1. Academic Validation
  2. Biochemical and structural basis for the pharmacological inhibition of nuclear hormone receptor PPARγ by inverse agonists

Biochemical and structural basis for the pharmacological inhibition of nuclear hormone receptor PPARγ by inverse agonists

  • J Biol Chem. 2022 Nov;298(11):102539. doi: 10.1016/j.jbc.2022.102539.
Sean Irwin 1 Craig Karr 1 Craig Furman 1 Jennifer Tsai 1 Patricia Gee 1 Deepti Banka 1 Ardian S Wibowo 2 Alexey A Dementiev 2 Morgan O'Shea 1 Joyce Yang 1 Jason Lowe 1 Lorna Mitchell 1 Sabine Ruppel 1 Peter Fekkes 1 Ping Zhu 1 Manav Korpal 1 Nicholas A Larsen 3
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Department of Drug Discovery, H3 Biomedicine, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA.
  • 2 Shamrock Structures, LLC, Illinois, USA.
  • 3 Department of Drug Discovery, H3 Biomedicine, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA. Electronic address: nick.a.larsen@gmail.com.
Abstract

Recent studies have reported that the Peroxisome Proliferator-activated Receptor gamma (PPARγ) pathway is activated in approximately 40% of patients with muscle-invasive bladder Cancer. This led us to investigate pharmacological repression of PPARγ as a possible intervention strategy. Here, we characterize PPARγ antagonists and inverse agonists and find that the former behave as silent ligands, whereas inverse agonists (T0070907 and SR10221) repress downstream PPARγ target genes leading to growth inhibition in bladder Cancer cell lines. To understand the mechanism, we determined the ternary crystal structure of PPARγ bound to T0070907 and the corepressor (co-R) peptide NCOR1. The structure shows that the AF-2 helix 12 (H12) rearranges to bind inside the ligand-binding domain, where it forms stabilizing interactions with the compound. This dramatic movement in H12 unveils a large interface for co-R binding. In contrast, the crystal structure of PPARγ bound to a SR10221 analog shows more subtle structural differences, where the compound binds and pushes H12 away from the ligand-binding domain to allow co-R binding. Interestingly, we found that both classes of compound promote recruitment of co-R proteins in biochemical assays but with distinct conformational changes in H12. We validate our structural models using both site-directed mutagenesis and chemical probes. Our findings offer new mechanistic insights into pharmacological modulation of PPARγ signaling.

Keywords

cancer biology; chemical biology; crystal structure; drug design; peroxisome proliferator–activated receptor.

Figures
Products
  • Cat. No.
    Product Name
    Description
    Target
    Research Area
  • HY-150308
    98.96%, PPARγ反向激动剂