Proteomic discovery of chemical probes that perturb protein complexes in human cells

蛋白质组学发现可扰乱人类细胞中蛋白质复合物的化学探针

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作者:Michael R Lazear ,Jarrett R Remsberg ,Martin G Jaeger ,Katherine Rothamel ,Hsuan-Lin Her ,Kristen E DeMeester ,Evert Njomen ,Simon J Hogg ,Jahan Rahman ,Landon R Whitby ,Sang Joon Won ,Michael A Schafroth ,Daisuke Ogasawara ,Minoru Yokoyama ,Garrett L Lindsey ,Haoxin Li ,Jason Germain ,Sabrina Barbas ,Joan Vaughan ,Thomas W Hanigan ,Vincent F Vartabedian ,Christopher J Reinhardt ,Melissa M Dix ,Seong Joo Koo ,Inha Heo ,John R Teijaro ,Gabriel M Simon ,Brahma Ghosh ,Omar Abdel-Wahab ,Kay Ahn ,Alan Saghatelian ,Bruno Melillo ,Stuart L Schreiber ,Gene W Yeo ,Benjamin F Cravatt

Abstract

Most human proteins lack chemical probes, and several large-scale and generalizable small-molecule binding assays have been introduced to address this problem. How compounds discovered in such "binding-first" assays affect protein function, nonetheless, often remains unclear. Here, we describe a "function-first" proteomic strategy that uses size exclusion chromatography (SEC) to assess the global impact of electrophilic compounds on protein complexes in human cells. Integrating the SEC data with cysteine-directed activity-based protein profiling identifies changes in protein-protein interactions that are caused by site-specific liganding events, including the stereoselective engagement of cysteines in PSME1 and SF3B1 that disrupt the PA28 proteasome regulatory complex and stabilize a dynamic state of the spliceosome, respectively. Our findings thus show how multidimensional proteomic analysis of focused libraries of electrophilic compounds can expedite the discovery of chemical probes with site-specific functional effects on protein complexes in human cells.

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