| Literature DB >> 30347148 |
Martin Marek1, Tajith B Shaik1, Tino Heimburg2, Alokta Chakrabarti3, Julien Lancelot4, Elizabeth Ramos-Morales1, Cyrielle Da Veiga5, Dmitrii Kalinin6, Jelena Melesina2, Dina Robaa2, Karin Schmidtkunz3, Takayoshi Suzuki7,8, Ralph Holl9, Eric Ennifar5, Raymond J Pierce4, Manfred Jung3, Wolfgang Sippl2, Christophe Romier1.
Abstract
Metal-dependent histone deacetylases (HDACs) are key epigenetic regulators that represent promising therapeutic targets for the treatment of numerous human diseases. Yet the currently FDA-approved HDAC inhibitors nonspecifically target at least several of the 11 structurally similar but functionally different HDAC isozymes, which hampers their broad usage in clinical settings. Selective inhibitors targeting single HDAC isozymes are being developed, but precise understanding in molecular terms of their selectivity remains sparse. Here, we show that HDAC8-selective inhibitors adopt a L-shaped conformation required for their binding to a HDAC8-specific pocket formed by HDAC8 catalytic tyrosine and HDAC8 L1 and L6 loops. In other HDAC isozymes, a L1-L6 lock sterically prevents L-shaped inhibitor binding. Shielding of the HDAC8-specific pocket by protein engineering decreases potency of HDAC8-selective inhibitors and affects catalytic activity. Collectively, our results unravel key HDAC8 active site structural and functional determinants important for the design of next-generation chemical probes and epigenetic drugs.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30347148 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.8b01087
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Chem ISSN: 0022-2623 Impact factor: 7.446