Antonio L Figueroa Bietti, Alisa-Maite A Kauth, Katrin Hommel, Mike Blueggel, Laurenz Mohr, Felix C Niemeyer, Christine Beuck, Peter Bayer, Shirley K Knauer, Bart Jan Ravoo, Thomas Schrader
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Light serves as an exceptional stimulus for the precise spatiotemporal regulation of protein activity and protein-protein interactions. Here, we introduce a light-responsive supramolecular ligand system designed to modulate Taspase 1, a protease critical for embryogenesis and implicated in tumor progression. Our approach utilizes photoswitchable divalent molecular tweezers engineered to target lysine-rich regions within the Taspase 1 loop. By incorporating arylazopyrazole (AAP) photoswitches, we achieve dynamic and reversible control of ligand binding. These photoswitches exhibit high photostationary states, excellent reversibility, and prolonged thermal stability of the Z isomer, ensuring reliable switching without photodegradation. The tweezer distance varies between E and Z isomers, enabling tunable binding interactions. Through a combination of surface plasmon resonance, enzymatic cleavage assays, and molecular dynamics simulations, we demonstrate that these ligands bind Taspase 1 with low micromolar affinity and effectively inhibit its proteolytic activity. While isomerization did not significantly affect the inhibition of protein-protein interaction, the E-isomers of larger tweezers exhibited powerful enzyme inhibition, likely due to their ability to bridge lysines flanking the active site. This photoswitchable tweezer system provides a versatile tool for light-controlled modulation of protein function, offering new opportunities for selectively targeting lysine-rich proteins in dynamic biological environments.