DOI

  • Sarah Picaud
  • Katharina Leonards
  • Jean Philippe Lambert
  • Oliver Dovey
  • Christopher Wells
  • Oleg Fedorov
  • Octovia Monteiro
  • Takao Fujisawa
  • Chen Yi Wang
  • Hannah Lingard
  • Cynthia Tallant
  • Nikzad Nikbin
  • Lucie Guetzoyan
  • Richard Ingham
  • Steven V. Ley
  • Paul Brennan
  • Susanne Muller
  • Anne Claude Gingras
  • Juerg Schwaller
  • George Vassiliou
  • Stefan Knapp
  • Panagis Filippakopoulos

Bromodomains (BRDs) have emerged as compelling targets for cancer therapy. The development of selective and potent BET (bromo and extra-Terminal) inhibitors and their significant activity in diverse tumor models have rapidly translated into clinical studies and have motivated drug development efforts targeting non-BET BRDs. However, the complexmultidomain/subunit architecture of BRD protein complexes complicates predictions of the consequences of their pharmacological targeting. To address this issue, we developed a promiscuous BRD inhibitor [bromosporine (BSP)] that broadly targets BRDs (including BETs) with nanomolar affinity, creating a tool for the identification of cellular processes and diseases where BRDs have a regulatory function. As a proof of principle, we studied the effects of BSP on leukemic cell lines known to be sensitive to BET inhibition and found, as expected, strong antiproliferative activity. Comparison of the modulation of transcriptional profiles by BSP after a short exposure to the inhibitor resulted in a BET inhibitor signature but no significant additional changes in transcription that could account for inhibition of other BRDs. Thus, nonselective targeting of BRDs identified BETs, but not other BRDs, as master regulators of contextdependent primary transcription response.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere1600760
JournalScience advances
Volume2
Issue number10
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Oct 2016

    Scopus subject areas

  • General

ID: 34102285