Abstract
Immunological proteins are major disease targets, yet most remain undrugged. Post-translational redox modification of cysteine residues has emerged as an important mode of immune cell regulation, particularly in macrophage cytokine responses. Here we develop a strategy for systematic discovery and small-molecule functionalization of redox-regulated cysteines on immunological proteins. Using deep redox proteomics, we annotate 788 in vivo redox-regulated cysteines across diverse immune-relevant protein domains. We demonstrate how these sites enable cysteine-directed pharmacology through discovery of a novel cysteine activation site on the immune regulator SHP1. Targeting C102, we develop a highly selective covalent agonist, SCA, which binds the N-SH2 domain to relieve autoinhibition and activate SHP1. In mouse and human macrophages, SCA selectively engages SHP1 C102, antagonizing interleukin-1 receptor-associated kinase signaling and lipopolysaccharide-induced proinflammatory cytokine production. Together, this work identifies a druggable cysteine redox switch controlling macrophage cytokine responses and provides a compendium of redox-regulated sites for therapeutic development.