4.8 Article

The Molecular Tweezer CLR01 Stabilizes a Disordered Protein-Protein Interface

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 139, Issue 45, Pages 16256-16263

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.7b07939

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Collaborative Research Centre 1093 - Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG)
  2. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research [024.001.035]
  3. VICI [016.150.366]
  4. Boehringer Ingelheim Foundation
  5. Cluster of Excellence RESOLV - DFG [EXC 1069]

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Protein regions that are involved in protein protein interactions (PPIs) very often display a high degree of intrinsic disorder, which is reduced during the recognition process. A prime example is binding of the rigid 14-3-3 adapter proteins to their numerous partner proteins, whose recognition motifs undergo an extensive disorder-to-order transition. In this context, it is highly desirable to control this entropy-costly process using tailored stabilizing agents. This study reveals how the molecular tweezer CLR01 tunes the 14-3-3/Cdc25CpS216 protein protein interaction. Protein crystallography, biophysical affinity determination and biomolecular simulations unanimously deliver a remarkable finding: a supramolecular Janus ligand can bind simultaneously to a flexible peptidic PPI recognition motif and to a well-structured adapter protein. This binding fills a gap in the protein-protein interface, freezes one of the conformational states of the intrinsically disordered Cdc25C protein partner and enhances the apparent affinity of the interaction. This is the first structural and functional proof of a supramolecular ligand targeting a PPI interface and stabilizing the binding of an intrinsically disordered recognition motif to a rigid partner protein.

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