| Literature DB >> 27665925 |
Alexander G Myasnikov1,2,3,4, S Kundhavai Natchiar1,2,3,4, Marielle Nebout5,6, Isabelle Hazemann1,2,3,4, Véronique Imbert5,6, Heena Khatter1,2,3,4, Jean-François Peyron5,6, Bruno P Klaholz1,2,3,4.
Abstract
Many antibiotics in clinical use target the bacterial ribosome by interfering with the protein synthesis machinery. However, targeting the human ribosome in the case of protein synthesis deregulations such as in highly proliferating cancer cells has not been investigated at the molecular level up to now. Here we report the structure of the human 80S ribosome with a eukaryote-specific antibiotic and show its anti-proliferative effect on several cancer cell lines. The structure provides insights into the detailed interactions in a ligand-binding pocket of the human ribosome that are required for structure-assisted drug design. Furthermore, anti-proliferative dose response in leukaemic cells and interference with synthesis of c-myc and mcl-1 short-lived protein markers reveals specificity of a series of eukaryote-specific antibiotics towards cytosolic rather than mitochondrial ribosomes, uncovering the human ribosome as a promising cancer target.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27665925 PMCID: PMC5052680 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms12856
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Figure 1Structure of the human 80S ribosome with the eukaryote-specific CHX ligand.
(a,b) Comparison of the 80S ribosome complexes with the CHX ligand or with E-site tRNA bound in the sample separated by particle sorting, showing the conformational changes of the L1 region on the ribosome occurring upon CHX binding and tRNA release (left, 80S/CHX complex; right, 80S with E-site tRNA, middle superposition; cryo-EM maps and corresponding atomic models are shown in blue and green respectively). The structural disorder of the L1 region upon CHX binding and tRNA release is illustrated by the fact that it is better visible in cryo-EM maps filtered to 5 Å (b) compared with the full-resolution maps (a). (c) Overall binding region of CHX on the human 80S ribosome (backbone representation; CHX is shown with van der Waals spheres); the L1 region is disordered because of the absence of E-site tRNA. The inset shows the overall cryo-EM map sectioned at the level of the ligand-binding pocket (arrow; 60S and 40S subunits are annotated). (d) Structural comparison with the human 80S ribosome containing E-site tRNA10. View on the exit (E) site tRNA including the rRNA components interacting with the tRNA (marked in red) which are well-structured including the L1 region.
Figure 2Analysis of CHX interactions in the ligand-binding pocket of the human 80S ribosome.
(a) Cryo-EM map of the ligand-binding pocket including the CHX ligand (stereo representation). (b) Local resolution estimation of the CHX ligand and of the surrounding residues. (c) Details of the molecular interactions of CHX in the ligand binding pocket, the residues in hydrogen-bonding distance are indicated. The cyclohexyl moiety of the CHX ligand (on the left) interacts with G91 region, while the piperidine-2,6-dione moiety is located next to G4370 and G4371 of the 28S rRNA of the 60S subunit. (d) Comparison of the yeast and human ribosome structure with CHX, showing that the ligand is slightly rotated, has the piperidine-2,6-dione moiety flipped. Note the presence of a Mg2+ ion which is absent in the yeast ribosome complex. (e) Detailed view of the interactions of the 3′-terminal adenine A76 of the tRNA with the 28S rRNA; same viewing angle as in panel c. The adenine intercalates between G4370 and G4371 of the 28S rRNA and forms a non-standard interaction with C4341 through the atom N3 acceptor position. Base pair hydrogen bonds are indicated for the neighbour nucleotides. (f) Intercalation of the 3′-terminal A76 of the tRNA between bases G4370 and G4371 (view along the base stacking, viewing from the top as compared with panel e). (g) The superposition of the CHX ligand (yellow) and the E-site tRNA (magenta) shows that they overlap only partially, while the main part of the tRNA extends further into the E-site (viewing angle as in e). (h) Illustration of the potential of structure-assisted drug design. The arrows indicate potential interaction sites in the vicinity (within 4–5 Å distance), notably the Lys53-Phe56 region of ribosomal protein eL42 and the possible intercalation between bases G4370 and G4371 which would imitate that of A76 of the tRNA (f, same viewing angle).
Figure 3CHX and other eukaryote-specific but not prokaryote-specific antibiotics display anti-leukaemic activity.
(a,b) Eukaryote-specific antibiotics: anisomycin (ANS), cycloheximide (CHX), deoxynivalenol (DON), homoharringtonine (HHT), verrucarin-A (VA); prokaryote-specific antibiotics: gentamicin (GEN), kanamycin (KAN), streptomycin (STR), tetracycline (TCN). Top: WST1 assay of mitochondrial activity and cell survival, 48 h after incubation of KO99L tPTEN−/− cells with increasing doses of the different compounds. Middle: flow cytometry analysis of cellular counts, 48 h after incubation of KO99L cells with indicated molecules. The results are representative of at least three independent experiments. Bottom: flow cytometry analysis of cell death induction by the different compounds, 48 h after incubation of KO99L cells. Data represent live cell numbers (4,6 diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) negative cells). (c) Top: WST1 assay of mitochondrial activity and cell survival of human cell lines representative of T-ALL (Jurkat), B-ALL (NALM-6, 697) and AML (Kasumi-1, U937). Assays were performed after a 48 h incubation with increasing doses of the different E-specific antibiotics. Bottom: flow cytometry analysis of cell death induction by the different E-specific antibiotics (48 h incubation) on the leukaemic cell line panel. (d) Immunoblotting of murine c-myc, Mcl-1, Hsp-90 proteins and of mitochondrial Cox-2 after incubation of tPTEN−/− KO99L cells for 24 h with indicated doses of the different antibiotics. The results are representative of at least three independent experiments.