| Literature DB >> 31762980 |
Thomas Lanyon-Hogg1, Markus Ritzefeld1, Lea Sefer2, Jasmine K Bickel1, Amalie F Rudolf2, Nattawadee Panyain1, Ganka Bineva-Todd3, Cory A Ocasio3, Nicola O'Reilly3, Christian Siebold2, Anthony I Magee4, Edward W Tate1.
Abstract
Posttranslational attachment of lipids to proteins is important for many cellular functions, and the enzymes responsible for these modifications are implicated in many diseases, from cancer to neurodegeneration. Lipid transferases and hydrolases are increasingly tractable therapeutic targets, but present unique challenges for high-throughput biochemical enzyme assays which hinder development of new inhibitors. We present Acylation-coupled Lipophilic Induction of Polarisation (Acyl-cLIP) as the first universally applicable biochemical lipidation assay, exploiting the hydrophobic nature of lipidated peptides to drive a polarised fluorescence readout. Acyl-cLIP allows sensitive, accurate, real-time measurement of S- or N-palmitoylation, N-myristoylation, S-farnesylation or S-geranylgeranylation. Furthermore, it is applicable to transfer and hydrolysis reactions, and we demonstrate its extension to a high-throughput screening format. We anticipate that Acyl-cLIP will greatly expedite future drug discovery efforts against these challenging targets. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2019.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31762980 PMCID: PMC6855259 DOI: 10.1039/c9sc01785b
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Sci ISSN: 2041-6520 Impact factor: 9.825
Fig. 1Acyl-cLIP measurement of palmitoylation of a SHH N-terminus peptide. (A) Schematic representation of the Acyl-cLIP assay for HHAT. (B) Polarisation of substrate and product SHH-FAM peptides at 1 μM and detergents at 2 mM or BSA at 0.15 mM; only BSA and detergents above their CMC increase polarised emission of the lipidated peptide. (C) DDM titration demonstrates specific Pal-SHH-FAM polarised emission above the CMC. (D) BSA titration demonstrates specific Pal-SHH-FAM polarised emission above Kd. (E) Real-time analysis of SHH-FAM palmitoylation showing HHAT-dependent increase in FA over time. Data represent mean ± SEM (assays performed in duplicate, n = 3).
Fig. 2Acyl-cLIP application to lipid PTM processing enzymes. (A) NMT-mediated myristoylation of SRC-FAM. (B) FTase prenylation of FAM-KRAS CAAX-box with Fpp, but not GGpp. (C) GGTase prenylation of FAM-KRAS CAAX-box with GGpp, but not Fpp. (D) Cleavage of Pal-SHH-FAM by trypsin. (E) Deacylation of Pal-GobX-TAMRA by APT1. (F) Deacylation of Pal-GobX-TAMRA by APT2. Data represent mean ± SEM (assays performed in duplicate, n = 3).
Fig. 3Analysis of HHAT inhibition. (A) Dose-response analysis of RUSKI compounds, demonstrating RUSKI-201 is the most potent HHAT inhibitor. (B) Dose-response analysis of SHH, SHH(FL) and Pal-SHH, indicating efficient product inhibition of HHAT. (C) SHH(FL) acylation with YnC15 assessed by bioorthogonal AzTB labelling and SDS-PAGE demonstrates low yield of SHH(FL) acylation. Data represent mean ± SEM (assays performed in duplicate, n = 3).
Fig. 4Suitability of Acyl-cLIP for HTS campaigns. (A) Stopped signal from full 384-well plate of positive (HHAT) and negative (buffer) controls indicating excellent HTS suitability (Z′ = 0.69). (B) Screening of 775 FDA-approved drugs for inhibition of HHat, including RUSKI-201 as blind positive control. Hits defined as giving >80% inhibition at 25 μM.