posted on 2021-09-08, 21:33authored byValerie Scott, Debasis Dey, Jordan Kuwik, Kathryn Hinkelman, Megan Waldman, Kabirul Islam
Closely related protein families
evolved from common ancestral
genes present a significant hurdle in developing member- and isoform-specific
chemical probes, owing to their similarity in fold and function. In
this piece of work, we explore an allele-specific chemical rescue
strategy to activate a “dead” variant of a wildtype
protein using synthetic cofactors and demonstrate its successful application
to the members of the alpha-ketoglutarate (αKG)-dependent histone
demethylase 4 (KDM4) family. We show that a mutation at a specific
residue in the catalytic site renders the variant inactive toward
the natural cosubstrate. In contrast, αKG derivatives bearing
appropriate stereoelectronic features endowed the mutant with native-like
demethylase activity while remaining refractory to a set of wild type
dioxygenases. The orthogonal enzyme-cofactor pairs demonstrated site-
and degree-specific lysine demethylation on a full-length chromosomal
histone in the cellular milieu. Our work offers a strategy to modulate
a specific histone demethylase by identifying and engineering a conserved
phenylalanine residue, which acts as a gatekeeper in the KDM4 subfamily,
to sensitize the enzyme toward a novel set of αKG derivatives.
The orthogonal pairs developed herein will serve as probes to study
the role of degree-specific lysine demethylation in mammalian gene
expression. Furthermore, this approach to overcome active site degeneracy
is expected to have general application among all human αKG-dependent
dioxygenases.