| Literature DB >> 27437033 |
David Weigt1, Carsten Hopf1, Guillaume Médard2.
Abstract
Some epigenetic modifier proteins have become validated clinical targets. With a few small molecule inhibitors already approved by national health administrations and many more in the pharmaceutical industry pipelines, there is a need for technologies that can promote full comprehension of the molecular action of these drugs. Proteomics, with its relatively unbiased nature, can contribute to a thorough understanding of the complexity of the megadalton complexes, which write, read and erase the histone code, and it can help study the on-target and off-target effect of the drugs designed to modulate their action. This review on the one hand gathers the published affinity probes able to decipher small molecule targets and off-targets in a close-to-native environment. These are small molecule analogues of epigenetic drugs conceived as protein target enrichment tools after they have engaged them in cells or lysates. Such probes, which have been designed for deacetylases, bromodomains, demethylases, and methyltransferases not only enrich their direct protein targets but also their stable interactors, which can be identified by mass spectrometry. Hence, they constitute a tool to study the epigenetic complexes together with other techniques also reviewed here: immunoaffinity purification with antibodies against native protein complex constituents or epitope tags, affinity matrices designed to bind recombinantly tagged protein, and enrichment of the complexes using histone tail peptides as baits. We expect that this toolbox will be adopted by more and more researchers willing to harness the spectacular advances in mass spectrometry to the epigenetic field.Entities:
Keywords: Affinity matrix; Affinity purification; Complex identification; Immunoaffinity purification; Photo-cross-linking; Target deconvolution
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27437033 PMCID: PMC4950666 DOI: 10.1186/s13148-016-0244-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Epigenetics ISSN: 1868-7075 Impact factor: 6.551
Fig. 1Affinity probes for the identification of drug targets by chemical proteomics strategies. An analogue of the small molecule is synthesized that a is covalently attached to a solid matrix or b possesses an enrichment handle or c possesses a cross-linking moiety and an enrichment handle
Fig. 2Strategies to capture histone-modifying complexes. These approaches include co-purifications via small molecule affinity probes, antibodies against native protein compounds, antibodies against epitope tags, non-epitope tag/tag binder couple, and bait peptides mimicking histone tails
Studied histone-modifying complexes sorted by identification strategies
| Identification strategy | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Protein complex | Immobilized drug | Antibody against protein complex constituent | Antibody against epitope tags | Recombinant tags other than epitope taps | Bait (histone) tail peptide |
| Writer | |||||
| HAT | [ | [ | |||
| PMT | [ | [ | [ | [ | |
| Eraser | |||||
| HDAC | [ | [ | [ | [ | |
| Lysine demethylases | [ | [ | [ | [ | |
| Lysine decrotonylase | [ | ||||
| Reader | |||||
| BET | [ | [ | [ | [ | [ |
| Methyl-lysine- and/or methyl-arginine binding domain-containing protein | [ | [ | |||
| PHD-containing proteins | [ | [ | [ | ||
| Phosphor-threonine/phosphor-serine binding protein | [ | [ | |||
HAT histone acetyl transferase, PMT protein methyl transferase, HDAC histone deacetylase, BET bromodomain and extraterminal domain family, PHD plant homodomain