Small Molecule Inhibition of Ligand-Stimulated RAGE-DIAPH1 Signal Transduction

Michaele B. Manigrasso(NYU Langone Health), Jinhong Pan(Albany State University), Vivek Rai(NYU Langone Health), Jinghua Zhang(NYU Langone Health), Sergey Reverdatto(Albany State University), Nosirudeen Quadri(NYU Langone Health), Robert J. DeVita(Drug Discovery Laboratory (Norway)), Ravichandran Ramasamy(NYU Langone Health), Alexander Shekhtman(Albany State University), Ann Marie Schmidt(NYU Langone Health)
Scientific Reports
March 3, 2016
Cited by 108Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

The receptor for advanced glycation endproducts (RAGE) binds diverse ligands linked to chronic inflammation and disease. NMR spectroscopy and x-ray crystallization studies of the extracellular domains of RAGE indicate that RAGE ligands bind by distinct charge- and hydrophobicity-dependent mechanisms. The cytoplasmic tail (ct) of RAGE is essential for RAGE ligand-mediated signal transduction and consequent modulation of gene expression and cellular properties. RAGE signaling requires interaction of ctRAGE with the intracellular effector, mammalian diaphanous 1 or DIAPH1. We screened a library of 58,000 small molecules and identified 13 small molecule competitive inhibitors of ctRAGE interaction with DIAPH1. These compounds, which exhibit in vitro and in vivo inhibition of RAGE-dependent molecular processes, present attractive molecular scaffolds for the development of therapeutics against RAGE-mediated diseases, such as those linked to diabetic complications, Alzheimer's disease, and chronic inflammation, and provide support for the feasibility of inhibition of protein-protein interaction (PPI).


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis