Preventing proteostasis diseases by selective inhibition of a phosphatase regulatory subunit

I Das, A Krzyzosiak, K Schneider, L Wrabetz… - Science, 2015 - science.org
I Das, A Krzyzosiak, K Schneider, L Wrabetz, M D'Antonio, N Barry, A Sigurdardottir…
Science, 2015science.org
Protein phosphorylation regulates virtually all biological processes. Although protein
kinases are popular drug targets, targeting protein phosphatases remains a challenge.
Here, we describe Sephin1 (selective inhibitor of a holophosphatase), a small molecule that
safely and selectively inhibited a regulatory subunit of protein phosphatase 1 in vivo.
Sephin1 selectively bound and inhibited the stress-induced PPP1R15A, but not the related
and constitutive PPP1R15B, to prolong the benefit of an adaptive phospho-signaling …
Protein phosphorylation regulates virtually all biological processes. Although protein kinases are popular drug targets, targeting protein phosphatases remains a challenge. Here, we describe Sephin1 (selective inhibitor of a holophosphatase), a small molecule that safely and selectively inhibited a regulatory subunit of protein phosphatase 1 in vivo. Sephin1 selectively bound and inhibited the stress-induced PPP1R15A, but not the related and constitutive PPP1R15B, to prolong the benefit of an adaptive phospho-signaling pathway, protecting cells from otherwise lethal protein misfolding stress. In vivo, Sephin1 safely prevented the motor, morphological, and molecular defects of two otherwise unrelated protein-misfolding diseases in mice, Charcot-Marie-Tooth 1B, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Thus, regulatory subunits of phosphatases are drug targets, a property exploited here to safely prevent two protein misfolding diseases.
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