A “Goldilocks
Zone” for Recruiting BET
Proteins with Bromodomain-1-Selective Ligands
Posted on 2024-10-14 - 20:29
Synthetic
genome readers/regulators (SynGRs) are bifunctional molecules
that are rationally designed to bind specific genomic sequences and
engage cellular machinery that regulates the expression of targeted
genes. The prototypical SynGR1 targets GAA trinucleotide repeats and
recruits the BET family of transcriptional regulatory proteins via
a flexibly tethered ligand, JQ1. This pan-BET ligand binds both tandem
bromodomains of BET proteins (BD1 and BD2). Second-generation SynGRs,
which substituted JQ1 with bromodomain-selective ligands, unexpectedly
revealed that BD1-selective ligands failed to functionally engage
BET proteins in living cells despite displaying the ability to bind
BD1 in vitro. Mechanistically, recruiting a BET protein via BD1- or
BD2-selective SynGRs should have resulted in indistinguishable functional
outcomes. Here we report the conversion of inactive BD1-targeting
SynGRs into functional gene regulators by a structure-guided redesign
of the chemical linker that bridges the DNA-binding molecule to the
highly selective BD1 ligand GSK778. The results point to an optimal
zone for positioning the BD1-selective ligand for functional engagement
of BET proteins on chromatin, consistent with the preferred binding
of BD1 domains to distal acetyllysine residues on histone tails. The
results not only resolve the mechanistic conundrum but also provide
insight into domain-selective targeting and nuanced design of chemo
probes and therapeutics.
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Mohammed, Ashraf; Churion, Kelly; Danda, Adithi; Philips, Steven J.; Ansari, Aseem Z. (2024). A “Goldilocks
Zone” for Recruiting BET
Proteins with Bromodomain-1-Selective Ligands. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acschembio.4c00505