Hedgehog
proteins, a family of vital cell signaling factors, are
expressed in precursor form, which requires specialized autoprocessing,
called cholesterolysis, for full biological activity. Cholesterolysis
occurs in cis through the action of the precursor’s
C-terminal enzymatic domain, HhC. In this work, we describe HhC activator
compounds (HACs), a novel class of noncovalent modulators that induce
autoprocessing infidelity, diminishing native cholesterolysis in favor
of precursor autoproteolysis, an otherwise minor and apparently nonphysiological
side reaction. HAC-induced autoproteolysis generates hedgehog protein
that is cholesterol free and hence signaling deficient. The most effective
HAC has an AC50 of 9 μM, accelerates HhC autoproteolytic
activity by 225-fold, and functions in the presence and absence of
cholesterol, the native substrate. HACs join a rare class of “antagonists”
that suppress native enzymatic activity by subverting mechanistic
fidelity.
The enzymatic agent of hedgehog protein cholesterolysis accommodates substrate sterols with undersized, oversized and distorted ring systems relative to cholesterol.
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