| Literature DB >> 28892090 |
Xingyue He1, Jessica Riceberg1, Teresa Soucy1, Erik Koenig1, James Minissale1, Melissa Gallery1, Hugues Bernard1, Xiaofeng Yang1, Hua Liao1, Claudia Rabino1, Pooja Shah1, Kristina Xega1, Zhong-Hua Yan1, Mike Sintchak1, John Bradley1, He Xu1, Matt Duffey1, Dylan England1, Hirotake Mizutani1, Zhigen Hu1, Jianping Guo1, Ryan Chau1, Lawrence R Dick1, James E Brownell1, John Newcomb1, Steve Langston1, Eric S Lightcap1, Neil Bence1, Sai M Pulukuri1.
Abstract
Small ubiquitin-like modifier (SUMO) family proteins regulate target-protein functions by post-translational modification. However, a potent and selective inhibitor targeting the SUMO pathway has been lacking. Here we describe ML-792, a mechanism-based SUMO-activating enzyme (SAE) inhibitor with nanomolar potency in cellular assays. ML-792 selectively blocks SAE enzyme activity and total SUMOylation, thus decreasing cancer cell proliferation. Moreover, we found that induction of the MYC oncogene increased the ML-792-mediated viability effect in cancer cells, thus indicating a potential application of SAE inhibitors in treating MYC-amplified tumors. Using ML-792, we further explored the critical roles of SUMOylation in mitotic progression and chromosome segregation. Furthermore, expression of an SAE catalytic-subunit (UBA2) S95N M97T mutant rescued SUMOylation loss and the mitotic defect induced by ML-792, thus confirming the selectivity of ML-792. As a potent and selective SAE inhibitor, ML-792 provides rapid loss of endogenously SUMOylated proteins, thereby facilitating novel insights into SUMO biology.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28892090 DOI: 10.1038/nchembio.2463
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Chem Biol ISSN: 1552-4450 Impact factor: 15.040