Litcius/Paper detail

A uniquely efficacious type of CFTR corrector with complementary mode of action

Valentina Marchesin, Lucile Monnier, Peter Blattmann, Florent Chevillard, Christine Kuntz, Camille Forny, Judith Kamper, R. O. Studer, Alexandre Bossu, Eric A. Ertel, Oliver Nayler, Christine Brotschi, Jodi T. Williams, John Gatfield

2024Science Advances10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Three distinct pharmacological corrector types (I, II, III) with different binding sites and additive behavior only partially rescue the F508del-cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) folding and trafficking defect observed in cystic fibrosis. We describe uniquely effective, macrocyclic CFTR correctors that were additive to the known corrector types, exerting a complementary "type IV" corrector mechanism. Macrocycles achieved wild-type-like folding efficiency of F508del-CFTR at the endoplasmic reticulum and normalized CFTR currents in reconstituted patient-derived bronchial epithelium. Using photo-activatable macrocycles, docking studies and site-directed mutagenesis a highly probable binding site and pose for type IV correctors was identified in a cavity between lasso helix-1 (Lh1) and transmembrane helix-1 of membrane spanning domain (MSD)-1, distinct from the known corrector binding sites. Since only F508del-CFTR fragments spanning from Lh1 until MSD2 responded to type IV correctors, these likely promote cotranslational assembly of Lh1, MSD1, and MSD2. Previously corrector-resistant CFTR folding mutants were also robustly rescued, suggesting substantial therapeutic potential for type IV correctors.

Topics & Concepts

Cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulatorEndoplasmic reticulumMutantTransmembrane domainTransmembrane proteinChemistryMutagenesisWild typeBiophysicsHelix (gastropod)Folding (DSP implementation)Cystic fibrosisCell biologyBiologyBiochemistryAmino acidGeneticsReceptorGeneEngineeringEcologyElectrical engineeringSnailCystic Fibrosis Research AdvancesAdvanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniquesNeonatal Respiratory Health Research
A uniquely efficacious type of CFTR corrector with complementary mode of action | Litcius