posted on 2020-05-26, 14:36authored byAna C. Puhl, Jonathan W. Bogart, Victoria A. Haberman, Jacob E. Larson, Andre S. Godoy, Jacqueline L. Norris-Drouin, Stephanie H. Cholensky, Tina M. Leisner, Stephen V. Frye, Leslie V. Parise, Albert A. Bowers, Kenneth H. Pearce
Calcium
and integrin binding protein 1 (CIB1) is an EF-hand-containing,
small intracellular protein that has recently been implicated in cancer
cell survival and proliferation. In particular, CIB1 depletion significantly
impairs tumor growth in triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC). Thus,
CIB1 is a potentially attractive target for cancer chemotherapy that
has yet to be validated by a chemical probe. To produce a probe molecule
to the CIB1 helix 10 (H10) pocket and demonstrate that it is a viable
target for molecular intervention, we employed random peptide phage
display to screen and select CIB1-binding peptides. The top peptide
sequence selected, UNC10245092, was produced synthetically, and binding
to CIB1 was confirmed by isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) and
a time-resolved fluorescence resonance energy transfer (TR-FRET) assay.
Both assays showed that the peptide bound to CIB1 with low nanomolar
affinity. CIB1 was cocrystallized with UNC10245092, and the 2.1 Å
resolution structure revealed that the peptide binds as an α-helix
in the H10 pocket, displacing the CIB1 C-terminal H10 helix and causing
conformational changes in H7 and H8. UNC10245092 was further derivatized
with a C-terminal Tat-derived cell penetrating peptide (CPP) to demonstrate
its effects on TNBC cells in culture, which are consistent with results
of CIB1 depletion. These studies provide a first-in-class chemical
tool for CIB1 inhibition in cell culture and validate the CIB1 H10
pocket for future probe and drug discovery efforts.