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Targeting the Genome-Stability Hub Ctf4 by Stapled-Peptide Design.

Yuteng WuFabrizio VillaJoseph MamanYu Heng LauLina DobnikarAline C SimonKarim LabibDavid R SpringLuca Pellegrini
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2017)
The exploitation of synthetic lethality by small-molecule targeting of pathways that maintain genomic stability is an attractive chemotherapeutic approach. The Ctf4/AND-1 protein hub, which links DNA replication, repair, and chromosome segregation, represents a novel target for the synthetic lethality approach. Herein, we report the design, optimization, and validation of double-click stapled peptides encoding the Ctf4-interacting peptide (CIP) of the replicative helicase subunit Sld5. By screening stapling positions in the Sld5 CIP, we identified an unorthodox i,i+6 stapled peptide with improved, submicromolar binding to Ctf4. The mode of interaction with Ctf4 was confirmed by a crystal structure of the stapled Sld5 peptide bound to Ctf4. The stapled Sld5 peptide was able to displace the Ctf4 partner DNA polymerase α from the replisome in yeast extracts. Our study provides proof-of-principle evidence for the development of small-molecule inhibitors of the human CTF4 orthologue AND-1.
Keyphrases
  • small molecule
  • endothelial cells
  • cancer therapy
  • gene expression
  • drug delivery
  • genome wide
  • hiv infected
  • hepatitis c virus