Nanomolar Affinity Small Molecule Correctors of Defective ΔF508-CFTR Chloride Channel Gating

Hong Yang(University of California, San Francisco), Anang A. Shelat(University of California, San Francisco), R. Kiplin Guy(University of California, San Francisco), Vadiraj S. Gopinath(University of California, San Francisco), Tonghui Ma(University of California, San Francisco), Kai Du(SickKids Foundation), Gergely L. Lukács(SickKids Foundation), Alessandro Taddei(Istituto Giannina Gaslini), Chiara Folli(Istituto Giannina Gaslini), Nicoletta Pedemonte(Istituto Giannina Gaslini), Luis J. V. Galietta(Istituto Giannina Gaslini), A. S. Verkman(University of California, San Francisco)
Journal of Biological Chemistry
September 1, 2003
Cited by 203Open Access
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Abstract

Deletion of Phe-508 (Delta F508) is the most common mutation in the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) causing cystic fibrosis. Delta F508-CFTR has defects in both channel gating and endoplasmic reticulum-to-plasma membrane processing. We identified six novel classes of high affinity potentiators of defective Delta F508-CFTR Cl- channel gating by screening 100,000 diverse small molecules. Compounds were added 15 min prior to assay of iodide uptake in epithelial cells co-expressing Delta F508-CFTR and a high sensitivity halide indicator (YFP-H148Q/I152L) in which Delta F508-CFTR was targeted to the plasma membrane by culture at 27 degrees C for 24 h. Thirty-two compounds with submicromolar activating potency were identified; most had tetrahydrobenzothiophene, benzofuran, pyramidinetrione, dihydropyridine, and anthraquinone core structures (360-480 daltons). Further screening of >1000 structural analogs revealed tetrahydrobenzothiophenes that activated DeltaF508-CFTR Cl- conductance reversibly with Kd < 100 nm. Single-cell voltage clamp analysis showed characteristic CFTR currents after Delta F508-CFTR activation. Activation required low concentrations of a cAMP agonist, thus mimicking the normal physiological response. A Bayesian computational model was developed using tetrahydrobenzothiophene structure-activity data, yielding insight into the physical character and structural features of active and inactive potentiators and successfully predicting the activity of structural analogs. Efficient potentiation of defective Delta F508-CFTR gating was also demonstrated in human bronchial epithelial cells from a Delta F508 cystic fibrosis subject after 27 degrees C temperature rescue. In conjunction with correctors of defective Delta F508-CFTR processing, small molecule potentiators of defective Delta F508-CFTR gating may be useful for therapy of cystic fibrosis caused by the Delta F508 mutation.


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