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Discovery of Potent and Selective Allosteric Inhibitors of Protein Arginine Methyltransferase 3 (PRMT3)
Author(s) -
H. Ümit Kanıskan,
Mohammad S. Eram,
Kehao Zhao,
Magdalena M. Szewczyk,
Xiaobao Yang,
Keith T. Schmidt,
Xiao Luo,
Sean Xiao,
Miao Dai,
Feng He,
Irene Zang,
Ying Lin,
Fengling Li,
E. Dobrovetsky,
David Smil,
SunJoon Min,
Jennifer LinJones,
Matthieu Schapira,
Peter Atadja,
En Li,
Dalia Baršytė-Lovejoy,
C.H. Arrowsmith,
Peter J. Brown,
Feng Liu,
Zhengtian Yu,
Masoud Vedadi,
Jian Jin
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of medicinal chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.01
H-Index - 261
eISSN - 1520-4804
pISSN - 0022-2623
DOI - 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.7b01674
Subject(s) - allosteric regulation , chemistry , structure–activity relationship , biochemistry , enzyme , arginine , drug discovery , chemical synthesis , stereochemistry , in vitro , amino acid
PRMT3 catalyzes the asymmetric dimethylation of arginine residues of various proteins. It is crucial for maturation of ribosomes and has been implicated in several diseases. We recently disclosed a highly potent, selective, and cell-active allosteric inhibitor of PRMT3, compound 4. Here, we report comprehensive structure-activity relationship studies that target the allosteric binding site of PRMT3. We conducted design, synthesis, and evaluation of novel compounds in biochemical, selectivity, and cellular assays that culminated in the discovery of 4 and other highly potent (IC 50 values: ∼10-36 nM), selective, and cell-active allosteric inhibitors of PRMT3 (compounds 29, 30, 36, and 37). In addition, we generated compounds that are very close analogs of these potent inhibitors but displayed drastically reduced potency as negative controls (compounds 49-51). These inhibitors and negative controls are valuable chemical tools for the biomedical community to further investigate biological functions and disease associations of PRMT3.

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