Design of a small molecule that stimulates vascular endothelial growth factor A enabled by screening RNA fold-small molecule interactions.
Hafeez S HaniffLaurent KnerrXiaohui LiuGogce CrynenJonas BoströmDaniel AbeggAlexander AdibekianElizabeth LekahKye Won WangMichael D CameronIlyas YildirimMalin LemurellMatthew D DisneyPublished in: Nature chemistry (2020)
Vascular endothelial growth factor A (VEGFA) stimulates angiogenesis in human endothelial cells, and increasing its expression is a potential treatment for heart failure. Here, we report the design of a small molecule (TGP-377) that specifically and potently enhances VEGFA expression by the targeting of a non-coding microRNA that regulates its expression. A selection-based screen, named two-dimensional combinatorial screening, revealed preferences in small-molecule chemotypes that bind RNA and preferences in the RNA motifs that bind small molecules. The screening program increased the dataset of known RNA motif-small molecule binding partners by 20-fold. Analysis of this dataset against the RNA-mediated pathways that regulate VEGFA defined that the microRNA-377 precursor, which represses Vegfa messenger RNA translation, is druggable in a selective manner. We designed TGP-377 to potently and specifically upregulate VEGFA in human umbilical vein endothelial cells. These studies illustrate the power of two-dimensional combinatorial screening to define molecular recognition events between 'undruggable' biomolecules and small molecules, and the ability of sequence-based design to deliver efficacious structure-specific compounds.
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