Targeting the Allosteric Pathway That Interconnects the Core-Functional Scaffold and the Distal Phosphorylation Sites for Specific Dephosphorylation of Bcl-2.
Ziqian WangTing SongZongwei GuoKeke CaoChao ChenYingang FengHang WangFangkui YinSheng ZhouJian DaiZhichao ZhangPublished in: Journal of medicinal chemistry (2020)
Protein phosphorylation is the most significant post-translational modification for regulating cellular activities, but site-specific modulation of phosphorylation is still challenging. Using three-dimensional NMR spectra, molecular dynamics simulations, and alanine mutations, we identified that the interaction network between pT69/pS70 and R106/R109 residues prevents the phosphorylation sites from exposure to phosphatase and subsequent dephosphorylation. A Bcl-2-dephosphorylation probe, S1-6e, was designed by installing a carboxylic acid group to a Bcl-2 inhibitor. The carboxyl group competitively disrupts the interaction network between R106/R109 and pT69/pS70 and subsequently facilitates Bcl-2 dephosphorylation in living cells. As a result, S1-6e manifests a more effective apoptosis induction in pBcl-2-dependent cancer cells than other inhibitors exhibiting a similar binding affinity for Bcl-2. We believe that targeting the allosteric pathways interconnecting the core-functional domain and the phosphorylation site can be a general strategy for a rational design of site-specific dephosphorylating probes, since the allosteric pathway has been discovered in a variety of proteins.
Keyphrases
- living cells
- protein kinase
- molecular dynamics simulations
- small molecule
- fluorescent probe
- magnetic resonance
- cancer therapy
- oxidative stress
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- high resolution
- minimally invasive
- molecular docking
- binding protein
- drug delivery
- transcription factor
- density functional theory
- cell cycle arrest