Computational and Experimental Druggability Assessment of Human DNA Glycosylases

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Abstract

Due to a polar or even charged binding interface, DNA-binding proteins are considered extraordinarily difficult targets for development of small-molecule ligands and only a handful of proteins have been targeted successfully to date. Recently, however, it has been shown that development of selective and efficient inhibitors of 8-oxoguanine DNA glycosylase is possible. Here, we describe the initial druggability assessment of DNA glycosylases in a computational setting and experimentally investigate several methods to target endonuclease VIII-like 1 (NEIL1) with small-molecule inhibitors. We find that DNA glycosylases exhibit good predicted druggability in both DNA-bound and-unbound states. Furthermore, we find catalytic sites to be highly flexible, allowing for a range of interactions and binding partners. One flexible catalytic site was rationalized for NEIL1 and further investigated experimentally using both a biochemical assay in the presence of DNA and a thermal shift assay in the absence of DNA.

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Michel, M., Visnes, T., Homan, E. J., Seashore-Ludlow, B., Hedenström, M., Wiita, E., … Helleday, T. (2019). Computational and Experimental Druggability Assessment of Human DNA Glycosylases. ACS Omega, 4(7), 11642–11656. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.9b00162

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