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  2. Chemoproteomics-Enabled Covalent Ligand Screening Reveals a Thioredoxin-Caspase 3 Interaction Disruptor That Impairs Breast Cancer Pathogenicity

Chemoproteomics-Enabled Covalent Ligand Screening Reveals a Thioredoxin-Caspase 3 Interaction Disruptor That Impairs Breast Cancer Pathogenicity

  • ACS Chem Biol. 2017 Oct 20;12(10):2522-2528. doi: 10.1021/acschembio.7b00711.
Kimberly E Anderson 1 Milton To 1 James A Olzmann 1 Daniel K Nomura 1
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Departments of Chemistry, Molecular and Cell Biology, and ‡Nutritional Sciences and Toxicology, University of California, Berkeley , Berkeley, California 94720, United States.
Abstract

Covalent ligand discovery is a promising strategy to develop small-molecule effectors against therapeutic targets. Recent studies have shown that dichlorotriazines are promising reactive scaffolds that preferentially react with lysines. Here, we have synthesized a series of dichlorotriazine-based covalent ligands and have screened this library to reveal small molecules that impair triple-negative breast Cancer cell survival. Upon identifying a lead hit from this screen KEA1-97, we used activity-based protein profiling (ABPP)-based chemoproteomic platforms to identify that this compound targets lysine 72 of thioredoxin-a site previously shown to be important in protein interactions with Caspase 3 to inhibit Caspase 3 activity and suppress Apoptosis. We show that KEA1-97 disrupts the interaction of thioredoxin with Caspase 3, activates caspases, and induces Apoptosis without affecting thioredoxin activity. Moreover, KEA1-97 impairs in vivo breast tumor xenograft growth. Our study showcases how the screening of covalent ligands can be coupled with ABPP platforms to identify unique Anticancer lead and target pairs.

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