4.6 Article

Ligands for Glaucoma-Associated Myocilin Discovered by a Generic Binding Assay

Journal

ACS CHEMICAL BIOLOGY
Volume 9, Issue 2, Pages 517-525

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/cb4007776

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [R01EY021205, R01NS073899]
  2. Pew Scholar in Biomedical Sciences program
  3. BrightFocus [G2012071]
  4. U.S. Department of Education Graduate Assistance in Areas of National Need [P200A060188]
  5. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship [DGE-1148903]
  6. Georgia Tech Presidential Fellowship
  7. Sam Nunn Security Fellowship
  8. Georgia Tech Presidential Undergraduate Research Award
  9. Merck

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Mutations in the olfactomedin domain of myocilin (myoc-OLF) are the strongest link to inherited primary open angle glaucoma. In this recently identified protein misfolding disorder, aggregation-prone disease variants of myocilin hasten glaucoma-associated elevation of intraocular pressure, leading to vision loss. Despite its well-documented pathogenic role, myocilin remains a domain of unknown structure or function. Here we report the first small-molecule ligands that bind to the native state of myoc-OLF. To discover these molecules, we designed a general label-free, mix-and-measure, high throughput chemical assay for restabilization (CARS), which is likely readily adaptable to discover ligands for other proteins. Of the 14 hit molecules identified from screening myoc-OLF against the Sigma-Aldrich Library of Pharmacologically Active Compounds using CARS, surface plasmon resonance binding studies reveal three are stoichiometric ligand scaffolds with low micromolar affinity. Two compounds, GW5074 and apigenin, inhibit myoc-OLF amyloid formation in vitro. Structure activity relationship-based soluble derivatives reduce aggregation in vitro as well as enhance secretion of full-length mutant myocilin in a cell culture model. Our compounds set the stage for a new chemical probe approach to clarify the biological function of wild-type myocilin and represent lead therapeutic compounds for diminishing intracellular sequestration of toxic mutant myocilin.

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