An allosteric MALT1 inhibitor is a molecular corrector rescuing function in an immunodeficient patient

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Abstract

MALT1 paracaspase is central for lymphocyte antigen-dependent responses including NF-κB activation. We discovered nanomolar, selective allosteric inhibitors of MALT1 that bind by displacing the side chain of Trp580, locking the protease in an inactive conformation. Interestingly, we had previously identified a patient homozygous for a MALT1 Trp580-to-serine mutation who suffered from combined immunodeficiency. We show that the loss of tryptophan weakened interactions between the paracaspase and C-terminal immunoglobulin MALT1 domains resulting in protein instability, reduced protein levels and functions. Upon binding of allosteric inhibitors of increasing potency, we found proportionate increased stabilization of MALT1-W580S to reach that of wild-type MALT1. With restored levels of stable MALT1 protein, the most potent of the allosteric inhibitors rescued NF-κB and JNK signaling in patient lymphocytes. Following compound washout, MALT1 substrate cleavage was partly recovered. Thus, a molecular corrector rescues an enzyme deficiency by substituting for the mutated residue, inspiring new potential precision therapies to increase mutant enzyme activity in other deficiencies.

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Quancard, J., Klein, T., Fung, S. Y., Renatus, M., Hughes, N., Israël, L., … Overall, C. M. (2019). An allosteric MALT1 inhibitor is a molecular corrector rescuing function in an immunodeficient patient. Nature Chemical Biology, 15(3), 304–313. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41589-018-0222-1

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