Development of Substrate-Derived Sirtuin Inhibitors with Potential Anticancer Activity.

ChemMedChem

Institute for Genetics and Cologne Excellence Cluster on Cellular Stress Responses in Aging-Associated Diseases, CECAD, University of Cologne, Joseph-Stelzmann-Str. 26, 50931, Cologne, Germany.

Published: October 2017

RhoGDIα is a key regulator of Rho proteins, coordinating their GTP/GDP and membrane/cytosol cycle. Recently, it was demonstrated by quantitative mass spectrometry that RhoGDIα is heavily targeted by post-translational lysine acetylation. For one site in its N-terminal domain, namely K52, we reported earlier that acetylation completely switches off RhoGDIα function. Herein we show that K52-acetylated RhoGDIα is specifically deacetylated by the sirtuin deacetylase Sirt2. We show that acetylation at K52 decelerates cervical cancer cell proliferation, suggesting RhoGDIα acetylation to be a promising therapeutic target. We demonstrate that treatment of cervical cancer cells with a RhoGDIα-derived K52-trifluoroacetylated, substrate-derived peptidic sirtuin inhibitor severely impairs cell proliferation. Finally, we conclude that the potency of substrate-derived sirtuin inhibitors depends on structural features, the substrate-derived amino acid sequence as a determinant for selectivity, as well as the presence of an acetyl-lysine analogue to increase its potency. These data reveal a prospective therapeutic potential for novel substrate-derived sirtuin inhibitors.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cmdc.201700414DOI Listing

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