Login / Signup

An Anticancer Rhenium Tricarbonyl Targets Fe-S Cluster Biogenesis in Ovarian Cancer Cells.

Benjamin NeuditschkoA Paden KingZhouyang HuangLukas JankerAndrea BileckYasmin BorutzkiSierra C MarkerChristopher GernerJustin J WilsonSamuel M Meier-Menches
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2022)
Target identification remains a critical challenge in inorganic drug discovery to deconvolute potential polypharmacology. Herein, we describe an improved approach to prioritize candidate protein targets based on a combination of dose-dependent chemoproteomics and treatment effects in living cancer cells for the rhenium tricarbonyl compound TRIP. Chemoproteomics revealed 89 distinct dose-dependent targets with concentrations of competitive saturation between 0.1 and 32 μM despite the broad proteotoxic effects of TRIP. Target-response networks revealed two highly probable targets of which the Fe-S cluster biogenesis factor NUBP2 was competitively saturated by free TRIP at nanomolar concentrations. Importantly, TRIP treatment led to a down-regulation of Fe-S cluster containing proteins and upregulated ferritin. Fe-S cluster depletion was further verified by assessing mitochondrial bioenergetics. Consequently, TRIP emerges as a first-in-class modulator of the scaffold protein NUBP2, which disturbs Fe-S cluster biogenesis at sub-cytotoxic concentrations in ovarian cancer cells.
Keyphrases
  • drug discovery
  • metal organic framework
  • oxidative stress
  • single cell
  • aqueous solution
  • binding protein
  • climate change
  • amino acid
  • risk assessment
  • small molecule