Hijacking DNA methyltransferase transition state analogues to produce chemical scaffolds for prmt inhibitors

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Abstract

DNA, RNA and histone methylation is implicated in various human diseases such as cancer or viral infections, playing a major role in cell process regulation, especially in modulation of gene expression. Here we developed a convergent synthetic pathway starting from a protected bromomethylcytosine derivative to synthesize transition state analogues of the DNA methyltransferases. This approach led to seven 5-methylcytosine-adenosine compounds that were, surprisingly, inactive against hDNMT1, hDNMT3Acat, TRDMT1 and other RNA human and viral methyltransferases. Interestingly, compound 4 and its derivative 2 showed an inhibitory activity against PRMT4 in the micromolar range. Crystal structures showed that compound 4 binds to the PRMT4 active site, displacing strongly the S-adenosyl-L-methionine cofactor, occupying its binding site, and interacting with the arginine substrate site through the cytosine moiety that probes the space filled by a substrate peptide methylation intermediate. Furthermore, the binding of the compounds induces important structural switches. These findings open new routes for the conception of new potent PRMT4 inhibitors based on the 5-methylcytosine-adenosine scaffold.

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APA

Halby, L., Marechal, N., Pechalrieu, D., Cura, V., Franchini, D. M., Faux, C., … Arimondo, P. B. (2018). Hijacking DNA methyltransferase transition state analogues to produce chemical scaffolds for prmt inhibitors. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 373(1748). https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2017.0072

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