As an emerging approach to protein perturbation, small molecule-induced protein degradation has gained significant attention as both a chemical tool and a potential therapeutic. To enable discrete control over its function, we have developed a broadly applicable approach for the optical activation of small molecule-induced protein degradation. By installing two different photolabile protecting groups, so-called caging groups, onto two different ligands recruiting Von Hippel–Lindau (VHL) and cereblon (CRBN) E3 ubiquitin ligases, our strategy enables light-triggered protein degradation for any small molecule warhead.
Conditionally activated, caged morpholino antisense agents (cMOs) are tools that enable the temporal and spatial investigation of gene expression, regulation, and function during embryonic development. Cyclic MOs are conformationally gated oligonucleotide analogs that do not block gene expression until they are linearized through the application of an external trigger, such as light or enzyme activity. Here, we describe the first examples of small molecule-responsive cMOs, which undergo rapid and efficient decaging via a Staudinger reduction. This is enabled by a highly flexible linker design that offers opportunities for the installation of chemically activated, self-immolative motifs. We synthesized cyclic cMOs against two distinct, developmentally relevant genes and demonstrated phosphine-triggered knockdown of gene expression in zebrafish embryos. This represents the first report of a small molecule-triggered antisense agent for gene knockdown, adding another bioorthogonal entry to the growing arsenal of gene knockdown tools.
Edited by Wolfgang PetiCatecholamine neurotransmitter levels in the synapses of the brain shape human disposition-cognitive flexibility, aggression, depression, and reward seeking-and manipulating these levels is a major objective of the pharmaceutical industry. Certain neurotransmitters are extensively sulfonated and inactivated by human sulfotransferase 1A3 (SULT1A3). To our knowledge, sulfonation as a therapeutic means of regulating transmitter activity has not been explored. Here, we describe the discovery of a SULT1A3 allosteric site that can be used to inhibit the enzyme. The structure of the new site is determined using spin-label-triangulation NMR. The site forms a cleft at the edge of a conserved ϳ30-residue active-site cap that must open and close during the catalytic cycle. Allosteres anchor into the site via -stacking interactions with two residues that sandwich the planar core of the allostere and inhibit the enzyme through capstabilizing interactions with substituents attached to the core. Changes in cap free energy were calculated ab initio as a function of core substituents and used to design and synthesize a series of inhibitors intended to progressively stabilize the cap and slow turnover. The inhibitors bound tightly (34 nM to 7.4 M) and exhibited progressive inhibition. The cap-stabilizing effects of the inhibitors were experimentally determined and agreed remarkably well with the theoretical predictions. These studies establish a reliable heuristic for the design of SULT1A3 allosteric inhibitors and demonstrate that the free-energy changes of a small, dynamic loop that is critical for SULT substrate selection and turnover can be calculated accurately.
Gene function can be precisely controlled with light-responsive nucleic acids.
MicroRNAs play crucial and dynamic roles in vertebrate development and diseases. Some, like miR-430, are highly expressed during early embryo development and regulate hundreds of transcripts, which can make it difficult to study their role in the timing and location of specific developmental processes using conventional morpholino oligonucleotide (MO) knockdown or genetic deletion approaches. We demonstrate that light-activated circular morpholino oligonucleotides (cMOs) can be applied to the conditional control of microRNA function. We targeted miR-430 in zebrafish embryos to study its role in the development of the embryo body and the heart. Using 405 nm irradiation, precise spatial and temporal control over miR-430 function was demonstrated, offering insight into the cell populations and developmental timepoints involved in each process.
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