Chemoproteomic profiling to identify activity changes and functional inhibitors of DNA-binding proteins

Cell Chem Biol. 2022 Nov 17;29(11):1639-1648.e4. doi: 10.1016/j.chembiol.2022.10.008. Epub 2022 Nov 9.

Abstract

DNA-binding proteins are promising therapeutic targets but are notoriously difficult to drug. Here, we evaluate a chemoproteomic DNA interaction platform as a complementary strategy for parallelized compound profiling. To enable this approach, we determined the proteomic binding landscape of 92 immobilized DNA sequences. Perturbation-induced activity changes of captured transcription factors in disease-relevant settings demonstrated functional relevance of the enriched subproteome. Chemoproteomic profiling of >300 cysteine-directed compounds against a coverage optimized bead mixture, which specifically captures >150 DNA binders, revealed competition of several DNA-binding proteins, including the transcription factors ELF1 and ELF2. We also discovered the first compound that displaces the DNA-repair complex MSH2-MSH3 from DNA. Compound binding to cysteine 252 on MSH3 was confirmed using chemoproteomic reactive cysteine profiling. Overall, these results suggested that chemoproteomic DNA bead pull-downs enable the specific readout of transcription factor activity and can identify functional "hotspots" on DNA binders toward expanding the druggable proteome.

Keywords: DNA binding; chemical proteomics; covalency; drug screening; mass spectrometry; pull-down; reactive side chain profiling.

MeSH terms

  • Cysteine*
  • DNA-Binding Proteins*
  • Proteome
  • Proteomics
  • Transcription Factors

Substances

  • DNA-Binding Proteins
  • Cysteine
  • Transcription Factors
  • Proteome