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  2. Discovery of an allosteric 14-3-3 inhibitor for suppressing NRF2-driven cancer via phenotypic screening and chemoproteomic-based target deconvolution

Discovery of an allosteric 14-3-3 inhibitor for suppressing NRF2-driven cancer via phenotypic screening and chemoproteomic-based target deconvolution

  • Chem Sci. 2025 Aug 20;16(37):17248-17260. doi: 10.1039/d5sc04324g.
Jinglong Zhao 1 Han Jiang 1 Kaimei Zhao 1 Tian Liu 1 Qiong Zhang 1 Ziquan Zhao 1 Junjie Wang 1 Qidong You 1 2 Mengchen Lu 3 Zhengyu Jiang 1 2
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Jiang Su Key Laboratory of Drug Design and Optimization, Department of Medicinal Chemistry, School of Pharmacy, China Pharmaceutical University Nanjing 210009 China [email protected] [email protected].
  • 2 State Key Laboratory of Natural Medicines, China Pharmaceutical University Nanjing 210009 China.
  • 3 Department of Medicinal Chemistry, College of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Soochow University Medical College Suzhou 215123 China [email protected].
Abstract

The NRF2 transcription factor is constitutively active in various cancers, functioning as an oncogenic driver for tumor progression and chemo/radiotherapy resistance. Despite the well-documented role of NRF2 overactivation in Cancer, no targeted therapy is currently available. In this study, using a combination of phenotypic screening, chemoproteomics, and biochemical and cellular assays, we identified WS3 as a potent allosteric inhibitor of 14-3-3 that selectively inhibits NRF2 activity in tumor cells. Mechanistically, WS3 binds allosterically to the 14-3-3 dimer, inducing a conformational change and disrupting the 14-3-3-pGSK3β interaction, thereby releasing pGSK3β for dephosphorylation. This activation of GSK3β subsequently enhances the ubiquitination and degradation of NRF2 by the CUL1-β-TrCP E3 Ligase. WS3 effectively elicits oxidative stress and potentiates chemotherapeutics and Ferroptosis in NRF2-driven cancers. Our findings uncover a previously unrecognized role of 14-3-3 in the hyperactivation of NRF2 and present a first-in-class sub-micromolar 14-3-3 allosteric inhibitor as an effective therapeutic strategy to suppress NRF2 overactivation, especially in Keap1 defective cancers.

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