Abstract
Photoaffinity-based chemical proteomic (chemoproteomic) methods have emerged as a powerful means for proteome-wide mapping of ligandable proteins directly in cells as well as the concatenate discovery of small molecule chemical probes. However, due to the relatively low throughput of screening small molecule libraries by proteomics and the synthetic burden incurred in installing the requisite photoactivatable functionality on each member, great priority must be placed on library design to maximize efficient exploration of biologically-relevant chemical space and to ensure the identification of authentic binding interactions. To address this challenge, here we leverage the inherent complexity of natural products (NPs) to access structurally unique series of diastereo/regioisomeric photoaffinity probes for ligand discovery in cells. Through semi-synthesis we exploit sp3-rich NP scaffolds and employ mass spectrometry-based chemoproteomics to identify and quantify their interactions in human cells, uncovering topology, regio-, and stereoselective ligands for functionally diverse proteins that currently lack reported chemical probes. Collectively, our findings highlight the potential of NP-inspired chemoproteomic libraries to expand the boundaries of the ligandable proteome.
Supplementary materials
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Supplemental Information
Description
Contains all supplemental figures, experimental methods and compound characterization
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Supplemental Dataset 1
Description
Reagent lists and chemoinformatic analyses
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Supplemental Dataset 2
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Proteomics data
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