Litcius/Paper detail

Covalent Inhibition by a Natural Product-Inspired Latent Electrophile

David P. Byun, Jennifer M. Ritchie, Ye‐Jin Jung, Ronald J. Holewinski, Hong‐Rae Kim, Ravichandra Tagirasa, Joseph Ivanic, Claire M. Weekley, Michael W. Parker, Þorkell Andrésson, Euna Yoo

2023Journal of the American Chemical Society29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Strategies to target specific protein cysteines are critical to covalent probe and drug discovery. 3-Bromo-4,5-dihydroisoxazole (BDHI) is a natural product-inspired, synthetically accessible electrophilic moiety that has previously been shown to react with nucleophilic cysteines in the active site of purified enzymes. Here, we define the global cysteine reactivity and selectivity of a set of BDHI-functionalized chemical fragments using competitive chemoproteomic profiling methods. Our study demonstrates that BDHIs capably engage reactive cysteine residues in the human proteome and the selectivity landscape of cysteines liganded by BDHI is distinct from that of haloacetamide electrophiles. Given its tempered reactivity, BDHIs showed restricted, selective engagement with proteins driven by interactions between a tunable binding element and the complementary protein sites. We validate that BDHI forms covalent conjugates with glutathione S -transferase Pi (GSTP1) and peptidyl-prolyl cis – trans isomerase NIMA-interacting 1 (PIN1), emerging anticancer targets. BDHI electrophile was further exploited in Bruton’s tyrosine kinase (BTK) inhibitor design using a single-step late-stage installation of the warhead onto acrylamide-containing compounds. Together, this study expands the spectrum of optimizable chemical tools for covalent ligand discovery and highlights the utility of 3-bromo-4,5-dihydroisoxazole as a cysteine-reactive electrophile.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistryElectrophileCysteineCovalent bondNatural productNucleophileMoietyCombinatorial chemistryDrug discoveryStereochemistryBiochemistryEnzymeOrganic chemistryCatalysisClick Chemistry and ApplicationsSignaling Pathways in DiseaseBiochemical and Molecular Research