Chemoproteomic Profiling of C. albicans for Characterization of Anti-fungal Kinase Inhibitors

Avatar
Poster
Voice is AI-generated
Connected to paperThis paper is a preprint and has not been certified by peer review

Chemoproteomic Profiling of C. albicans for Characterization of Anti-fungal Kinase Inhibitors

Authors

Shirley, D. J.; Nandakumar, M.; Cabrera, A.; Yiu, B.; Puumala, E.; Liu, Z.; Robbins, N.; Whitesell, L.; Smith, J. L.; Lyons, S. P.; Mordant, A. L.; Herring, L. E.; Graves, L. M.; Counago, R. L. M.; Drewry, D. H.; Cowen, L. E.; Willson, T. M.

Abstract

Candida albicans is a growing health concern as the leading causal agent of systemic candidiasis, a life-threatening fungal infection with a mortality rate of ~40% despite best available therapy. Yck2, a fungal casein kinase 1 (CK1) family member, is the cellular target of inhibitors YK-I-02 (YK) and MN-I-157 (MN). Here, multiplexed inhibitor beads paired with mass spectrometry (MIB/MS) employing ATP-competitive kinase inhibitors were used to define the selectivity of these Yck2 inhibitors across the global C. albicans proteome. The MIB matrix captured 89% of the known and predicted C. albicans protein kinases present in cell lysate. In MIB/MS competition assays, YK and MN demonstrated exquisite selectivity across the C. albicans fungal kinome with target engagement of only three CK1 homologs (Yck2, Yck22, and Hrr25) and a homolog of human p38 (Hog1). Additional chemoproteomics using a custom MN-kinobead identified only one additional C. albicans protein, confirming its remarkable fungal proteome-wide selectivity. To identify new Yck2 inhibitors with selectivity over Hog1, thirteen human CK1 kinase inhibitors were profiled for fungal kinase-binding activity using MIB/MS competition assays and in-cell NanoBRET target engagement assays. A new chemotype of family-selective Yck2 inhibitors with antifungal activity was identified. Together, these findings expand the application of MIB/MS proteomic profiling for non-human kinomes and demonstrate its utility in the discovery and development of selective inhibitors of fungal kinases with potential antimicrobial activity.

Follow Us on

0 comments

Add comment