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LLY-507, a Cell-active, Potent, and Selective Inhibitor of Protein-lysine Methyltransferase SMYD2*

Authors :
Song Wu
Tatiana Shatseva
Dalia Barsyte-Lovejoy
Cheryl H. Arrowsmith
Li Fan
Laura A. Pelletier
Joseph R. Martin
Shawn Chang
Shichong Liu
S. Emtage
David Mendel
Carmen Curtis
Peter Brown
Jonathan B. Olsen
Masoud Vedadi
Abdellah Allali-Hassani
Hannah Nguyen
Stephen Antonysamy
Benjamin A. Garcia
Lisa Hong Chen
Fengling Li
Robert M. Campbell
Feiyu Fred Zhang
Mary M. Mader
Tarun Gheyi
Source :
The Journal of Biological Chemistry
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, 2015.

Abstract

Background: SMYD2 is a methyltransferase whose role in cancer is poorly understood and is lacking cell-active chemical tools. Results: We describe LLY-507, a small molecule inhibitor of SMYD2. Conclusion: LLY-507 is potent, selective, cell-active, and binds SMYD2 in a high resolution co-crystal. Significance: LLY-507 is a first-in-class cell-potent chemical probe that will be valuable in dissecting SMYD2 biology.<br />SMYD2 is a lysine methyltransferase that catalyzes the monomethylation of several protein substrates including p53. SMYD2 is overexpressed in a significant percentage of esophageal squamous primary carcinomas, and that overexpression correlates with poor patient survival. However, the mechanism(s) by which SMYD2 promotes oncogenesis is not understood. A small molecule probe for SMYD2 would allow for the pharmacological dissection of this biology. In this report, we disclose LLY-507, a cell-active, potent small molecule inhibitor of SMYD2. LLY-507 is >100-fold selective for SMYD2 over a broad range of methyltransferase and non-methyltransferase targets. A 1.63-Å resolution crystal structure of SMYD2 in complex with LLY-507 shows the inhibitor binding in the substrate peptide binding pocket. LLY-507 is active in cells as measured by reduction of SMYD2-induced monomethylation of p53 Lys370 at submicromolar concentrations. We used LLY-507 to further test other potential roles of SMYD2. Mass spectrometry-based proteomics showed that cellular global histone methylation levels were not significantly affected by SMYD2 inhibition with LLY-507, and subcellular fractionation studies indicate that SMYD2 is primarily cytoplasmic, suggesting that SMYD2 targets a very small subset of histones at specific chromatin loci and/or non-histone substrates. Breast and liver cancers were identified through in silico data mining as tumor types that display amplification and/or overexpression of SMYD2. LLY-507 inhibited the proliferation of several esophageal, liver, and breast cancer cell lines in a dose-dependent manner. These findings suggest that LLY-507 serves as a valuable chemical probe to aid in the dissection of SMYD2 function in cancer and other biological processes.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1083351X and 00219258
Volume :
290
Issue :
22
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Biological Chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4a8ef4709ee4bdc36f35ae771e3b2396