학술논문

Assigning functionality to cysteines by base editing of cancer dependency genes
Document Type
article
Source
Nature Chemical Biology. 19(11)
Subject
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Bioinformatics and Computational Biology
Biological Sciences
Genetics
Biotechnology
Cancer
Underpinning research
1.1 Normal biological development and functioning
Generic health relevance
Humans
Cysteine
Proteomics
Gene Editing
Proteome
Neoplasms
Nuclear Proteins
Medicinal and Biomolecular Chemistry
Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
Biochemistry and cell biology
Medicinal and biomolecular chemistry
Language
Abstract
Covalent chemistry represents an attractive strategy for expanding the ligandability of the proteome, and chemical proteomics has revealed numerous electrophile-reactive cysteines on diverse human proteins. Determining which of these covalent binding events affect protein function, however, remains challenging. Here we describe a base-editing strategy to infer the functionality of cysteines by quantifying the impact of their missense mutation on cancer cell proliferation. The resulting atlas, which covers more than 13,800 cysteines on more than 1,750 cancer dependency proteins, confirms the essentiality of cysteines targeted by covalent drugs and, when integrated with chemical proteomic data, identifies essential, ligandable cysteines in more than 160 cancer dependency proteins. We further show that a stereoselective and site-specific ligand targeting an essential cysteine in TOE1 inhibits the nuclease activity of this protein through an apparent allosteric mechanism. Our findings thus describe a versatile method and valuable resource to prioritize the pursuit of small-molecule probes with high function-perturbing potential.