Structural complementarity facilitates E7820-mediated degradation of RBM39 by DCAF15

TB Faust, H Yoon, RP Nowak, KA Donovan, Z Li… - Nature chemical …, 2020 - nature.com
TB Faust, H Yoon, RP Nowak, KA Donovan, Z Li, Q Cai, NA Eleuteri, T Zhang, NS Gray
Nature chemical biology, 2020nature.com
The investigational drugs E7820, indisulam and tasisulam (aryl-sulfonamides) promote the
degradation of the splicing factor RBM39 in a proteasome-dependent mechanism. While the
activity critically depends on the cullin RING ligase substrate receptor DCAF15, the
molecular details remain elusive. Here we present the cryo-EM structure of the DDB1–
DCAF15–DDA1 core ligase complex bound to RBM39 and E7820 at a resolution of 4.4 Å,
together with crystal structures of engineered subcomplexes. We show that DCAF15 adopts …
Abstract
The investigational drugs E7820, indisulam and tasisulam (aryl-sulfonamides) promote the degradation of the splicing factor RBM39 in a proteasome-dependent mechanism. While the activity critically depends on the cullin RING ligase substrate receptor DCAF15, the molecular details remain elusive. Here we present the cryo-EM structure of the DDB1–DCAF15–DDA1 core ligase complex bound to RBM39 and E7820 at a resolution of 4.4 Å, together with crystal structures of engineered subcomplexes. We show that DCAF15 adopts a new fold stabilized by DDA1, and that extensive protein–protein contacts between the ligase and substrate mitigate low affinity interactions between aryl-sulfonamides and DCAF15. Our data demonstrate how aryl-sulfonamides neo-functionalize a shallow, non-conserved pocket on DCAF15 to selectively bind and degrade RBM39 and the closely related splicing factor RBM23 without the requirement for a high-affinity ligand, which has broad implications for the de novo discovery of molecular glue degraders.
nature.com
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果