4.5 Article

A synthetic small molecule stalls pre-mRNA splicing by promoting an early-stage U2AF2-RNA complex

Journal

CELL CHEMICAL BIOLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 8, Pages 1145-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.chembiol.2021.02.007

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [R01 GM070503, R01 GM122279]
  2. National Science Foundation (NSF) [CHE-1900050]
  3. UR Ventures
  4. Edward P. Evans Foundation
  5. NIH Director's Pioneer award [DP1 OD006779]
  6. Clinical and Translational Sciences (NCATS) award [UL1 TR001412]
  7. NCATS ASPIRE Design Challenge award
  8. NIH training grant [T32 GM08646]
  9. National Library of Medicine [T15 LM012495]
  10. NSF Major Research Instrumentation grant [CHE1725028]
  11. X-ray diffractometer

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This study identifies a compound that enhances RNA binding by the U2AF2 subunit and inhibits splicing of representative substrates, effectively killing cancer cells by stalling spliceosome assembly. The results suggest that trapping early spliceosome assembly could be an effective pharmacological approach for manipulating pre-mRNA splicing.
Dysregulated pre-mRNA splicing is an emerging Achilles heel of cancers and myelodysplasias. To expand the currently limited portfolio of small-molecule drug leads, we screened for chemical modulators of the U2AF complex, which nucleates spliceosome assembly and is mutated in myelodysplasias. A hit compound specifically enhances RNA binding by a U2AF2 subunit. Remarkably, the compound inhibits splicing of representative substrates and stalls spliceosome assembly at the stage of U2AF function. Computational docking, together with structure-guided mutagenesis, indicates that the compound bridges the tandem U2AF2 RNA recognition motifs via hydrophobic and electrostatic moieties. Cells expressing a cancer-associated U2AF1 mutant are preferentially killed by treatment with the compound. Altogether, our results highlight the potential of trapping early spliceosome assembly as an effective pharmacological means to manipulate pre-mRNA splicing. By extension, we suggest that stabilizing assembly intermediates may offer a useful approach for small-molecule inhibition of macromolecular machines.

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