The authors characterized the inhibitor-bound TNF-receptor complex structurally and biochemically, demonstrating alterations in TNF-receptor binding stoichiometry and cluster formation, suggesting a new model for TNF signaling based on disrupted TNF-TNFR1 clusters by small molecule inhibitors.
Tumour necrosis factor (TNF) is a trimeric protein which signals through two membrane receptors, TNFR1 and TNFR2. Previously, we identified small molecules that inhibit human TNF by stabilising a distorted trimer and reduce the number of receptors bound to TNF from three to two. Here we present a biochemical and structural characterisation of the small molecule-stabilised TNF-TNFR1 complex, providing insights into how a distorted TNF trimer can alter signalling function. We demonstrate that the inhibitors reduce the binding affinity of TNF to the third TNFR1 molecule. In support of this, we show by X-ray crystallography that the inhibitor-bound, distorted, TNF trimer forms a complex with a dimer of TNFR1 molecules. This observation, along with data from a solution-based network assembly assay, leads us to suggest a model for TNF signalling based on TNF-TNFR1 clusters, which are disrupted by small molecule inhibitors. Small molecules stabilising a distorted TNF trimer can inhibit TNF signaling, but the underlying mechanism is unclear. Here, the authors characterize the inhibitor-bound TNF-receptor complex structurally and biochemically, showing that the inhibitors alter TNF-receptor binding stoichiometry and cluster formation.
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