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9H-purine scaffold reveals induced-fit pocket plasticity of the BRD9 bromodomain

Abstract:
The 2-amine-9H-purine scaffold was identified as a weak bromodomain template and was developed via iterative structure based design into a potent nanomolar ligand for the bromodomain of human BRD9 with small residual micromolar affinity toward the bromodomain of BRD4. Binding of the lead compound 11 to the bromodomain of BRD9 results in an unprecedented rearrangement of residues forming the acetyllysine recognition site, affecting plasticity of the protein in an induced-fit pocket. The compound does not exhibit any cytotoxic effect in HEK293 cells and displaces the BRD9 bromodomain from chromatin in bioluminescence proximity assays without affecting the BRD4/histone complex. The 2-amine-9H-purine scaffold represents a novel template that can be further modified to yield highly potent and selective tool compounds to interrogate the biological role of BRD9 in diverse cellular systems.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MSD
Department:
NDM
Sub department:
Structural Genomics Consortium
Role:
Author


Publisher:
American Chemical Society
Journal:
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry More from this journal
Volume:
58
Issue:
6
Pages:
2718–2736
Publication date:
2015-02-22
DOI:
EISSN:
1520-4804
ISSN:
0022-2623


Language:
English
UUID:
uuid:42669dfb-2eea-4f14-b98c-6e2055ad7209
Deposit date:
2015-06-01
ARK identifier:

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