A Chemical Probe for Tudor Domain Protein Spindlin1 to Investigate Chromatin Function.

Fagan V., Johansson C., Gileadi C., Monteiro O., Dunford JE., Nibhani R., Philpott M., Malzahn J., Wells G., Faram R., Cribbs AP., Halidi N., Li F., Chau I., Greschik H., Velupillai S., Allali-Hassani A., Bennett J., Christott T., Giroud C., Lewis AM., Huber KVM., Athanasou N., Bountra C., Jung M., Schüle R., Vedadi M., Arrowsmith C., Xiong Y., Jin J., Fedorov O., Farnie G., Brennan PE., Oppermann U.

Modifications of histone tails, including lysine/arginine methylation, provide the basis of a "chromatin or histone code". Proteins that contain "reader" domains can bind to these modifications and form specific effector complexes, which ultimately mediate chromatin function. The spindlin1 (SPIN1) protein contains three Tudor methyllysine/arginine reader domains and was identified as a putative oncogene and transcriptional coactivator. Here we report a SPIN1 chemical probe inhibitor with low nanomolar in vitro activity, exquisite selectivity on a panel of methyl reader and writer proteins, and with submicromolar cellular activity. X-ray crystallography showed that this Tudor domain chemical probe simultaneously engages Tudor domains 1 and 2 via a bidentate binding mode. Small molecule inhibition and siRNA knockdown of SPIN1, as well as chemoproteomic studies, identified genes which are transcriptionally regulated by SPIN1 in squamous cell carcinoma and suggest that SPIN1 may have a role in cancer related inflammation and/or cancer metastasis.

DOI

10.1021/acs.jmedchem.9b00562

Type

Journal article

Journal

J Med Chem

Publication Date

24/10/2019

Volume

62

Pages

9008 - 9025

Keywords

Cell Cycle Proteins, Cell Line, Tumor, Chromatin, Crystallography, X-Ray, Humans, Microtubule-Associated Proteins, Molecular Probes, Phosphoproteins, Protein Conformation, Tudor Domain

Permalink Original publication