Small-Molecule Covalent Modification of Conserved Cysteine Leads to Allosteric Inhibition of the TEAD_Yap Protein-Protein Interaction

Abstract

The Hippo pathway coordinates extracellular signals onto the control of tissue homeostasis and organ size. Hippo signaling primarily regulates the ability of Yap1 to bind and co-activate TEA domain (TEAD) transcription factors. Yap1 tightly binds to TEAD4 via a large flat interface, making the development of small-molecule orthosteric inhibitors highly challenging. Here, we report small-molecule TEAD⋅Yap inhibitors that rapidly and selectively form a covalent bond with a conserved cysteine located within the unique deep hydrophobic palmitate-binding pocket of TEADs. Inhibition of TEAD4 binding to Yap1 by these compounds was irreversible and occurred on a longer time scale. In mammalian cells, the compounds formed a covalent complex with TEAD4, inhibited its binding to Yap1, blocked its transcriptional activity, and suppressed expression of connective tissue growth factor. The compounds inhibited cell viability of patient-derived glioblastoma spheroids, making them suitable as chemical probes to explore Hippo signaling in cancer.

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Bum-Erdene, Khuchtumur, et al. "Small-Molecule Covalent Modification of Conserved Cysteine Leads to Allosteric Inhibition of the TEAD_Yap Protein-Protein Interaction." Cell Chemical Biology, vol. 26, no. 3, 2019-03-21, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chembiol.2018.11.010.

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Cell Chemical Biology

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