Discovery of a chemical probe for PRDM9.
Abdellah Allali-HassaniMagdalena M SzewczykDanton IvanochkoShawna L OrganJabez BokJessica Sook Yuin HoFlorence P H GayFengling LiLevi BlazerMohammad S EramLevon HalabelianDavid DilworthGenna M LucianiEvelyne Lima-FernandesQin WuPeter LoppnauNathan PalmerS Zakiah A TalibPeter J BrownMatthieu SchapiraPhilipp KaldisRonan C O'HaganErnesto GuccioneDalia Barsyte-LovejoyCheryl H ArrowsmithJohn M SandersSolomon D KattarDavid Jonathan BennettBenjamin NicholsonMasoud VedadiPublished in: Nature communications (2019)
PRDM9 is a PR domain containing protein which trimethylates histone 3 on lysine 4 and 36. Its normal expression is restricted to germ cells and attenuation of its activity results in altered meiotic gene transcription, impairment of double-stranded breaks and pairing between homologous chromosomes. There is growing evidence for a role of aberrant expression of PRDM9 in oncogenesis and genome instability. Here we report the discovery of MRK-740, a potent (IC50: 80 ± 16 nM), selective and cell-active PRDM9 inhibitor (Chemical Probe). MRK-740 binds in the substrate-binding pocket, with unusually extensive interactions with the cofactor S-adenosylmethionine (SAM), conferring SAM-dependent substrate-competitive inhibition. In cells, MRK-740 specifically and directly inhibits H3K4 methylation at endogenous PRDM9 target loci, whereas the closely related inactive control compound, MRK-740-NC, does not. The discovery of MRK-740 as a chemical probe for the PRDM subfamily of methyltransferases highlights the potential for exploiting SAM in targeting SAM-dependent methyltransferases.
Keyphrases
- induced apoptosis
- genome wide
- binding protein
- small molecule
- poor prognosis
- cell cycle arrest
- high throughput
- dna methylation
- quantum dots
- living cells
- amino acid
- cell death
- gene expression
- single cell
- long non coding rna
- bone marrow
- transcription factor
- signaling pathway
- drug delivery
- genome wide identification
- dna repair
- protein protein
- cell therapy
- dna binding