The use of site-selective chemical drug-conjugation strategies enables the construction of antibody–drug conjugates (ADCs) with superior therapeutic efficacy.”
Chemical modification
of proteins is essential for a variety of
important diagnostic and therapeutic applications. Many strategies
developed to date lack chemo- and regioselectivity as well as result
in non-native linkages that may suffer from instability in vivo and
adversely affect the protein’s structure and function. We describe
here the reaction of N-nucleophiles with the amino
acid dehydroalanine (Dha) in a protein context. When Dha is chemically
installed in proteins, the addition of a wide-range N-nucleophiles enables the rapid formation of amine linkages (secondary
and tertiary) in a chemoselective manner under mild, biocompatible
conditions. These new linkages are stable at a wide range of pH values
(pH 2.8 to 12.8), under reducing conditions (biological thiols such
as glutathione) and in human plasma. This method is demonstrated for
three proteins and is shown to be fully compatible with disulfide
bridges, as evidenced by the selective modification of recombinant
albumin that displays 17 structurally relevant disulfides. The practicability
and utility of our approach is further demonstrated by the construction
of a chemically modified C2A domain of Synaptotagmin-I protein that
retains its ability to preferentially bind to apoptotic cells at a
level comparable to the native protein. Importantly, the method was
useful for building a homogeneous antibody-drug conjugate with a precise
drug-to-antibody ratio of 2. The kinase inhibitor crizotinib was directly
conjugated to Dha through its piperidine motif, and its antibody-mediated
intracellular delivery results in 10-fold improvement of its cancer
cell-killing efficacy. The simplicity and exquisite site-selectivity
of the aza-Michael ligation described herein allows the construction
of stable secondary and tertiary amine-linked protein conjugates without
affecting the structure and function of biologically relevant proteins.
Unbiased binding assays involving small-molecule microarrays were used to identify compounds that display unique patterns of selectivity among members of the zinc-dependent histone deacetylase family of enzymes. A novel, hydroxyquinoline-containing compound, BRD4354, was shown to preferentially inhibit activity of HDAC5 and HDAC9 in vitro. Inhibition of deacetylase activity appears to be time-dependent and reversible. Mechanistic studies suggest that the compound undergoes zinc-catalyzed decomposition to an ortho-quinone methide, which covalently modifies nucleophilic cysteines within the proteins. The covalent nature of the compound-enzyme interaction has been demonstrated in experiments with biotinylated probe compound and with electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry.
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