AI Article Synopsis

  • - The human transcription factor TFIIH is a complex made up of 10 subunits, with the small subunit p8 playing a crucial role in its stability and function in transcription and DNA repair.
  • - p8 can form different structures (homodimeric and heterodimeric) that affect how well TFIIH operates, and its absence diminishes overall transcription activity, suggesting its dimerization could be a target for cancer therapy.
  • - Researchers discovered small-molecule compounds that disrupt p8 dimerization, leading to reduced levels of TFIIH and transcriptional activity, providing a basis for further drug development aimed at regulating transcription in cancer cells.

Article Abstract

The human transcription factor TFIIH is a large complex composed of 10 subunits that form an intricate network of protein-protein interactions critical for regulating its transcriptional and DNA repair activities. The trichothiodystrophy group A protein (TTD-A or p8) is the smallest TFIIH subunit, shuttling between a free and a TFIIH-bound state. Its dimerization properties allow it to shift from a homodimeric state, in the absence of a functional partner, to a heterodimeric structure, enabling dynamic binding to TFIIH. Recruitment of p8 at TFIIH stabilizes the overall architecture of the complex, whereas p8's absence reduces its cellular steady-state concentration and consequently decreases basal transcription, highlighting that p8 dimerization may be an attractive target for down-regulating transcription in cancer cells. Here, using a combination of molecular dynamics simulations to study p8 conformational stability and a >3000-member library of chemical fragments, we identified small-molecule compounds that bind to the dimerization interface of p8 and provoke its destabilization, as assessed by biophysical studies. Using quantitative imaging of TFIIH in living mouse cells, we found that these molecules reduce the intracellular concentration of TFIIH and its transcriptional activity to levels similar to that observed in individuals with trichothiodystrophy owing to mutated Our results provide a proof of concept of fragment-based drug discovery, demonstrating the utility of small molecules for targeting p8 dimerization to modulate the transcriptional machinery, an approach that may help inform further development in anticancer therapies.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6166727PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.RA118.003444DOI Listing

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