NMR Studies Reveal an
Unexpected Binding Site for a Redox Inhibitor of AP Endonuclease 1
Posted on 2011-12-06 - 00:00
AP endonuclease 1 (APE1) is a multifaceted protein with
essential roles in DNA repair and transcriptional regulation. APE1
(ref-1) activates many transcription factors (TF), including AP-1
and NF-κB. While the mechanism of APE1 redox activity remains
unknown, it may involve reduction of an oxidized Cys in the TF DNA-binding
domain. Several small molecules inhibit APE1-mediated TF activation,
including the quinone derivative E3330. It has been proposed some
inhibitors bind near C65, a residue suggested to be important for
TF activation, but the binding site has not been determined for any
inhibitor. Remarkably, NMR and molecular docking studies here reveal
E3330 binds in the DNA repair active site of APE1, far removed from
C65. Accordingly, AP endonuclease activity is substantially inhibited
by E3330 (100 μM), suggesting that E3330 may not selectively
inhibit APE1 redox activity in cells, in contrast with previous proposals.
A naphthoquinone analogue of E3330, RN7-60, binds a site removed from
both C65 and the repair active site. While a detailed understanding
of how these inhibitors work requires further studies into the mechanism
of redox activity, our results do not support proposals that E3330
binds selectively (and slowly) to locally unfolded APE1 or that E3330
promotes formation of disulfide bonds in APE1. Rather, we suggest
E3330 may suppress a conformational change needed for redox activity,
disrupt productive APE1-TF binding, or block the proposed redox chaperone
activity of APE1. Our results provide the first structural information
for any APE1 redox inhibitor and could facilitate development of improved
inhibitors for research and perhaps clinical purposes.
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Manvilla, Brittney
A.; Wauchope, Orrette; Seley-Radtke, Katherine L.; Drohat, Alexander C. (2016). NMR Studies Reveal an
Unexpected Binding Site for a Redox Inhibitor of AP Endonuclease 1. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/bi201071g