Divergent Proteome
Reactivity Influences Arm-Selective
Activation of the Unfolded Protein Response by Pharmacological Endoplasmic
Reticulum Proteostasis Regulators
posted on 2023-07-31, 19:23authored byGabriel
M. Kline, Ryan J. Paxman, Chung-Yon Lin, Nicole Madrazo, Leonard Yoon, Julia M. D. Grandjean, Kyunga Lee, Karina Nugroho, Evan T. Powers, R. Luke Wiseman, Jeffery W. Kelly
Pharmacological activation
of the activating transcription factor
6 (ATF6) arm of the unfolded protein response (UPR) has proven useful
for ameliorating proteostasis deficiencies in cellular and mouse models
of numerous etiologically diverse diseases. Previous high-throughput
screening efforts identified the small molecule AA147 as a potent
and selective ATF6 activating compound that operates through a mechanism
involving metabolic activation of its 2-amino-p-cresol
substructure affording a quinone methide, which then covalently modifies
a subset of endoplasmic reticulum (ER) protein disulfide isomerases
(PDIs). Another compound identified in this screen, AA132, also contains
a 2-amino-p-cresol moiety; however, this compound
showed less transcriptional selectivity, instead globally activating
all three arms of the UPR. Here, we show that AA132 activates global
UPR signaling through a mechanism analogous to that of AA147, involving
metabolic activation and covalent modification of proteins including
multiple PDIs. Chemoproteomic-enabled analyses show that AA132 covalently
modifies PDIs to a greater extent than AA147. However, the extent
of PDI labeling by AA147 approaches a plateau more rapidly than PDI
labeling by AA132. These observations together suggest that AA132
can access a larger pool of proteins for covalent modification, possibly
because its activated form is less susceptible to quenching than activated
AA147. In other words, the lower reactivity of activated AA132 allows
it to persist longer and modify more PDIs in the cellular environment.
Collectively, these results suggest that AA132 globally activates
the UPR through increased engagement of ER PDIs. Consistent with this,
reducing the cellular concentration of AA132 decreases PDI modifications
and enables selective ATF6 activation. Our results highlight the relationship
between metabolically activatable-electrophile stability, ER proteome
reactivity, and the transcriptional response observed with the enaminone
chemotype of ER proteostasis regulators, enabling continued development
of next-generation ATF6 activating compounds.