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Identification of phenothiazine derivatives as UHM-binding inhibitors of early spliceosome assembly.

Pravin Kumar Ankush JagtapTomáš KubelkaKomal SoniCindy L WillDivita GargClaudia SippelTobias G KappHarish Kumar PotukuchiKenji SchorppKamyar HadianHorst KesslerReinhard LührmannFelix HauschThorsten BachMichael Sattler
Published in: Nature communications (2020)
Interactions between U2AF homology motifs (UHMs) and U2AF ligand motifs (ULMs) play a crucial role in early spliceosome assembly in eukaryotic gene regulation. UHM-ULM interactions mediate heterodimerization of the constitutive splicing factors U2AF65 and U2AF35 and between other splicing factors that regulate spliceosome assembly at the 3' splice site, where UHM domains of alternative splicing factors, such as SPF45 and PUF60, contribute to alternative splicing regulation. Here, we performed high-throughput screening using fluorescence polarization assays with hit validation by NMR and identified phenothiazines as general inhibitors of UHM-ULM interactions. NMR studies show that these compounds occupy the tryptophan binding pocket of UHM domains. Co-crystal structures of the inhibitors with the PUF60 UHM domain and medicinal chemistry provide structure-activity-relationships and reveal functional groups important for binding. These inhibitors inhibit early spliceosome assembly on pre-mRNA substrates in vitro. Our data show that spliceosome assembly can be inhibited by targeting UHM-ULM interactions by small molecules, thus extending the toolkit of splicing modulators for structural and biochemical studies of the spliceosome and splicing regulation.
Keyphrases
  • atrial fibrillation
  • magnetic resonance
  • high resolution
  • binding protein
  • small molecule
  • high throughput
  • electronic health record
  • single cell
  • gene expression
  • genome wide
  • energy transfer
  • drug discovery