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Gatorbulin-1, a distinct cyclodepsipeptide chemotype, targets a seventh tubulin pharmacological site.


ABSTRACT: Tubulin-targeted chemotherapy has proven to be a successful and wide spectrum strategy against solid and liquid malignancies. Therefore, new ways to modulate this essential protein could lead to new antitumoral pharmacological approaches. Currently known tubulin agents bind to six distinct sites at α/β-tubulin either promoting microtubule stabilization or depolymerization. We have discovered a seventh binding site at the tubulin intradimer interface where a novel microtubule-destabilizing cyclodepsipeptide, termed gatorbulin-1 (GB1), binds. GB1 has a unique chemotype produced by a marine cyanobacterium. We have elucidated this dual, chemical and mechanistic, novelty through multidimensional characterization, starting with bioactivity-guided natural product isolation and multinuclei NMR-based structure determination, revealing the modified pentapeptide with a functionally critical hydroxamate group; and validation by total synthesis. We have investigated the pharmacology using isogenic cancer cell screening, cellular profiling, and complementary phenotypic assays, and unveiled the underlying molecular mechanism by in vitro biochemical studies and high-resolution structural determination of the α/β-tubulin-GB1 complex.

SUBMITTER: Matthew S 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC7936326 | biostudies-literature | 2021 Mar

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Gatorbulin-1, a distinct cyclodepsipeptide chemotype, targets a seventh tubulin pharmacological site.

Matthew Susan S   Chen Qi-Yin QY   Ratnayake Ranjala R   Fermaintt Charles S CS   Lucena-Agell Daniel D   Bonato Francesca F   Prota Andrea E AE   Lim Seok Ting ST   Wang Xiaomeng X   Díaz J Fernando JF   Risinger April L AL   Paul Valerie J VJ   Oliva Maria Ángela MÁ   Luesch Hendrik H  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20210301 9


Tubulin-targeted chemotherapy has proven to be a successful and wide spectrum strategy against solid and liquid malignancies. Therefore, new ways to modulate this essential protein could lead to new antitumoral pharmacological approaches. Currently known tubulin agents bind to six distinct sites at α/β-tubulin either promoting microtubule stabilization or depolymerization. We have discovered a seventh binding site at the tubulin intradimer interface where a novel microtubule-destabilizing cyclod  ...[more]

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