Selectivity via Cooperativity: Preferential Stabilization of the p65/14-3-3 Interaction with Semisynthetic Natural Products.
Madita WolterPim J de VinkJoão Filipe NevesSonja SrdanovićYusuke HiguchiNobuo KatoAndrew J WilsonIsabelle LandrieuLuc BrunsveldChristian OttmannPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2020)
Natural compounds are an important class of potent drug molecules including some retrospectively found to act as stabilizers of protein-protein interactions (PPIs). However, the design of synthetic PPI stabilizers remains an understudied approach. To date, there are limited examples where cooperativity has been utilized to guide the optimization of a PPI stabilizer. The 14-3-3 scaffold proteins provide an excellent platform to explore PPI stabilization because these proteins mediate several hundred PPIs, and a class of natural compounds, the fusicoccanes, are known to stabilize a subset of 14-3-3 protein interactions. 14-3-3 has been reported to negatively regulate the p65 subunit of the NF-κB transcription factor, which qualifies this protein complex as a potential target for drug discovery to control cell proliferation. Here, we report the high-resolution crystal structures of two 14-3-3 binding motifs of p65 in complex with 14-3-3. A semisynthetic natural product derivative, DP-005, binds to an interface pocket of the p65/14-3-3 complex and concomitantly stabilizes it. Cooperativity analyses of this interaction, and other disease relevant 14-3-3-PPIs, demonstrated selectivity of DP-005 for the p65/14-3-3 complex. The adaptation of a cooperative binding model provided a general approach to characterize stabilization and to assay for selectivity of PPI stabilizers.
Keyphrases
- mass spectrometry
- protein protein
- high resolution
- drug discovery
- cell proliferation
- transcription factor
- small molecule
- high throughput
- binding protein
- oxidative stress
- pi k akt
- cell cycle
- emergency department
- amino acid
- immune response
- inflammatory response
- toll like receptor
- lps induced
- single cell
- nuclear factor
- water soluble
- protein kinase