4.8 Article

Chemically targeting the redox switch in AP1 transcription factor ΔFOSB

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 50, Issue 16, Pages 9548-9567

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkac710

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH/NIDA [R01DA040621, P01DA047233]
  2. Sealy Center for Structural Biology and Molecular Biophysics (SCSB) at UTMB
  3. Cancer Prevention Research Institute of Texas (CPRIT) [RP190682, RP150578]
  4. Stuart & Suzanne Steele MGH Research Scholars Program
  5. Jeane B. Kempner Fellowship Program
  6. UTMB Center for Addiction Research Predoctoral Fellowship [NIDA] [T32 DA 07287]
  7. John D. Stobo, M.D. Distinguished Chair Endowment Fund

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The AP1 transcription factor Delta FOSB, a splice variant of FOSB, accumulates in the brain in response to chronic insults and mediates subsequent long-term neuroadaptations. The structural basis of its redox switch has been revealed, providing potential targets for modulating its biological functions.
The AP1 transcription factor Delta FOSB, a splice variant of FOSB, accumulates in the brain in response to chronic insults such as exposure to drugs of abuse, depression, Alzheimer's disease and tardive dyskinesias, and mediates subsequent long-term neuroadaptations. Delta FOSB forms heterodimers with other AP1 transcription factors, e.g. JUND, that bind DNA under control of a putative cysteine-based redox switch. Here, we reveal the structural basis of the redox switch by determining a key missing crystal structure in a trio, the Delta FOSB/JUND bZIP domains in the reduced, DNA-free form. Screening a cysteine-focused library containing 3200 thiol-reactive compounds, we identify specific compounds that target the redox switch, validate their activity biochemically and in cell-based assays, and show that they are well tolerated in different cell lines despite their general potential to bind to cysteines covalently. A crystal structure of the Delta FOSB/JUND bZIP domains in complex with a redox-switch-targeting compound reveals a deep compound-binding pocket near the DNA-binding site. We demonstrate that Delta FOSB, and potentially other, related AP1 transcription factors, can be targeted specifically and discriminately by exploiting unique structural features such as the redox switch and the binding partner to modulate biological function despite these proteins previously being thought to be undruggable.

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