide binding using the known interaction partner estrogen receptor alpha. Screening of an in-house fragment library identified fragment 2 (VUF15640) as a putative PPI stabilizer capable of cooperatively stabilizing 14-3-3 PPIs in a cooperative fashion with Fusicoccin-A. Mechanistically, fragment 2 appears to enhance 14-3-3 dimerization leading to increased client-protein binding. Functionally, fragment 2 enhanced potency of 14-3-3 in a cell-free system inhibiting the enzyme activity of the nitrate reductase. In conclusion, we identified a general PPI stabilizer targeting 14-3-3, which could be used as a tool compound for investigating 14-3-3 client protein interactions.
Keyphrases
  • protein protein
  • small molecule
  • cell free
  • estrogen receptor
  • high throughput
  • nitric oxide
  • emergency department
  • binding protein
  • drug delivery
  • dna binding
  • quantum dots
  • drug induced
  • living cells
  • amino acid