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Potent and selective bivalent inhibitors of BET bromodomains.

Michael J WaringHuawei ChenAlfred A RabowGraeme WalkerRomel BobbyScott BoikoRob H BradburyRowena CallisEdwin ClarkIan DaleDanette L DanielsAustin DulakLiz FlavellGeoff HoldgateThomas A JowittAlexey G KikhneyMark McAlisterJacqui MéndezDerek OggJoe PatelPhilip PetterutiGraeme R RobbMatthew B RobersSakina SaifNatalie StrattonDmitri I SvergunWenxian WangDavid WhittakerDavid M WilsonYi Yao
Published in: Nature chemical biology (2016)
Proteins of the bromodomain and extraterminal (BET) family, in particular bromodomain-containing protein 4 (BRD4), are of great interest as biological targets. BET proteins contain two separate bromodomains, and existing inhibitors bind to them monovalently. Here we describe the discovery and characterization of probe compound biBET, capable of engaging both bromodomains simultaneously in a bivalent, in cis binding mode. The evidence provided here was obtained in a variety of biophysical and cellular experiments. The bivalent binding results in very high cellular potency for BRD4 binding and pharmacological responses such as disruption of BRD4-mediator complex subunit 1 foci with an EC50 of 100 pM. These compounds will be of considerable utility as BET/BRD4 chemical probes. This work illustrates a novel concept in ligand design-simultaneous targeting of two separate domains with a drug-like small molecule-providing precedent for a potentially more effective paradigm for developing ligands for other multi-domain proteins.
Keyphrases
  • small molecule
  • protein protein
  • binding protein
  • dna binding
  • living cells
  • particulate matter
  • quantum dots
  • risk assessment
  • single molecule
  • fluorescence imaging
  • drug induced