Back to Search Start Over

Herboxidiene Features That Mediate Conformation-Dependent SF3B1 Interactions to Inhibit Splicing

Authors :
Srinivasa Rao Allu
Adriana Gamboa Lopez
Hannah M. Maul-Newby
Guddeti Chandrashekar Reddy
Melissa S. Jurica
Patricia Mendez
Arun K. Ghosh
Source :
ACS chemical biology, vol 16, iss 3, ACS Chem Biol
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2021.

Abstract

Small molecules that target the spliceosome SF3B complex are potent inhibitors of cancer cell growth. The compounds affect an early stage of spliceosome assembly when U2 snRNP first engages the branch point sequence of an intron. Employing an inactive herboxidiene analog (iHB) as a competitor, we investigated factors that influence inhibitor interactions with SF3B to inhibit pre-mRNA splicing in vitro. Order-of addition experiments show that inhibitor interactions are long lasting and affected by both temperature and the presence of ATP. Our data are also consistent with the idea that not all SF3B conformations observed in structural studies are conducive to productive inhibitor interactions. Notably, SF3B inhibitors do not impact an ATP-dependent rearrangement in U2 snRNP that exposes the branch binding sequence for base pairing. We also report extended structure activity relationship analysis of the splicing inhibitor herboxidiene. We identified features of the tetrahydropyran ring that mediate its interactions with SF3B and its ability to interfere with splicing. Analyzing our data in the context of recent structural models of SF3B interactions with inhibitors, our results lead us to extend the model for early spliceosome assembly and inhibitor mechanism. We postulate that interactions between a carboxylic acid substituent of herboxidiene and positively charged SF3B1 sidechains in the inhibitor binding channel are required to maintain inhibitor occupancy while counteracting the SF3B transition to a closed state that is required for stable U2 snRNP interactions with the intron.

Details

ISSN :
15548937 and 15548929
Volume :
16
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ACS Chemical Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e216f75b0446abb67125bae5db5f5658
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acschembio.0c00965