4.1 Article

In Vitro Ubiquitination Platform Identifies Methyl Ellipticiniums as Ubiquitin Ligase Inhibitors

Journal

SLAS DISCOVERY
Volume 26, Issue 7, Pages 870-884

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1177/24725552211000675

Keywords

CBL; ubiquitin ligase; inhibitor; high throughput; E3

Funding

  1. Intramural Research Program of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), National Cancer Institute, Center for Cancer Research
  2. National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health [HHSN261200800001E]

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The ubiquitination process is crucial for regulating cell function, with dysregulation linked to various diseases. CBLB, a pivotal ubiquitin ligase, plays a key role in immune and growth signaling pathways, and its loss enhances antitumor immunity. Inhibition of CBLB activity, potentially through natural product-based alkaloids, could have therapeutic implications for enhancing antitumor immunity.
The transfer of the small protein ubiquitin to a target protein is an intricately orchestrated process called ubiquitination that results in modulation of protein function or stability. Proper regulation of ubiquitination is essential, and dysregulation of this process is implicated in several human diseases. An example of a ubiquitination cascade that is a central signaling node in important disease-associated pathways is that of CBLB [a human homolog of a viral oncogene Casitas B-lineage lymphoma (CBL) from the Cas NS-1 murine retrovirus], a RING finger ubiquitin ligase (E3) whose substrates include a number of important cell-signaling kinases. These include kinases important in immune function that act in the T cell receptor and costimulatory pathways, the Tyro/Axl/MerTK (TAM) receptor family in natural killer (NK) cells, as well as growth factor receptor kinases like epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR). Loss of CBLB has been shown to increase innate and adaptive antitumor immunity. This suggests that small-molecule modulation of CBLB E3 activity could enhance antitumor immunity in patients. To explore the hypothesis that enzymatic inhibition of E3s may result in modulation of disease-related signaling pathways, we established a high-throughput screen of >70,000 chemical entities for inhibition of CBLB activity. Although CBLB was chosen as a proof-of-principle target for inhibitor discovery, we demonstrate that our assay is generalizable to monitoring the activity of other ubiquitin ligases. We further extended our observed in vitro inhibition with additional cell-based models of CBLB activity. From these studies, we demonstrate that a class of natural product-based alkaloids, known as methyl ellipticiniums (MEs), is capable of inhibiting ubiquitin ligases intracellularly.

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