Literature DB >> 20148560

Comparative analysis of small molecules and histone substrate analogues as LSD1 lysine demethylase inhibitors.

Jeffrey C Culhane1, Dongqing Wang, Paul M Yen, Philip A Cole.   

Abstract

LSD1 is a flavin-dependent histone demethylase that oxidatively removes methyl groups from Lys-4 of histone H3. LSD1 belongs to the amine oxidase enzyme superfamily which utilize molecular oxygen to transform amines to imines that are hydrolytically cleaved to formaldehyde. In prior studies, it has been shown that monoamine oxidase inhibitory scaffolds such as propargylamines and cyclopropylamines can serve as mechanism-based inactivators of LSD1. Propargylamine-histone H3 peptide analogues are potent LSD1 inhibitors, whereas small molecule antidepressant MAO acetylenic inhibitors like pargyline do not inhibit LSD1. In contrast, the small molecule MAO cyclopropylamine inhibitor tranylcypromine is a time-dependent LSD1 inhibitor but exo-cyclopropylamine-peptide substrate analogue is not. To provide further insight into small molecule versus peptide relationships in LSD1 inhibition, herein we further our analysis of warheads in peptide scaffolds to include the chlorovinyl, endo-cyclopropylamine, and hydrazine-functionalities as LSD1 inactivators. We find that chlorovinyl-H3 is a mechanism-based LSD1 inactivator whereas endo-cyclopropylamine-H3 does not show time-dependent inactivation. The hydrazine-H3 was shown to be the most potent LSD1 suicide inhibitor yet reported, more than 20-fold more efficient in inhibiting demethylation than propargylamine-H3 derivatives. We re-explored MAO antidepressant agent phenelzine (phenethylhydrazine), previously reported to be a weak LSD1 inhibitor, and found that it is far more potent than previously appreciated. We show that phenelzine can block histone H3K4Me demethylation in cells, validating it as a pharmacologic tool and potential lead structure for anticancer therapy.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20148560      PMCID: PMC2843942          DOI: 10.1021/ja909996p

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Chem Soc        ISSN: 0002-7863            Impact factor:   15.419


  38 in total

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3.  Histone demethylation by a family of JmjC domain-containing proteins.

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4.  The pseudoirreversible inhibition of monoamine oxidase by allylamine.

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Journal:  Mol Pharmacol       Date:  1977-11       Impact factor: 4.436

Review 5.  The epigenomics of cancer.

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6.  Exploring distal regions of the A3 adenosine receptor binding site: sterically constrained N6-(2-phenylethyl)adenosine derivatives as potent ligands.

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8.  A novel mammalian flavin-dependent histone demethylase.

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10.  Mechanistic analysis of a suicide inactivator of histone demethylase LSD1.

Authors:  Lawrence M Szewczuk; Jeffrey C Culhane; Maojun Yang; Ananya Majumdar; Hongtao Yu; Philip A Cole
Journal:  Biochemistry       Date:  2007-05-19       Impact factor: 3.162

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  59 in total

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Review 7.  Balancing histone methylation activities in psychiatric disorders.

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Review 9.  The promise and failures of epigenetic therapies for cancer treatment.

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10.  Synthesis and Deployment of an Elusive Fluorovinyl Cation Equivalent: Access to Quaternary α-(1'-Fluoro)vinyl Amino Acids as Potential PLP Enzyme Inactivators.

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