Chemical tools to expand the ligandable proteome: diversity-oriented synthesis-based photoreactive stereoprobes
Chemical tools to expand the ligandable proteome: diversity-oriented synthesis-based photoreactive stereoprobes
Ogasawara, D.; Konrad, D.; Tan, Z. Y.; Carey, K.; Luo, J.; Won, S. J.; Li, H.; Carter, T.; DeMeester, K.; Njomen, E.; Schreiber, S.; Xavier, R.; Melillo, B.; Cravatt, B.
AbstractChemical proteomics enables the global assessment of small molecule-protein interactions in native biological systems and has emerged as a versatile approach for ligand discovery. The range of small molecules explored by chemical proteomics has, however, been limited. Here, we describe a diversity-oriented synthesis (DOS)-inspired library of stereochemically-defined compounds bearing diazirine and alkyne units for UV light-induced covalent modification and click chemistry enrichment of interacting proteins, respectively. We find that these photo-stereoprobes interact in a stereoselective manner with hundreds of proteins from various structural and functional classes in human cells and demonstrate that these interactions can form the basis for high-throughput screening-compatible nanoBRET assays. Integrated phenotypic analysis and chemical proteomics identified photo-stereoprobes that modulate autophagy by engaging the mitochondrial serine protease CLPP. Our findings show the utility of photo-stereoprobes for expanding the ligandable proteome, furnishing target engagement assays, and discovering and characterizing bioactive small molecules by cell-based screening.