Constrained TACC3 peptidomimetics for a non-canonical protein-protein interface elucidate allosteric communication in Aurora-A Kinase

09 September 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Peptidomimetic design for non-canonical interfaces is less well established than for α-helix and β-strand mediated protein-protein interactions. Using the TACC3/Aurora-A kinase interaction as a model, we developed a series of constrained TACC3 peptide variants with 10-fold increased binding potencies (Kd) towards Aurora-A in comparison to the parent peptide. High-affinity is achieved in part by restricting the accessible conformational ensemble of the peptide leading to a more favourable entropy of binding. In addition to acting as potent orthosteric TACC3/Aurora-A inhibitors, these peptidomimetics were shown to activate the kinase and inhibit the N-Myc/Aurora-A interaction at a distal site. Thus, the potency of these tools uniquely allowed us to unveil new insight into the role of allosteric communication in the kinase.

Keywords

protein-protein interactions
Aurora-A
peptidomimetics
intrinsically disordered protesin

Supplementary materials

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Supporting Information
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Additional Data Figures, Experimental Procedures and Characterization Data
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