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In-solution enrichment identifies peptide inhibitors of protein-protein interactions.

Nature chemical biology (2019-03-20)
Fayçal Touti, Zachary P Gates, Anupam Bandyopadhyay, Guillaume Lautrette, Bradley L Pentelute
ZUSAMMENFASSUNG

The use of competitive inhibitors to disrupt protein-protein interactions (PPIs) holds great promise for the treatment of disease. However, the discovery of high-affinity inhibitors can be a challenge. Here we report a platform for improving the affinity of peptide-based PPI inhibitors using non-canonical amino acids. The platform utilizes size exclusion-based enrichment from pools of synthetic peptides (1.5-4 kDa) and liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry-based peptide sequencing to identify high-affinity binders to protein targets, without the need for 'reporter' or 'encoding' tags. Using this approach-which is inherently selective for high-affinity binders-we realized gains in affinity of up to ~100- or ~30-fold for binders to the oncogenic ubiquitin ligase MDM2 or HIV capsid protein C-terminal domain, which inhibit MDM2-p53 interaction or HIV capsid protein C-terminal domain dimerization, respectively. Subsequent macrocyclization of select MDM2 inhibitors rendered them cell permeable and cytotoxic toward cancer cells, demonstrating the utility of the identified compounds as functional PPI inhibitors.