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Time Resolved-Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer platform for quantitative nucleosome binding and footprinting.

In Protein Science : A Publication of the Protein Society on 1 June 2022 by Wesley, N. A., Skrajna, A., et al.

Quantitative analysis of chromatin protein-nucleosome interactions is essential to understand regulation of genome-templated processes. However, current methods to measure nucleosome interactions are limited by low throughput, low signal-to-noise, and/or the requirement for specialized instrumentation. Here, we report a Lanthanide Chelate Excite Time-Resolved Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer (LANCE TR-FRET) assay to efficiently quantify chromatin protein-nucleosome interactions. The system makes use of commercially available reagents, offers robust signal-to-noise with minimal sample requirements, uses a conventional fluorescence microplate reader, and can be adapted for high-throughput workflows. We determined the nucleosome-binding affinities of several chromatin proteins and complexes, which are consistent with measurements obtained through orthogonal biophysical methods. We also developed a TR-FRET competition assay for high-resolution footprinting of chromatin protein-nucleosome interactions. Finally, we set up a TR-FRET competition assay using the LANA peptide to quantitate nucleosome acidic patch binding. We applied this assay to establish a proof-of-principle for regulation of nucleosome acidic patch binding by methylation of chromatin protein arginine anchors. Overall, our TR-FRET assays allow facile, high-throughput quantification of chromatin interactions and are poised to complement mechanistic chromatin biochemistry, structural biology, and drug discovery programs.
© 2022 The Protein Society.

New class of HIV-1 integrase (IN) inhibitors with a dual mode of action.

In The Journal of Biological Chemistry on 15 June 2012 by Tsiang, M., Jones, G. S., et al.

tert-Butoxy-(4-phenyl-quinolin-3-yl)-acetic acids (tBPQA) are a new class of HIV-1 integrase (IN) inhibitors that are structurally distinct from IN strand transfer inhibitors but analogous to LEDGINs. LEDGINs are a class of potent antiviral compounds that interacts with the lens epithelium-derived growth factor (LEDGF) binding pocket on IN and were identified through competition binding against LEDGF. LEDGF tethers IN to the host chromatin and enables targeted integration of viral DNA. The prevailing understanding of the antiviral mechanism of LEDGINs is that they inhibit LEDGF binding to IN, which prevents targeted integration of HIV-1. We showed that in addition to the properties already known for LEDGINs, the binding of tBPQAs to the IN dimer interface inhibits IN enzymatic activity in a LEDGF-independent manner. Using the analysis of two long terminal repeat junctions in HIV-infected cells, we showed that the inhibition by tBPQAs occurs at or prior to the viral DNA 3'-processing step. Biochemical studies revealed that this inhibition operates by compound-induced conformational changes in the IN dimer that prevent proper assembly of IN onto viral DNA. For the first time, tBPQAs were demonstrated to be allosteric inhibitors of HIV-1 IN displaying a dual mode of action: inhibition of IN-viral DNA assembly and inhibition of IN-LEDGF interaction.

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