Department of Biotechnology
inStem (Institute for Stem Cell Science and Regenerative Medicine)

Targeting Phosphopeptide Recognition by the Human BRCA1 Tandem BRCT Domain to Interrupt BRCA1-Dependent Signaling.

Publication Type

Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Date of Publication

June 21, 2018

Journal

Cell chemical biology

Volume/Issue

25/6

ISSN

2451-9448

Intracellular signals triggered by DNA breakage flow through proteins containing BRCT (BRCA1 C-terminal) domains. This family, comprising 23 conserved phosphopeptide-binding modules in man, is inaccessible to small-molecule chemical inhibitors. Here, we develop Bractoppin, a drug-like inhibitor of phosphopeptide recognition by the human BRCA1 tandem (t)BRCT domain, which selectively inhibits substrate binding with nanomolar potency in vitro. Structure-activity exploration suggests that Bractoppin engages BRCA1 tBRCT residues recognizing pSer in the consensus motif, pSer-Pro-Thr-Phe, plus an abutting hydrophobic pocket that is distinct in structurally related BRCT domains, conferring selectivity. In cells, Bractoppin inhibits substrate recognition detected by Förster resonance energy transfer, and diminishes BRCA1 recruitment to DNA breaks, in turn suppressing damage-induced G2 arrest and assembly of the recombinase, RAD51. But damage-induced MDC1 recruitment, single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) generation, and TOPBP1 recruitment remain unaffected. Thus, an inhibitor of phosphopeptide recognition selectively interrupts BRCA1 tBRCT-dependent signals evoked by DNA damage.

Alternate Journal

Cell Chem Biol

PubMed ID

29606576

PubMed Central ID

PMC6015222

Authors

Jayaprakash Periasamy
Vadiraj Kurdekar
Subbarao Jasti
Mamatha B Nijaguna
Sanjana Boggaram
Manjunath A Hurakadli
Dhruv Raina
Lokavya Meenakshi Kurup
Chetan Chintha
Kavyashree Manjunath
Aneesh Goyal
Gayathri Sadasivam
Kavitha Bharatham
Muralidhara Padigaru
Vijay Potluri
Ashok R Venkitaraman

Keywords

Phosphopeptides
Cells, Cultured
Structure-Activity Relationship
Molecular Structure
Protein Domains
Cell Survival
Signal Transduction
BRCA1 Protein
Molecular Dynamics Simulation
Humans
Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer
HEK293 Cells