A Chemical Probe for Tudor Domain Protein Spindlin1 to Investigate Chromatin Function.
Vincent FaganCatrine JohanssonCarina GileadiOctovia MonteiroJames E DunfordReshma NibhaniMartin PhilpottJessica MalzahnGraham WellsRuth FaramAdam P CribbsNadia HalidiFengling LiIrene ChauHolger GreschikSrikannathasan VelupillaiAbdellah Allali-HassaniJames BennettThomas ChristottCharline GiroudAndrew M LewisKilian V M HuberNick AthanasouChas BountraManfred JungRoland SchüleMasoud VedadiCheryl H ArrowsmithYan XiongJian JinOleg FedorovGillian FarniePaul E BrennanUdo OppermannPublished in: Journal of medicinal chemistry (2019)
Modifications of histone tails, including lysine/arginine methylation, provide the basis of a "chromatin or histone code". Proteins that contain "reader" domains can bind to these modifications and form specific effector complexes, which ultimately mediate chromatin function. The spindlin1 (SPIN1) protein contains three Tudor methyllysine/arginine reader domains and was identified as a putative oncogene and transcriptional coactivator. Here we report a SPIN1 chemical probe inhibitor with low nanomolar in vitro activity, exquisite selectivity on a panel of methyl reader and writer proteins, and with submicromolar cellular activity. X-ray crystallography showed that this Tudor domain chemical probe simultaneously engages Tudor domains 1 and 2 via a bidentate binding mode. Small molecule inhibition and siRNA knockdown of SPIN1, as well as chemoproteomic studies, identified genes which are transcriptionally regulated by SPIN1 in squamous cell carcinoma and suggest that SPIN1 may have a role in cancer related inflammation and/or cancer metastasis.
Keyphrases
- room temperature
- genome wide
- density functional theory
- single molecule
- small molecule
- gene expression
- transcription factor
- dna methylation
- squamous cell carcinoma
- living cells
- dna damage
- amino acid
- transition metal
- protein protein
- nitric oxide
- quantum dots
- oxidative stress
- binding protein
- high resolution
- papillary thyroid
- computed tomography
- molecular dynamics
- immune response
- dna binding
- magnetic resonance
- lymph node metastasis
- dendritic cells
- childhood cancer
- young adults
- contrast enhanced