WO2000057184A2 - Screening methods based on fha domains - Google Patents
Screening methods based on fha domains Download PDFInfo
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- WO2000057184A2 WO2000057184A2 PCT/GB2000/001024 GB0001024W WO0057184A2 WO 2000057184 A2 WO2000057184 A2 WO 2000057184A2 GB 0001024 W GB0001024 W GB 0001024W WO 0057184 A2 WO0057184 A2 WO 0057184A2
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- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01N—INVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
- G01N33/00—Investigating or analysing materials by specific methods not covered by groups G01N1/00 - G01N31/00
- G01N33/48—Biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Haemocytometers
- G01N33/50—Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing
- G01N33/68—Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing involving proteins, peptides or amino acids
- G01N33/6872—Intracellular protein regulatory factors and their receptors, e.g. including ion channels
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C07—ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
- C07K—PEPTIDES
- C07K14/00—Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof
- C07K14/37—Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof from fungi
- C07K14/39—Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof from fungi from yeasts
- C07K14/395—Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof from fungi from yeasts from Saccharomyces
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C07—ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
- C07K—PEPTIDES
- C07K14/00—Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof
- C07K14/435—Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof from animals; from humans
- C07K14/46—Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof from animals; from humans from vertebrates
- C07K14/47—Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof from animals; from humans from vertebrates from mammals
- C07K14/4701—Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof from animals; from humans from vertebrates from mammals not used
- C07K14/4702—Regulators; Modulating activity
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C07—ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
- C07K—PEPTIDES
- C07K14/00—Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof
- C07K14/435—Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof from animals; from humans
- C07K14/46—Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof from animals; from humans from vertebrates
- C07K14/47—Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof from animals; from humans from vertebrates from mammals
- C07K14/4701—Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof from animals; from humans from vertebrates from mammals not used
- C07K14/4746—Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof from animals; from humans from vertebrates from mammals not used p53
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61K—PREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
- A61K38/00—Medicinal preparations containing peptides
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- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01N—INVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
- G01N2500/00—Screening for compounds of potential therapeutic value
- G01N2500/02—Screening involving studying the effect of compounds C on the interaction between interacting molecules A and B (e.g. A = enzyme and B = substrate for A, or A = receptor and B = ligand for the receptor)
Definitions
- the present invention relates to assays, screening methods, peptides, mimetics, and methods of use based on the surprising discovery and characterisation of a direct interaction between the FHAl domain of the Sacharomyces cerevisiae protein Rad53p, and phosphorylated polypeptides.
- the invention relates to numerous cellular processes which are of interest in therapeutic contexts.
- the fork-head associated (FHA) domain is a recently defined motif of 65-100 amino acid residues that exists within approximately 60 known and hypothetical (i.e. conceptual translation of genome ORF) proteins (Hofmann and Bucher, 1995) .
- FHA domain is present in plants and in some prokaryotes, such as Mycobacteri ⁇ m, Synechocysti ⁇ and
- the FHA domain is thus one of the relatively rare protein modules found in eukaryotes as well as in prokaryotes.
- the vast majority of FHA-containing proteins in eukaryotes reside within the nucleus, and many of these have been linked to the control of transcription, DNA repair and/or cell cycle progression.
- the FHA domain-containing polypeptides that have been characterised, only the Arabidopsis thalliana protein phosphatase KAPP and the mammalian kinesin-like proteins KIFIB and C seem to occur in the cytoplasm, and nuclear roles for these proteins cannot currently be ruled out (Stone, et al . , 1994) .
- DNA-damage checkpoint signalling represents an interesting and important system in which to study intra-nuclear signal transduction. Characterised extensively in budding and fission yeasts, this signalling cascade bears striking similarity to growth factor receptor-mediated signal transduction events (Bentley and Carr, 1997) . Thus, the cascade is initiated by the detection of the signal (e.g. DNA damage) by a receptor or sensor (e.g.
- This sensor is thought to activate a "transducer" system, which is characterised by a protein kinase cascade that targets cellular effector pathways and generates diverse cellular responses (Bentley and Carr, 1997) .
- this cascade includes the protein kinases Meclp,
- the S. cerevisiae protein Rad53p is a member of the calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase superfamily (accession number 134835 in the National Centre for
- NCBI Biotechnology Information
- mice and in humans (Blasina, et al . , 1999;
- Rad53p possesses two FHA domains: FHAl, which is N-terminal to its kinase domain, and FHA2 which is C-terminal to the kinase domain.
- FHAl which is N-terminal to its kinase domain
- FHA2 which is C-terminal to the kinase domain.
- the FHA2 domain is involved in an interaction also involving phosphorylated forms of Rad9p, a protein proposed to be a sensor of DNA- damage that is genetically located upstream of Rad53p in the DNA damage signalling pathway (Emili, 1998; Sun, et al . , 1998; Vialard, et al . , 1998).
- Rad9p phosphorylation is dependent on Meclp and Tellp, two members of the phosphatidyl inositol 3-kinase like (PIKL) protein kinase family (Jackson, 1996) .
- PKAL phosphatidyl inositol 3-kinase like protein kinase family
- In vitro analysis has revealed that the interaction involving FHA2 and Rad9p requires the same regions of FHA2 as those required to signal DNA lesions that are induced when a yeast containing a temperature-sensitive mutation of CDC13 is shifted at the non permissive temperature (37°C) (Sun, et al . , 1998) . Binding of the FHA2 domain to phosphorylated Rad9p has not been established.
- FHA2 is not present among Rad53p homologues and orthologues in other species. Moreover it is quite divergent from the
- Rad53p FHAl domain The divergence of the FHA2 domain from the FHAl domain and its homologues is further illustrated by Figure IB which shows an evolutionary tree of FHA domains (the alignment in Figure 1A was used to generate an evolutionary tree using the uncorrected Bootstrap Neighbour- Joining method in the ClustalX program with 1000 bootstrap replicates according to the software instructions,- the unrooted tree was visualised using the Drawtree software in the Phylip package) .
- Previous work provided data indicating that a mutant of Rad53p in which residues 470 to 609 were deleted, but in which the FHAl domain remained, did not bind to Rad9p (Sun et al Science (1998) 281, 272) .
- the Arabidopsis protein KAPP interacts with the phosphorylated form of RLK5, a receptor kinase (Stone, et al . , 1994) .
- RLK5 a receptor kinase
- the site of interaction with phosphorylated RLK5 has been mapped to a region in KAPP which contains an FHA domain, but any involvement of the FHA domain in this interaction has not been established.
- the present inventors have also identified a consensus sequence for phosphorylated polypeptides with high affinity for the FHAl domain, and provide assays and methods for identifying phosphorylated polypeptides which bind to other FHA domains. Furthermore, they have shown how phosphorylated polypeptides can block the interaction between these domains and phosphorylated targets. Similarly, they have shown that mutation of residues which are conserved between FHAl and other FHA domains abolishes binding to Rad9p, abrogates binding of FHAl to the phosphorylated peptides, and results in yeast strains that are unable to respond effectively to DNA damage or the inhibition of DNA replication.
- the present invention provides valuable insights into checkpoint signalling, has important implications for the functions of other FHA domain-containing proteins, and provides basis for new lines of therapy.
- the present invention in various aspects is concerned with binding of an FHA domain to a phosphorylated protein or polypeptide, such as assay methods for determining binding between these molecules, identification of binding partners, especially phosphopeptides bound by an FHA domain, and assay methods for agents that modulate, especially disrupt, such binding and have therapeutic potential .
- FHA domain means a polypeptide comprising an amino acid sequence which conforms to the consensus sequence
- ⁇ represents a hydrophobic amino acid
- X represents any amino acid
- two or more residues which are separated by commas and are shown within brackets represent the possible residues which may be present at that position.
- hydrophobic amino acids are Ala, Val, Leu, lie, Pro, Phe, Tyr, Met and Trp.
- the amino acid sequence will include the underlined residues (one of each pair of underlined residues shown in brackets) . These underlined residues are conserved within known FHA domains . In FHA domains comprising an amino acid sequence which conforms to a fragment of the consensus sequence, the fragment will be 40-50, 50-55, 55-60, 60-65, 65-70, 70-75, 75-80, 80-85, 85-90, 90-95, 95-100, or more than 100 amino acids of the consensus sequence.
- the FHA domain may be derived from a eukaryotic (e.g. fungal, plant, animal) protein or polypeptide. It may be derived from a prokaryotic (e.g. Mycobacterial) protein or polypeptide.
- An FHA domain derived from a fungal protein or polypeptide may be derived from a yeast (e.g. Candida spp.) protein or polypeptide.
- An FHA domain derived from an animal protein or polypeptide may be derived from a mammalian (e.g. human) protein or polypeptide.
- An FHA domain may be a hybrid polypeptide comrising sequences dervied from two or more organisms .
- FHA domains are the FHA domains shown in Figure 1 and the FHA domains listed in Table 1.
- the FHA domain may be an FHAl-like domain.
- FHAl-like domain refers to a polypeptide comprising the amino acid sequence of the FHAl domain of S. cerevisiae Rad53p, or a polypeptide comprising an amino acid sequence which shares at least 30% amino acid sequence homology with the amino acid sequence of the FHAl domain of Rad53p, more preferably at least 35% sequence homology, more preferably at least 40% sequence homology, more preferably at least 50% sequence homology, more preferably at least 70% sequence homology, more preferably at least 80% sequence homology, still more preferably at least 90% sequence homology with the amino acid sequence of the FHAl domain of Rad53p. Sequence homology is defined elsewhere herein.
- FHAl-like domain also refers to a polypeptide comprising an allele, mutant, derivative or fragment of the amino acid sequence of the FHAl domain of Rad53p.
- the allele, mutant, derivative or fragment may retain the ability to bind one or more of phosphorylated Rad9p, a phosphorylate d polypeptide shown in Figure 2, or any other phosphorylated polypeptide. Alleles, mutants, derivatives and fragments are further discussed elsewhere herein.
- FHAl-like domains comprising a fragment of the FHAl domain of Rad53p will include 50-55, 55-60, 60-65, 65-70, 70-75, 75-80, 80-85, 85- 90, 90-95, 95-100, or more than 100 amino acids of the FHAl domain of Rad53p.
- An FHAl-like domain may be a polypeptide comprising an amino acid sequence selected from the sequences of the FHA domains in: MtuEmbR, MtuCY04C12.31, SynCYAA, Nibrin, ylr238w, ydr200c, SynMRCB, ScMekl, SpCdsl, ScDunl, AnaFRAH, SpDmal, yhrll5c and ynlll6w. These sequences are shown in Figure 1A.
- the FHAl-like domain may be a polypeptide comprising an amino acid sequence selected from the sequences of the FHA domains in SynMRCB, ScMekl, SpCdsl, ScDunl, AnaFRAH, SpDmal, yhrll5c and ynlll6w (see the Brief description of the Figures for the abbreviations used) .
- An FHAl-like domain may comprise one or more residues corresponding to the following residues of S. cerevisiae
- Rad53p G69, R70, L78, S85, H88, 191, S105, N107, G108, T109, N112, L124, G127, D128, 1130, G133.
- it comprises a residue corresponding to R70 and/or H88.
- An FHA domain may comprise from 65 to 100 amino acid residues.
- An FHA domain of interest in certain embodiments of different aspects of the invention binds to a Rad9p or to a phosphorylated polypeptide shown in Figure 2.
- an FHA domain for use in aspects of the invention binds to a phosphorylated polypeptide comprising the amino acid sequence -Thr (P) -X 1 -X 2 -Asp- , wherein Thr(P) denotes a phosphorylated threonine residue, and X and X 2 each represent any amino acid residue.
- FHA domains may be identified by various means .
- the sequence of an established FHA domain e.g. an FHA domain described in Hofmann and Bucher (1995) or an FHA domain identified by the present inventors, may be entered into a computer database and the database scanned for proteins including the same or a similar pattern of residues, taking into account conservative variation in sequence.
- the consensus sequence described above may be entered into a computer database in place of a full FHA sequence when scanning for related domains .
- Further information about important residues for FHA domain binding to phosphorylated polypeptides may be obtained using alanine scanning and deletion analysis of an FHA domain, e.g. the FHAl domain of Rad53p. Mutation may be used to identify residues which affect binding and those which do not.
- a phosphorylated protein, phosphorylated polypeptide or phosphorylated oligopeptide is herein referred to as a "phosphopeptide" .
- Phosphopeptides in accordance with and/or for use in the present invention may be less than 40 amino acid residues, less than 35, less than 30, less than 25, less than 20, less than 15 amino acid residues, about 10 amino acids or less, or 9, 8, 7, 6, 5 or less amino acid residues. They may be 5-10 amino acids, 10-15, 15-20, 10-20, 20-25, 20-30, 30-35, 35-40 or 30-40 amino acids.
- a phosphopeptide may comprise one or more of a phosphothreonine, phosphoserine, phosphoarginine, or phosphohistidine residue.
- a phosphopeptide comprises a phosphorylated threonine residue.
- a phosphopeptide includes the sequence -Thr(P)-X ! - X 2 -Asp-, wherein Thr(P) denotes a phosphorylated threonine residue, and X and X 2 each represent any amino acid residue.
- a phosphopeptide for use in a method of the invention may b e located, for at least part of the cell cycle, within the nucleus of a eukaryotic cell . It may be selected from the group comprising: phosphorylated Rad9p from Sacharomyces cerevisiae ; phosphorylated human histone protein H2A.X; phosphorylated p53 protein; and a phosphopeptide shown in Figure 2.
- the phosphopeptide is a phosphorylated fragment of p53. Alleles, mutants, derivatives and fragments are discussed elsewhere herein.
- Phosphopeptides for use in the present invention may bind to the FHAl domain of Rad53p.
- a phosphopeptide in screening or searching for and/or obtaining/identifying an FHA domain, e.g. an FHAl-like domain, which has the ability to bind to said phosphopeptide.
- an FHA domain e.g. the FHAl domain of Rad53p
- the invention provides for the use of an FHA domain, e.g. the FHAl domain of Rad53p, in screening or searching for and/or obtaining/identifying a phosphopeptide which has the ability to bind to said FHA domain.
- a screening or assay method for identifying an FHA domain which can bind to a phosphopeptide of interest, or for determining the binding of an FHA domain to a phosphopeptide of interest may include: (a) bringing a test FHA domain into contact with said phosphopeptide; and (b) determining binding of the test FHA domain to the phosphopeptide .
- a screening or assay method may include:
- a related aspect of the present invention provides the use of an FHA domain for determining the presence in a test sample of a phosphopeptide which has the ability to bind to said FHA domain.
- the invention provides for the use of a phosphopeptide for determining the presence in a test sample of an FHA domain which has the ability to bind to said phosphopeptide.
- a method for determining the presence in a test sample of a phosphopeptide may include:
- a method for determining the presence in a test sample of an FHA domain may include:
- a method for determining the presence in a test sample of a phosphopeptide or FHA domain may include quantifying the amount of phosphopeptide or FHA domain in the sample.
- Methods of determining the presence of, and optionally quantifying the amount of, a phosphopeptide or FHA domain in a test sample may have a diagnostic purpose, e.g. in the diagnosis of any medical condition discussed herein (e.g. a proliferative disorder such as cancer) or in the evaluation of a therapy to treat such a condition. Methods of determining binding and/or interaction in any method described herein are discussed below. Preferred FHA domains and phosphopeptides are discussed elsewhere herein.
- a phosphopeptide and/or FHA domain employed in accordance with the present invention may be a natural or synthetic chemical compound.
- test substance e.g. phosphopeptide, FHA domain
- substance of interest e.g. phosphopeptide, FHA domain
- a screening or assay method may include purifying and/or isolating a test substance and/or substance of interest, e.g. FHA domain and/or phosphopepetide from a mixture or extract, i.e. reducing the content of at least one component of the mixture or extract, e.g. a component with which the test substance is naturally associated.
- the screening or assay method may include determining the ability of one or more fractions of a test mixture or extract to bind to a phosphopeptide or FHA domain of interest.
- the purifying and/or isolating may employ any method known to those skilled in the art .
- a phosphopeptide or FHA domain identified by any one of the methods provided by the present invention may be isolated and/or purified and/or further investigated and/or manufactured. Various methods and uses of such compounds are discussed elsewhere herein.
- the inventors have identified a number of phosphopeptides which bind to an FHA domain. These phosphopeptides form the basis of further aspects of the present invention.
- the invention provides the phosphopeptides shown in Figure 2; also variant phosphopeptides that retain ability to bind an FHA domain.
- Such variants may have an amino acid sequence which shares at least about 30%, or 40%, or 50%, or 60%, or 70%, or 75%, or 80%, or 85%, 90% or 95% homology with any of the sequences shown in Figure 2.
- a phosphopeptide of the invention may have the ability to bind to the FHAl domain of Rad53p and/or to Chk2.
- a phosphopeptide according to the present invention may comprise a phosphothreonine, phosphoserine, phosphoarginine or phosphohistidine residue. It may comprise the sequence - Thr (P) -X x -X 2 -Asp- (as defined above).
- the present invention provides a phosphopeptide comprising the amino acid sequence -Thr(P)-X ! - X 2 -Asp- (as defined above), which phosphopeptide . can bind to an FHA domain.
- the inventors have clearly demonstrated that the amino acid sequence of the phosphopeptides of Figure 2 may vary considerably while retaining an ability of the phosphopeptide to bind to an FHA domain, e.g. to the FHAl domain of Rad53p.
- a variant of a stated amino acid sequence may differ by one or more amino acid residues from that sequence, by one or more of addition, insertion, deletion and substitution of one or more amino acid residues . It may include 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, or greater than 5 amino acid alterations such as substitutions with respect to the stated sequence .
- Such a variant of e.g. a phosphopeptide or FHA domain may in certain embodiments be the same length or shorter than that sequence.
- the phosphopeptide or FHA domain (or a variant thereof) may be included in a larger polypeptide particularly where the phosphopeptide or FHA domain is fused to a heterologous or foreign sequence.
- 1, 2, 3, 4 or 5 , 10, 20 or more additional amino acid residues, adjacent to a native form of the specific phosphopeptide or FHA domain, or heterologous thereto may be included at one end or both ends of the phosphopeptide.
- polypeptides include the polypeptide linked to a coupling partner, e.g. an effector molecule, a label, a drug, a toxin and/or a carrier or transport molecule, and/or a targeting molecule such as an antibody or binding fragment thereof or other ligand.
- a coupling partner e.g. an effector molecule, a label, a drug, a toxin and/or a carrier or transport molecule, and/or a targeting molecule such as an antibody or binding fragment thereof or other ligand.
- a coupling partner e.g. an effector molecule, a label, a drug, a toxin and/or a carrier or transport molecule, and/or a targeting molecule such as an antibody or binding fragment thereof or other ligand.
- the carrier molecule is a 16 amino acid peptide sequence derived from the homeodomain of Antennapedia (e.g. as sold under the name "Penetratin” ) , which can
- homology at the amino acid level is generally in terms of amino acid similarity or identity. Similarity allows for "conservative variation", i.e. substitution of one hydrophobic residue such as isoleucine, valine, leucine or methionine for another, or the substitution of one polar residue for another, such as arginine for lysine, glutamic for aspartic acid, or glutamine for asparagine. Homology may be taken over the full-length of a sequence or over a part, such as 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, 100, 120, 150, 200 contiguous nucleotides or amino acids .
- nucleotide sequences are said to share "homology" or be “homologous” is based on sequence comparison. Any phylogenetic relationship is irrelevant for this .
- Those skilled in the art routinely refer to homology between nucleotide sequences with no implication for evolutionary origin. Two homologous nucleotide sequences may also be said to be "similar” or have a certain per centage similarity or a certain per centage identity.
- a preferred algorithm may be GAP, which uses the alignment method of Needleman and Wunsch (J “ . Mol . Biol . (1970) 48, 443-453) and is included in the Program Manual or the Wisconsin Package, Version 8, September 1994, Genetics Computer Group, 575 Science Drive, Madison, Wisconsin, USA) .
- GAP GAP
- Parameters are preferably set, using the default matrix, as follows: Gapopen (penalty for the first residue in a gap) : - 12 for proteins / -16 for DNA; Gapext (penalty for additional residues in a gap) : -2 for proteins / -4 for DNA; KTUP word length: 2 for proteins / 6 for DNA. Nucleic acid sequence homology may be determined by means o f selective hybridisation between molecules under stringent conditions .
- Preliminary experiments may be performed by hybridising under low stringency conditions.
- preferred conditions are those which are stringent enough for there to be a simple pattern with a small number of hybridisations identified as positive which can be investigated further.
- filters are washed as follows: (1) 5 minutes at room temperature in 2X SSC and 1% SDS; (2) 15 minutes at room temperature in 2X SSC and 0.1% SDS; (3) 30 minutes - 1 hour at 37°C in IX SSC and 1% SDS; (4) 2 hours at 42-65°C in IX SSC and 1% SDS, changing the solution every 30 minutes.
- T m 81.5°C + 16.6Log [Na+] + 0.41 (% G+C) - 0.63 (% formamide) - 600/#bp in duplex.
- the T m is 57°C.
- the T m of a DNA duplex decreases by 1 - 1.5°C with every 1% decrease in homology.
- targets with greater than about 75% sequence identity would be observed using a hybridization temperature of 42°C.
- Such a sequence would be considered substantially homologous to the nucleic acid sequence of the present inventio .
- suitable conditions include, e.g. for detection of sequences that are about 80-90% identical, hybridization overnight at 42°C in 0.25M Na 2 HP0 4 , pH 7.2 , 6.5% SDS, 10% dextran sulfate and a final wash at 55°C in 0. IX SSC, 0.1% SDS .
- suitable conditions include hybridization overnight at 65°C in 0.25M Na 2 HP0 4 , pH 7.2 , 6.5% SDS, 10% dextran sulfate and a final wash at 60°C in 0. IX SSC, 0.1% SDS.
- Phosphopeptides may be generated wholly or partly by chemical synthesis, in accordance with well-established techniques, such as standard liquid or, preferably, solid-phase peptide synthesis methods, general descriptions of which are broadly available (see, for example, in J.M. Stewart and J.D. Young, Solid Phase Peptide Synthesis, 2nd edition, Pierce Chemical Company, Rockford, Illinois (1984) , in M. Bodanzsky and A. Bodanzsky, The Practice of Peptide Synthesis, Springer Verlag, New York (1984) ; and Applied Biosystems 430A Users Manual, ABI Inc., Foster City, California), or they may be prepared in solution, by the liquid phase method or by any combination of solid-phase, liquid phase and solution chemistry.
- Another convenient way of producing a phosphopeptide molecule according to the present invention is to express nucleic acid encoding the unphosphorylated form, by use of nucleic acid in an expression system, and phosphorylating the expression product .
- the unphosphorylated forms of the phosphopeptides of the present invention and nucleic acid molecules encoding such polypeptides are further aspects of the present invention.
- nucleic acid according to the present invention is provided as an isolate, in isolated and/or purified form, or free or substantially free of material with which it is naturally associated, such as free or substantially free of nucleic acid flanking the gene in the (e.g. human) genome, except possibly one or more regulatory sequence (s) for expression.
- Nucleic acid may be wholly or partially synthetic and may include genomic DNA, cDNA or RNA.
- Nucleic acid sequences encoding the unphosphorylated polypeptides of the present invention may be readily prepared by the skilled person using the information and references contained herein and techniques known in the art (for example, see Sambrook, Fritsch and Maniatis, "Molecular Cloning, A Laboratory Manual, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, 1989, and Ausubel et al, Short Protocols in Molecular Biology, John Wiley and Sons, 1992) . These techniques include (i) the use of the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to amplify samples of such nucleic acid, e.g. from genomic sources, (ii) chemical synthesis, or (iii) preparing cDNA sequences.
- PCR polymerase chain reaction
- DNA encoding the polypeptides may be generated and used in any suitable way known to those of skill in the art, including taking encoding DNA, identifying suitable restriction enzyme recognition sites either side of the portion to be expressed, and cutting out said portion from the DNA.
- the portion may then be operably linked to a suitable promoter in a standard commercially available expression system.
- Another recombinant approach is to amplify the relevant portion of the DNA with suitable PCR primers .
- Modifications to a nucleic acid sequence may be made, e.g. using site directed mutagenesis, to lead to the production of modified polypeptide, e.g. an allele or mutant form of a phosphopeptide, or to take account of codon preference in the host cells used to express the nucleic acid.
- the sequences may be incorporated in a vector having one or more control sequences operably linked to the nucleic acid to control its expression.
- Vectors may be chosen or constructed, They may contain appropriate regulatory sequences, including promoter sequences, terminator fragments, polyadenylation sequences, enhancer sequences, marker genes and other sequences as appropriate, e.g.
- Vectors may be plasmids, viral e.g. phage, or phagemid, as appropriate.
- plasmids viral e.g. phage, or phagemid, as appropriate.
- Polypeptide may then be obtained by transforming the vectors into host cells in which the vector is functional, culturing the host cells so that the polypeptide is produced and recovering the polypeptide from the host cells or the surrounding medium.
- a further aspect of the present invention provides a host cell containing heterologous nucleic acid as disclosed herein.
- Suitable host cells include bacteria, eukaryotic cells such as mammalian and yeast, and baculovirus systems.
- Mammalian cell lines available in the art for expression of a heterologous polypeptide include Chinese hamster ovary cells, HeLa cel l s, baby hamster kidney cells, COS cells and many others.
- a common, preferred bacterial host is E. coli.
- the nucleic acid of the invention may be integrated into the genome (e.g. chromosome) of the host cell. Integration may be promoted by inclusion of sequences which promote recombination with the genome, in accordance with standard techniques.
- the nucleic acid may be on an extra-chromosomal vector within the cell, or otherwise identifiably heterologous or foreign t;o the cell .
- a host cell containing nucleic acid according to the present invention may be comprised (e.g. in the soma) within an organism which is an animal, particularly a mammal, which may be human or non-human, such as rabbit, guinea pig, rat, mouse or other rodent, cat, dog, pig, sheep, goat, cattle or horse, or a bird, such as a chicken.
- an animal particularly a mammal, which may be human or non-human, such as rabbit, guinea pig, rat, mouse or other rodent, cat, dog, pig, sheep, goat, cattle or horse, or a bird, such as a chicken.
- mutant, allele, derivative or other variant sequence within cells of an organism may allow the organism to be used as a model in studying substances which modulate binding of an FHA domain to a phosphopeptide. Conveniently, however, at least preliminary assays for such substances may be carried out in vi tro, that is within host cells or in cell-free systems.
- those cells or cells of the same or similar type may be grafted into an appropriate host animal for in vivo testing.
- a further aspect provides a method which includes introducing a nucleic acid molecule of the invention into a host cell .
- the introduction which may (particularly for in vi tro introduction) be generally referred to without limitation as "transformation", may employ any available technique.
- suitable techniques may include calcium phosphate transfection, DEAE-Dextran, electroporation, liposome-mediated transfection and transduction using retrovirus or other virus, e.g. vaccinia or, for insect cells, baculovirus.
- suitable techniques may include calcium chloride transformation, electroporation and transfection using bacteriophage .
- direct injection of the nucleic acid could be employed.
- Marker genes such as antibiotic resistance or sensitivity genes may be used in identifying clones containing nucleic acid of interest, as is well known in the art.
- the introduction may be followed by causing or allowing expression from the nucleic acid, e.g. by culturing host cells (which may include cells actually transformed although more likely the cells will be descendants of the transformed cells) under conditions for expression of the gene, so that the encoded polypeptide is produced. If the polypeptide is expressed coupled to an appropriate signal leader peptide it may be secreted from the cell into the culture medium.
- a polypeptide may be isolated and/or purified from the host cell and/or culture medium, as the case may be, and subsequently used as desired, e.g. in the formulation of a composition which may include one or more additional components, such as a pharmaceutical composition which includes one or more pharmaceutically acceptable excipients, vehicles or carriers (e.g. see below) .
- a pharmaceutical composition which includes one or more pharmaceutically acceptable excipients, vehicles or carriers (e.g. see below) .
- Introduction into target cells of nucleic acid encoding a polypeptide of the present invention may take place in vivo by way of gene therapy, for instance to modulate e.g. disrupt or interfere with, binding of a protein or polypeptide comprising an FHA domain to a phosphopeptide, e.g. the binding of a mammalian homolgoue of Rad53p to phosphorylated p53.
- the present invention also provides a method of making a phosphopeptide of the invention or the corresponding unphosphorylated polypeptide, the method including expression from nucleic acid encoding the unphosphorylated polypeptide. This may conveniently be achieved by growing a host cell containing the nucleic acid in culture under appropriate conditions which cause or allow expression of the unphosphorylated polypeptide. Note however that expression may also be carried out in in vitro systems, e.g. reticulocyte lysate.
- an unphosphorylated form of a phosphopeptide of the invention may be phosphorylated in vivo or in vitro, e.g. in an in vitro kinase reaction using a purified or unpurified kinase and e.g. ATP as a phosphate donor.
- Phosphorylation may be carried out by any suitable kinase, e.g. by a member of the PIKL family of protein kinases, e.g. by Meclp.
- the present invention thus provides phosphopeptides, methods of identifying further phosphopeptides which have the ability to bind to an FHA domain, and methods of identifying an FHA domain which can bind to a target phosphopeptide.
- the present invention provides for assays and methods of screening for a substance which modulates, e.g. inhibits, reduces or interferes with, binding of an FHA domain to a phosphopeptide, and for the use of FHA domains and/or phosphopeptides in these screening methods and assays.
- Such a method may include :
- Binding in the presence of a test substance may be compared with binding of the FHA domain to the phosphopeptide in comparable reaction medium and conditions in the absence of a test substance.
- a test substance able to modulate the binding may be identified.
- Agents which modulate e.g. increase or potentiate interaction between an FHA domain and phosphopeptide may be identified using conditions which, in the absence of a positively- testing agent, prevent or impair the substances interacting.
- a difference in the binding of the FHA domain to the phosphopeptide between the treated and untreated conditions is indicative of a modulating effect of the relevant test substance (s) .
- Binding may be determined by any suitable method known to those skilled in the art . Examples of such methods are described below.
- the amount of test substance or compound which may be added to an assay o f the invention will normally be determined by trial and error depending upon the type of compound used. Typically, from about 0.001 nM to ImM or more concentrations of putative inhibitor compound may be used, for example from 0.01 nM to lOO ⁇ M, e.g. 0.1 to 50 ⁇ M, such as about 10 ⁇ M. Greater concentrations may be used when a peptide is the test substance. Even a molecule which has a weak effect may be a useful lead compound for further investigation and development .
- Compounds which may be screened may be natural or synthetic chemical compounds used in drug screening programmes . Extracts of plants, microbes or other organisms, which contain several characterised or uncharacterised components may also be used.
- combinatorial library technology provides an efficient way of testing a potentially vast number of different substances for ability to modulate an interaction.
- Such libraries and their use are known in the art, for all manner of natural products, small molecules and peptides, among others.
- the use of peptide libraries may be preferred in certain circumstances .
- the present invention provides a modulator identified by a screening method of the invention, e.g. a substance which interferes with or interrupts, increases or potentiates binding of an FHA domain (e.g. the FHAl domain of Rad53p) to a target phosphopeptide (e.g. Rad9p or a phosphopeptide of the invention) .
- a modulator identified by a screening method of the invention e.g. a substance which interferes with or interrupts, increases or potentiates binding of an FHA domain (e.g. the FHAl domain of Rad53p) to a target phosphopeptide (e.g. Rad9p or a phosphopeptide of the invention) .
- a modulator may be used to obtain peptidyl or non-peptidyl mimetics, e.g. by methods well known to those skilled in the art and discussed herein. It may be used in a therapeutic context as discussed below.
- the invention already provides a number of such modulators in the form of phosphopeptides of the invention, for example those comprising the sequence -Thr(P)- X x -X 2 -Asp- , wherein Thr(P) denotes a phosphorylated threonine residue, and X 2 and X 2 each represent any amino acid residue.
- Thr(P) denotes a phosphorylated threonine residue
- X 2 and X 2 each represent any amino acid residue.
- the present disclosure demonstrates the effect of the phosphopeptides of in Figure 2 in interrupting the binding between Rad53p and Rad9p .
- Another class of modulators comprises peptide fragments of the FHAl domain of Rad53p, or alleles, mutants or derivatives of such fragments .
- Suitable peptides are those which bind to Rad9p or a phosphopeptide of the invention and which have a length of 50-55, 55-60, 60-65, 65-70, 70-75, 75-80, 80-85, 85-90, 90-95, 95-100, or more than 100 amino acids.
- Nucleic acid encoding such FHA fragments, vectors and host cells containing such nucleic acid, and methods of expressing nucleic acid encoding such FHA fragments are further aspects of the present invention. The discussion herein relating to the construction, use and expression of nucleic acid encoding unphosphorylated forms of phosphopeptides applies as appropriate .
- Antibodies directed to the site of binding in either the FHA domain or the phosphopeptide form a further class of putative inhibitor compounds .
- Candidate inhibitor antibodies may be characterised and their binding regions determined to provide single chain antibodies and fragments thereof which are responsible for disrupting the binding.
- the site of binding of FHA domains to phosphopeptides has been studied by the present inventors. As shown herein, the binding of an FHA domain to a phosphopeptide is affected by mutations in the FHA domain at positions corresponding to Arg-70 and His-88 of Rad53p. Accordingly antibodies directed to regions of the FHA domain which contain these residues may be suitable candidate inhibitor compounds .
- the inventors have established a consensus amino acid sequence for phosphopeptides which bind to FHA domains, namely -Thr (P) -X ⁇ -X 2 -Asp- , wherein Thr(P), X x and X 2 are defined above.
- antibodies directed to this motif are further suitable candidate inhibitors .
- Antibodies may be obtained using techniques which are standard in the art. Methods of producing antibodies include immunising a mammal (e.g. mouse, rat, rabbit, horse, goat, sheep or monkey) with a phosphopeptide or a polypeptide comprising the FHA domain or a fragment thereof. Antibodies may be obtained from immunised animals using any of a variety of techniques known in the art, and screened, preferably using binding of antibody to antigen of interest . For instance, Western blotting techniques or immunoprecipitation may be used (Armitage et al . , 1992, Nature 357: 80-82). Isolation of antibodies and/or antibody-producing cells from an animal may be accompanied by a step of sacrificing the animal .
- an antibody specific for either an FHA domain or a target phosphopeptide may be obtained from a recombinantly produced library of expressed immunoglobulin variable domains, e.g. using lambda bacteriophage or filamentous bacteriophage which display functional immunoglobulin binding domains on their surfaces; for instance see WO92/01047.
- the library may be naive, that is constructed from sequences obtained from an organism which has not been immunised with any of the proteins (or fragments) , or may be one constructed using sequences obtained from an organism which has been exposed to the antigen of interest.
- Antibodies according to the present invention may be modified in a number of ways. Indeed the term “antibody” should be construed as covering any binding substance having a binding domain with the required specificity. Thus the invention covers antibody fragments, derivatives, functional equivalents and homologues of antibodies, including synthetic molecules and molecules whose shape mimicks that of an antibody enabling it to bind an antigen or epitope .
- Example antibody fragments capable of binding an antigen or other binding partner are the Fab fragment consisting of the VL, VH, Cl and CHI domains,- the Fd fragment consisting of the VH and CHI domains,- the Fv fragment consisting of the VL and VH domains of a single arm of an antibody; the dAb fragment which consists of a VH domain,- isolated CDR regions and F(ab')2 fragments, a bivalent fragment including two Fab fragments linked by a disulphide bridge at the hinge region.
- Single chain Fv fragments are also included.
- a hybridoma producing a monoclonal antibody according to the present invention may be subject to genetic mutation or other changes . It will further be understood by those skilled in the art that a monoclonal antibody can be subjected to the techniques of recombinant DNA technology to produce other antibodies or chimeric molecules which retain the specificity of the original antibody. Such techniques may involve introducing DNA encoding the immunoglobulin variable region, or the complementarity determining regions (CDRs) , of an antibody to the constant regions, or constant regions plus framework regions, of a different immunoglobulin. See, for instance, EP184187A, GB 2188638A or EP-A-0239400. Cloning and expression of chimeric antibodies are described in EP-A- 0120694 and EP-A-0125023.
- Hybridomas capable of producing antibody with desired binding characteristics are within the scope of the present invention, as are host cells, eukaryotic or prokaryotic, containing nucleic acid encoding antibodies (including antibody fragments) and capable of their expression.
- the invention also provides methods of production of the antibodies including growing a cell capable of producing the antibody under conditions in which the antibody is produced, and preferably secreted.
- the reactivities of antibodies on a sample may be determined by any appropriate means . Tagging with individual reporter molecules is one possibility.
- the reporter molecules may directly or indirectly generate detectable, and preferably measurable, signals.
- the linkage of reporter molecules may be directly or indirectly, covalently, e.g. via a peptide bond or non-covalently. Linkage via a peptide bond may be as a result of recombinant expression of a gene fusion encoding antibody and reporter molecule.
- the mode of determining binding is not a feature of the present invention and those skilled in the art are able to choose a suitable mode according to their preference and general knowledge.
- Antibodies may also be used in purifying and/or isolating a protein or polypeptide comprising an FHA domain, or a phosphopeptide capable of binding to an FHA domain, for instance following production of the polypeptide by expression from encoding nucleic acid therefor.
- Antibodies may be useful in a therapeutic context (which may include prophylaxis) to disrupt binding of an FHA domain to a phosphopeptide with a view to inhibiting the activity of either component.
- Antibodies can for instance be micro- injected into cells, e.g. at a tumour site, subject to radio- and/or chemo-therapy (as discussed already above) .
- Antibodies may be employed in accordance with the present invention for other therapeutic and non-therapeutic purposes which are discussed elsewhere herein.
- the present invention provides the use of a phosphopeptide which is capable of binding to an FHA domain (e.g. to Rad53p FHAl), in a method of designing a peptide or non-peptidyl mimetic of the phosphopeptide, which mimetic is able to bind to an FHA domain and/or modulate interaction between an FHA domain.
- the phosphopeptide used in such a method may be a phosphopeptide of the present invention , e.g. a phosphopeptide shown in Figure 2.
- the present invention similarly provides for the use of an FHA domain, for example an FHAl-like domain, e.g. the FHAl domain of S. cerevisiae Rad53p, in a method of designing a peptide or non-peptidyl mimetic of an FHAl-like domain, which mimetic is able to bind to a given phosphopeptide, e.g. to phosphorylated p53.
- an FHA domain of Chk2 may be used in this context .
- the present invention provides a method of designing a mimetic of a phosphopeptide which has the biological activity of binding to an FHA domain (e.g. Rad53p FHAl) , or a method of designing a mimetic of an FHA domain which has biological activity of binding to a target phosphopeptide (e.g. to a phosphopeptide of the present invention) , said method comprising:
- Suitable modelling techniques are known in the art. This includes the study of the bonding between an FHA domain and a phosphopeptide and to design compounds which contain functional groups arranged in such a manner that they could reproduced that bonding.
- the designing of mimetics to a known pharmaceutically active compound is a known approach to the development of pharmaceuticals based on a "lead" compound. This might be desirable where the active compound is difficult or expensive to synthesise or where it is unsuitable for a particular method of administration, for instance phosphopeptides of the invention may not be well suited as active agents for oral compositions as they tend to be quickly degraded by proteases in the alimentary canal.
- the pharmacophore Once the pharmacophore has been found, its structure is modelled according to its physical properties, e.g. stereochemistry, bonding, size and/or charge, using data from a range of sources, e.g. spectroscopic techniques, X-ray diffraction data and NMR. Computational analysis, similarity mapping (which models the charge and/or volume of a pharmacophore, rather than the bonding between atoms) and other techniques can be used in this modelling process.
- a range of sources e.g. spectroscopic techniques, X-ray diffraction data and NMR.
- Computational analysis, similarity mapping which models the charge and/or volume of a pharmacophore, rather than the bonding between atoms
- other techniques can be used in this modelling process.
- the inventors have already established an amino acid sequence shared by a number of phosphopeptides having the biological activity of binding to an FHA domain around which a mimetic may be designed, i.e. the amino acid sequence -Thr (P) -X ! -X 2 -Asp- (as defined above).
- the three-dimensional structure of a ligand and its binding partner are modelled. This can be especially useful where the ligand and/or binding partner change conformation on binding, allowing the model to take account of this the design of the mimetic.
- a template molecule is then selected onto which chemical groups which mimic the pharmacophore can be grafted.
- the template molecule and the chemical groups grafted on to it can conveniently be selected so that the mimetic is easy to synthesise, is likely to be pharmacologically acceptable, and does not degrade in vivo, while retaining the biological activity of the lead compound.
- the mimetic or mimetics found by this approach can then be screened to see whether they have the target property, or to what extent they exhibit it. Further optimisation or modification can then be carried out to arrive at one or more final mimetics for in vivo or clinical testing.
- the mimetic or mimetics found by any of the approaches described herein may be used in the assay methods of the present invention to determine whether they have the ability to bind to the relevant compound, i.e. to an FHA domain (e.g.
- Rad53p FHAl or to a target phoshopeptide (e.g. a phosphopeptide of the present invention) .
- Mimetics obtained by a method of the invention form a further aspect of the invention.
- the invention further provides various therapeutic methods and uses of one or more substances selected from (i) a phosphopeptide (e.g. a phosphopeptide shown in Figure 2, a phosphorylated fragment of Rad9p, H2A.X, or p53) , a phosphopeptide identified in accordance with a method of the invention which is able to bind to an FHA domain) ; (ii) an FHA domain or fragment thereof (e.g. one described herein or identified by a screening method of the present invention) ,- (iii) a modulator identified by a screening method of the present invention,- (iv) a mimetic of any of the above substances which can bind to an FHA domain or phosphopeptide.
- a phosphopeptide e.g. a phosphopeptide shown in Figure 2, a phosphorylated fragment of Rad9p, H2A.X, or p53
- the therapeutic/prophylactic purpose of such a method or use may be the modulation, e.g. disruption or interference, of the binding of an FHA domain to a phosphopeptide, e.g. to modulate any activity mediated by virtue of such binding.
- Such activities include cellular processes dependent on and/or involving proteins or polypeptides comprising an FHA domain.
- the therapeutic/prophylactic purpose may be:
- Chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy e.g. modulating interactions of FHA domain-containing proteins such as Chk2 , NBS/Nibrin, Ki-67, and Dmal + homologues, e.g. increasing the sensitivity of tumour cells to radiotherapy (chk2, NBS) , e.g. treatment of p53-negative cancers by functional reactivation of checkpoint signalling, cancer cell apoptosis etc.;
- Cancer prophylaxis e.g. reinforcing the DNA damage and/or replication inhibition checkpoint against e.g. UV- induced damage;
- A-T Ataxia-telangiectasia
- NBS Nijmegen breakage syndrome
- A-T is a human autosomal recessive disorder characterised by cerebellar degeneration, occulocutaneous telangiectasia, growth retardation, immune deficiencies, characteristics of premature ageing and increased incidence of cancer (Jackson, S.P. (1995), Current Biology 5, 1210-1212; Meyn, M.S. (1995),
- A-T cells are defective in the DNA damage checkpoint and exhibit deficient or severely delayed induction of p53 in response to IR (Kastan et al . , (1992), Cell 71, 587-597; Khanna, K. and
- NBS is a neurodegenerative and cancer prone condition (Carney, J. P., et al . , (1998) Cell, 93 , 477-486; Varon, R. , et al., (1998) Cell, 93 , 467-476);
- Atm knockout mice are infertile: ATM is a phosphatidyl inositol 3-kinase involved in cell cycle control and/or detection and signalling of DNA damage ) ;
- Anti-apoptosis e.g. the FHA domain containing protein FRF may target PML (Promyelocytic Leukaemia) bodies which are involved in caspase-independent apoptosis;
- PML Promyelocytic Leukaemia
- MNF Muscular (skeletal and cardiac) regeneration, e.g. through regulation of the activity of MNF.
- MNF is an FHA domain containing-protein which is located in satellite cells, i.e. undifferentiated cells with a mitotic potential. MNF levels are greatly decreased in myotubes .
- the FHA domain of MNF is located within the region of this protein responsible for its transcriptional activation activity. FHA- phosphopeptide binding could regulate the transactivation potential of MNF;
- Anti-bacterial activity e.g. antibacterial compounds targeting Mycobacteria via its EmbR protein and/or Chalmy d ia.
- EmbR is the regulator of the EmbAB genes, the primary target of the antimycobacterial drug ethambutanol (Belanger, A.E., et al . , (1996) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 95:11919-1924);
- FRF may play a role in HSV life cycle due to its homology to VmwllO, a key viral protein.
- p78 may be involved in regulating HSV life cycle (through interaction with ICP22) .
- ILF1 and ILF2 bind the HIV and HTLV promoters ,-
- Anti-fungal activity e.g. modulating the interactions of the FHA domain containing-proteins of S. Cerevisiae, or the interactions of homologuous proteins in other fungi e.g. C. alb i cans .
- the present invention thus provides a pharmaceutical composition, medicament, drug or other composition for such a purpose, the composition comprising one or more of those substances, the use of such a substance in a method of medical treatment, a method comprising administration of such a substance or composition to a patient, e.g. for treatment (which may include preventative treatment) of a medical condition, e.g. a condition associated with a defect or disorder in transcriptional control, DNA replication, DNA repair, or cell cycle control, e.g. for treatment of a disorder of cellular proliferation such as cancer or a condition associated with infection by a pathogen (i.e.
- a bacterium, virus or fungus whose infectivity and/or viability is mediated by an FHA domain/phosphopeptide interaction
- use of such a substance in the manufacture of a composition, medicament or drug for administration for such a purpose e.g. for treatment of a proliferative disorder
- a method of making a pharmaceutical composition comprising admixing such a substance with a pharmaceutically acceptable excipient, vehicle or carrier, and optionally other ingredients.
- the substances may be used as sole active agents or in combination with one another or with any other active substance, e.g. for anti-tumour therapy another anti-tumour compound or therapy, such as radiotherapy or chemotherapy.
- administration is preferably in a "prophylactically effective amount” or a “therapeutically effective amount” (as the case may be, although prophylaxis may be considered therapy) , this being sufficient to show benefit to the individual.
- a prophylaxis may be considered therapy
- the actual amount administered, and rate and time-course of administration, will depend on the nature and severity of what is being treated. Prescription of treatment, e.g. decisions on dosage etc, is within the responsibility of general practioners and other medical doctors.
- a substance or composition may be administered alone or in combination with other treatments, either simultaneously or sequentially dependent upon the condition to be treated, e.g. cancer.
- compositions according to the present invention may include, in addition to active ingredient, a pharmaceutically acceptable excipient, carrier, buffer, stabiliser or other materials well known to those skilled in the art. Such materials should be non-toxic and should not interfere with the efficacy of the active ingredient .
- a pharmaceutically acceptable excipient such materials should be non-toxic and should not interfere with the efficacy of the active ingredient .
- the precise nature of the carrier or other material will depend on the route of administration, which may be oral, or by injection, e.g. cutaneous, subcutaneous or intravenous.
- compositions for oral administration may be in tablet, capsule, powder or liquid form.
- a tablet may include a solid carrier such as gelatin or an adjuvant.
- Liquid pharmaceutical compositions generally include a liquid carrier such as water, petroleum, animal or vegetable oils, mineral oil or synthetic oil. Physiological saline solution, dextrose or other saccharide solution or glycols such as ethylene glycol, propylene glycol or polyethylene glycol may be included .
- the active ingredient will be in the form of a parenterally acceptable aqueous solution which is pyrogen-free and has suitable pH, isotonicity and stability.
- a parenterally acceptable aqueous solution which is pyrogen-free and has suitable pH, isotonicity and stability.
- isotonic vehicles such as Sodium Chloride Injection, Ringer's Injection, Lactated Ringer's Injection.
- Preservatives, stabilisers, buffers, antioxidants and/or other additives may be included, as required.
- Liposomes particularly cationic liposomes, may be used in carrier formulations .
- the substance or composition may be administered in a localised manner to a tumour site or other desired site or may be delivered in a manner in which it targets tumour or other cells.
- Targeting therapies may be used to deliver the active substance more specifically to certain types of cell, by the use of targeting systems such as antibody or cell specific ligands. Targeting may be desirable for a variety of reasons, for example if the agent is unacceptably toxic, or if it would otherwise require too high a dosage, or if it would not otherwise be able to enter the target cells.
- the target cells may be produced in the target cells by expression from an encoding nucleic acid introduced into the cells, e.g. from a viral vector.
- the vector may be targeted to the specific cells to be treated, or it may contain regulatory elements which are switched on more or less selectively by the target cells.
- Nucleic acid encoding the substance e.g. a polypeptide able to modulate, e.g. interfere with, the binding of an FHA domain to a phosphopeptide may thus be used in methods of gene therapy, for instance in treatment of individuals, e.g. with the aim of preventing or curing (wholly or partially) a disorder.
- Vectors such as viral vectors have been used in the prior art to introduce nucleic acid into a wide variety of different target cells. Typically the vectors are exposed to the target cells so that transfection can take place in a sufficient proportion of the cells to provide a useful therapeutic or prophylactic effect from the expression of the desired polypeptide.
- the transfected nucleic acid may be permanently incorporated into the genome of each of the targeted cells, providing long lasting effect, or alternatively the treatment may have to be repeated periodically .
- viruses have been used as gene transfer vectors, including papovaviruses, such as SV40, vaccinia virus, herpesviruses, including HSV and EBV, and retroviruses .
- papovaviruses such as SV40
- vaccinia virus vaccinia virus
- herpesviruses including HSV and EBV
- retroviruses retroviruses .
- Many gene therapy protocols in the prior art have used disabled murine retroviruses.
- nucleic acid into cells includes mechanical techniques such as microinjection, transfer mediated by liposomes and receptor-mediated DNA transfer.
- Receptor-mediated gene transfer in which the nucleic acid is linked to a protein ligand via polylysine, with the ligand being specific for a receptor present on the surface of the target cells, is an example of a technique for specifically targeting nucleic acid to particular cells .
- a polypeptide, phosphopeptide or other substance having an ability to modulate or interfere with the binding of an FHA domain to a phosphopeptide, a nucleic acid molecule which encodes a polypeptide having that ability, or a nucleic acid molecule which encodes an unphosphorylated form of a phosphopeptide having that ability may be provided in a kit, e.g. sealed in a suitable container which protects its contents from the external environment . Such a kit may include instructions for use.
- the present invention provides for the purification of a polypeptide or protein containing an
- the invention also provides for a purified protein or polypeptide containing an FHA domain and a purified phosphopeptide which has the ability to bind to an FHA domain.
- the purified polypeptide may be about 10% pure, more preferably about 20% pure, more preferably about 30% pure, more preferably about 40% pure, more preferably about 50% pure, more preferably about 60% pure, more preferably about 70% pure, more preferably about 80% pure, more preferably about 90% pure, more preferably about 95% pure, or substantially pure.
- the present invention provides a method of purifying a protein or polypeptide comprising an FHA domain or fragment able to bind a phosphopeptide, the method including contacting the polypeptide with a phosphopeptide.
- a mixture of material including a protein or polypeptide comprising an FHA domain may be contacted against immobilised phosphopeptide (e.g. immobilised either covalently or non- covalently such as via a specific binding molecule such as streptavidin or biotin) and molecules which do not bind to the phosphopeptide are washed off .
- immobilised phosphopeptide e.g. immobilised either covalently or non- covalently such as via a specific binding molecule such as streptavidin or biotin
- the invention provides a method of purifying a phosphopeptide, the method including contacting material containing the phosphopeptide with a protein or polypeptide comprising an FHA domain.
- Preferred FHA domains for use in methods of the invention are discussed elsewhere herein.
- the protein or polypeptide comprising the FHA domain which is contacted with the phosphopeptide, or the phosphopeptide which is contacted with the FHA domain, in a purification method of the present invention may be in a mixture of molecules, such as a cellular extract, such as a normal cell of an organism such as a human or a recombinant host cell expressing the protein or polypeptide or its unphosphorylated form from encoding DNA, such as a bacterial, eukaryotic (e.g. mammalian or yeast) or insect cell, such as in a baculovirus expression system.
- Purification may follow production of such a polypeptide recombinantly in a suitable expression system, such as a cell, by expression from encoding nucleic acid.
- the protein or polypeptide comprising the FHA domain or the phosphopeptide may be used as desired, e.g. in an assay for an agent which modulates its activity, e.g. binding, in raising or obtaining a specific antibody or other binding molecule, or in a therapeutic context.
- Methods of determining the binding of an FHA domain to a phosphopeptide, of identifying an FHA domain, of screening for a phosphopeptide able to bind to an FHA domain, and of screening for an agent able to modulate binding of an FHA domain to a phosphopeptide include methods in which a suitable end-point is used to assess binding.
- Binding may be determined by any number of techniques known in the art, qualitative or quantitative. They include techniques such as radioimmunosassay, co-immunoprecipitation, scintillation proximetry assay and ELISA methods .
- Binding of an FHA domain e.g. the FHAl domain of Rad53p
- a target phosphopeptide may be studied by labelling either one with a detectable label and bringing it into contact with the other which may have been immobilised on a solid support .
- Suitable detectable labels, especially for peptidyl substances include 35 S-methionine which may be incorporated into recombinantly produced peptides and polypeptides .
- Recombinantly produced peptides and polypeptides may also be expressed as a fusion protein containing an epitope which can be labelled with an antibody.
- the polypeptide which is immobilized on a solid support may be immobilized using an antibody against that polypeptide bound to a solid support or via other technologies which are known per se .
- a preferred in vi tro interaction may utilise a fusion polypeptide including glutathione-S-transferase (GST) . This may be immobilized on glutathione agarose beads.
- GST glutathione-S-transferase
- a test modulator can be assayed by determining its ability to diminish the amount of labelled polypeptide (e.g. labelle d phosphopeptide) which binds to the immobilized GST-fusion polypeptide (e.g.
- immobilised fusion polypeptide of GST and a peptide comprising an FHA domain may be determined by fractionating the glutathione-agarose beads by SDS- polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis .
- the beads may be rinsed to remove unbound polypeptide and the amount of polypeptide which has bound can be determined by counting the amount of label present in, for example, a suitable scintillation counter.
- Binding or interaction of an FHA domain and a phosphopeptide may also be determined using a two-hybrid assay.
- a polypeptide comprising an FHA domain or a phosphopeptide may be fused to a DNA binding domain such as that of the yeast transcription factor GAL4.
- the GAL4 transcription factor includes two functional domains. These domains are the DNA binding domain (GAL4DBD) and the GAL4 transcriptional activation domain (GAL4TAD) .
- GAL4DBD DNA binding domain
- GAL4TAD GAL4 transcriptional activation domain
- a kinase may be used to effect post-translational phosphorylation of the unphosphorylated form of the phosphopeptide sequence .
- the kinase may be endogenous to the expression host or introduced to the host in accordance with any technique well known to those skilled in the art. Suitable kinases are described elsewhere herein.
- This two hybrid assay format is described by Fields and Song, 1989, Nature 340; 245-246. It can be used in both mammalian cells and in yeast.
- Other combinations of DNA binding domain and transcriptional activation domain are available in the art and may be preferred, such as the LexA DNA binding domain and the VP60 transcriptional activation domain.
- a polypeptide comprising an FHA domain or a phosphopeptide may be employed as a fusion with (e.g.) the LexA DNA binding domain, and the counterpart polypeptide containing the FHA domain or phosphopeptide as a fusion with (e.g.) VP60.
- An expression cassette may be used to express a test peptide within a host cell.
- the expression cassette may be one vector from a library of expression vectors which encode a diverse range of peptides .
- a reduction in reporter gene expression e.g.
- test substance is not peptidyl and may not be expressed from encoding nucleic acid within a said third expression cassette, a similar system may be employed with the test substance supplied exogenously.
- An assay or screening method according to the present invention may thus take the form of an in vivo assay.
- the end-point of an in vivo assay that is to say the property which is determined in order to assess the binding of an FHA domain to a phosphopeptide (e.g. to assess whether a test substance interacts with a polypeptide comprising an FHA domain, whether a candidate FHA domain interacts with a phosphopeptide, or whether a test agent has an effect on the binding of an FHA domain to a phosphopeptide) may be a biological activity of the polypeptide comprising the FHA domain or a biological activity of the phosphopeptide, whichever as appropriate.
- those skilled in the art well appreciate the need for and design of appropriate controls for validation of results.
- the Rad53p protein of S. cerevisiae is phosphorylated in vivo, its phosphorylation being correlated with its function (Sanchez et al , Science (1996) 271, 357; Sun et al Genes Dev (1996) 10, 395) . Accordingly, in an in vivo assay of the present invention employing Rad53p, the end-point of the assay may be phosphorylation of Rad53p protein.
- Phosphorylation may be determined by any suitable method known to those skilled in the art. It may be detected by methods employing radiolabelled ATP and optionally a scintillant. By way of example, phosphorylation of a protein may be detected by capturing it on a solid substrate using an antibody or other specific binding molecule directed against the protein and immobilised to the substrate, the substrate being impregnated with a scintillant - such as in a standard scintillation proximetry assay. Phosphorylation is determined via measurement of the incorporation of radioactive phosphate.
- Phosphate incorporation into a protein such as Rad53p may also be determined by precipitation with acid, such as trichloroacetic acid, and collection of the precipitate on a nitrocellulose filter paper, followed by measurement of incorporation of radiolabeled phosphate.
- acid such as trichloroacetic acid
- Phosphorylation may be detected by methods employing an antibody or other binding molecule which binds the phosphorylated peptide with a different affinity to unphosphorylated peptide.
- Such antibodies may be obtained by means of any standard technique as discussed elsewhere herein. Binding of a binding molecule which discriminates between the phosphorylated and non-phosphorylated form of a peptide may be assessed using any technique available to those skilled in the art, examples of which are discussed elsewhere herein.
- an FHA domain may be used as a binding partner in any method of determining phosphorylation.
- Rad53p As other end points for in vivo assays employing Rad53p, the effect on DNA repair, RNR3 transcription, G 2 /M phase checkpoint arrest, replication inhibition, cell viability, cell killing and so on, may be measured. Suitable methods are known to those skilled in the art.
- activities which may be determined include induction of expression of a protein such as p21 (WAF1) , cellular sensitivity to ionizing radiation, p53- induced apoptosi ⁇ activity, p53 -induced anti-proliferative activity, p53-induced senescence of cells.
- WAF1 p21
- Figure 1A shows alignment and organisation of FHA domains.
- the sequences correspond to 15 yeast FHA domains, to FHA domains found in Rad53 relatives, and to FHA domains of other selected proteins .
- the abbreviations indicate the organism and protein in which each FHA domain is found.
- the following abbreviations are used for the organism: y or Sc - Saccharomyces cerevisiae; Sp - Schizosaccharomyces pombe ,- Hs - Homo sapiens ; Mm - Mus musculus ; Mtu - Mycobacteri um tuberculosis ; Syn - Synechocystis Sp. ; Ana - A ⁇ aJeana Sp .
- Figure IB shows an evolutionary tree of FHA domains .
- Figure ID shows that the RAD53 FHAl domain is important for survival in the presence of MMS .
- Figure 2 is a list of the peptides used in the present study.
- Figure 3 shows that the FHAl domain binds specific phosphopeptides with high affinity.
- Figure 3A shows binding curves of wild-type FHAl to the phosphorylated peptides ST, ST(P)+3A, T(P)5A, ST(P), SS(P) and S (P)T.
- Figure 3B is a comparison of wild-type FHAl and mutant (R70A, H88A, E117A) binding to the phosphorylated peptide ST(P) .
- FIG. 4 shows similarities between the growth factor- mediated signal transduction and DNA-damage signalling. Radl7p is represented by “17” and Mec3p by “3".
- Figure 5 shows results of experiments demonstrating the phosphothreonine of ST(p) residue can be protected from phosphatase activity by GST-FHA1 but not the H88A FHAl mutant .
- Figure 6 shows binding of wild-type FHAl to the ST(P) peptide using ITC. The titrations and the calculations leading to the K D , enthalpy ( ⁇ H) as well as the stoichiometry per FHA unit
- Figure 7 shows results of peptide library screening.
- Yeast strains BJ2168 (MATa ura3-52 leu2 trpl prbl-1122 pep4-3 prcl-407 gal2) and U960-5C (MATa rad53 ⁇ .-:HIS3 smll-1, in a
- W303 background were grown in non-selective and selective media as reported elsewhere (Boulton and Jackson, 1996) . All genotoxic drugs were purchased from Sigma. Hydroxyurea (HU) and methylmethane sulphonate (MMS) killing curves were established by diluting yeast cultures to an OD 600 of 0.2 followed by the addition of 0.2M HU or 0.05% MMS to the medium. At each time point, lOO ⁇ l of culture was diluted 10- fold before plating on synthetic complete medium minus uracil (SC-URA) plates using an automated spiral plater (Whitley) . Colonies were counted following incubation at 30°C for 3-4 days. For preparation of yeast extracts, cultures were grown to an OD 600 of 2.0 and the genotoxic agent (usually 0.02% MMS, 2 ⁇ g/mL of 4-NQO, unless otherwise indicated) was then added for a period of 60 minutes.
- HU Hydroxyurea
- MMS methylmethane sulphonate
- Fusion proteins were purified using glutathione-Sepharose 4B according to the batch method described in the GST manual (Pharmacia) . Fusion proteins were dialysed overnight in 50 mM Tris-Cl pH 7.4, NaCl 50 mM, 1 mM dithiothreitol (DTT) and 500 mM 4- (2- aminoethyDbenzenesulphoylfluoride (AEBSF) and then aliquoted and stored at -80°C. Protein concentration was determined by total amino acid analysis.
- fusion protein 50 ng was incubated with the biotinylated peptide (5 ng) in 100 ⁇ l of binding buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.4, 150 mM NaCl , 0.3% Nonidet P-40 (NP-40) , 1 mM DTT, 500 ⁇ M AEBSF and 2 ⁇ M microcystin-LR) plus 0.25% bovine serum albumin (BSA) for 30 minutes at room temperature.
- binding buffer 50 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.4, 150 mM NaCl , 0.3% Nonidet P-40 (NP-40) , 1 mM DTT, 500 ⁇ M AEBSF and 2 ⁇ M microcystin-LR
- BSA bovine serum albumin
- the compact cell pellet was then extruded through a syringe in liquid nitrogen and the frozen cell pellet ground in a coffee grinder in the presence of dry ice for five minutes.
- the dry ice was allowed to sublime and 1 volume (of the starting packed cell pellet) of 2X extraction buffer was added.
- the extracts were clarified by centrifugation at 4°C in a microfuge at 13000 g, aliquoted, quantitated by the Bradford assay (Pierce) and stored at -80°C.
- Yeast protein extracts typically 50 ⁇ g
- protein complexes were separated on 7% SDS-PAGE containing an acrylamide to bis- acrylamide ratio of 80:1 (Vialard, et al .
- binding buffer IX 50 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.4, 150 mM NaCl, 0.3% NP-40, 1 mM DTT, 1 mM sodium orthovanadate, 10 mM b- glyceropho ⁇ phate, 2 ⁇ M microcy ⁇ tin-LR and CompleteTM protease inhibitor mix
- Beads were then washed four ti e ⁇ in IX binding buffer and the protein complexe ⁇ eluted by boiling in SDS buffer prior to SDS-PAGE.
- Biotinylated peptides were immobilised on a streptavidin coated chip (SA5) u ⁇ ing a BIAcoreTM2000, Pharmacia Bio ⁇ ensor AB (Uppsala, Sweden). Biotinylated peptide (0.1 ⁇ M) was manually injected at 10 ⁇ l/min to an equivalent of 400 resonance units (RU) . Protein was dialysed and diluted in 50 mM Tri ⁇ -Cl, pH 7.4, 150 mM NaCl, 0.3% NP-40, 1 mM DTT, 1 mM PMSF to concentration ⁇ ranging from 1 ⁇ M-20 ⁇ M.
- Ynlll ⁇ wp is a homologue of the S. pombe spindle checkpoint protein Dmal .
- YDR501W has been found to be expressed in a highly restricted fashion during the cell cycle (Spellman, P.T., et al . , (1998) Molecular Biology of the Cell, 9, 3273- 3297) . The inventors believe that these proteins may function in controlling cell cycle progression or checkpoints.
- the inventors then compared the amino acid sequence ⁇ of known and newly identified FHA domain ⁇ .
- sequence ⁇ were obtained from the Pfam databa ⁇ e (http://www.8anger.ac.uk) or from PSI-BLAST searches . They were aligned using the ClustalX algorithm described in Thompson, J. D., et al . , (1997) Nucleic Acids Research Vol.25(24), 4876-4882.
- Figure 1A shows the alignment and organisation of the FHA domain. The shading was performed using boxshade .
- ⁇ represent ⁇ a hydrophobic amino acid
- X repre ⁇ ent ⁇ any amino acid and two or more re ⁇ idue ⁇ which are separated by commas and are shown within brackets represent the pos ⁇ ible residues which may be present at that position.
- the underlined residues are ab ⁇ olutely conserved among FHA domains. This consensus sequence (and/or techniques already known to those skilled in the art) readily enables the identification of further FHA domains .
- the FHAl and FHA2 domains of Rad53 are important for survival after DNA damage
- R70A, E117A, R605A and (R70A, R605A) mutants expressed normal levels of Rad53p
- the RA 53(H88A) mutant was either not expressed or was unstable.
- the H88A mutant was not employed in subsequent in vivo analyses .
- Log-phase yeast cultures bearing wild-type or mutated RAD53 alleles were diluted to an OD 60 lake of 0.2 and incubated in medium containing 0.2 M HU for an increasing amount of time
- Hydroxyurea lowers the level of the intracellular dNTP pool, leading to stalled replication fork ⁇ at early-firing origin ⁇ that, in turn, trigger the DNA replication checkpoint
- the strain carrying the R70A mutation of FHAl reduce ⁇ plating efficiency in the pre ⁇ ence of HU approximately 3 to 5-fold compared with the wild-type RAD53 allele and the colonie ⁇ generated by thi ⁇ mutant grow ⁇ ignificantly more ⁇ lowly in HU than tho ⁇ e of the wild-type and E117A mutant ⁇ trains.
- the present inventors investigated whether FHAl plays a role in signalling DNA damage triggered by the DNA alkylating agent, MMS.
- Rad9p The FHAl domain of Rad53p interacts with pho ⁇ phorylated Rad9p
- Rad9p is phosphorylated in response to DNA damage (Sun, Z. X., et al . , (1998); Vialard, J. E., et al . , (1998); Emili, A., et al . , (1998)).
- Protein extracts (lmg) from untreated yea ⁇ t cultures and from cultures treated either with MMS or the UV-mimetic agent 4- nitroquinoline oxide (4-NQO; Siede, W. , et al . , (1993)) were incubated in the presence of 500 ng GST-FHAl, 500ng GST- FHA1(R70A) or 500ng GST-FHA2 fusion proteins immobilised on Sepharose beads . Complexes were then washed extensively and the bound proteins analy ⁇ ed by SDS-gel electrophore ⁇ i ⁇ followed by Western blotting and detection of Rad9p with anti-Rad9p polyclonal antiserum.
- 4- nitroquinoline oxide (4-NQO; Siede, W. , et al . , (1993)
- the present inventors assayed the ability of the FHAl (H88A) , FHAKE117A) and FHA2 (R605A) mutants to bind pho ⁇ phorylated Rad9p in the a ⁇ ay described above.
- FHA1(E117A) efficiently retrieves Rad9p from yea ⁇ t extract ⁇ , whereas GST fusions of FHAKH88A) or FHA2 (R605A) do not.
- the ability of Rad53p FHA domains to bind Rad9p correlates with their ability to function in checkpoint signalling.
- the interaction between FHAl and phosphorylated Rad9p i ⁇ di ⁇ rupted by specific phosphopeptide ⁇ The inventors tested whether the FHA1-Rad9p interaction can be disrupted by phosphorylated polypeptides .
- T h e set of phosphorylated and non-phosphorylated peptide ⁇ u ⁇ ed in the ⁇ tudy is listed in Figure 2.
- the first twelve peptides are derived from p53, the bottom two from H2A.X. All the peptides from the p53 memori ⁇ are biotinylated and contain the linker Ser-Gly-Ser-Gly between the biotin group and the N- terminus of the peptide .
- the inventors performed competition studie ⁇ . Immobili ⁇ ed FHAl- or FHA2-GST fu ⁇ ions were incubated with whole cell extracts (lmg) prepared from yeast cells exposed to MMS, either alone or together with variou ⁇ phosphorylated or unphosphorylated peptides (5 ⁇ M) . The binding of phosphorylated forms of Rad9p to the FHA fusion was as ⁇ essed by Western blotting using the anti-Rad9p antiserum.
- RAD53 FHAl binds specific phosphopeptides with high affinity and selectivity The inventors analysed whether FHAl can bind directly to
- ST(P) or any of the other phosphopeptides employed.
- a pulldown assay was employed in which biotinylated peptides (5ng) were incubated with different GST-FHA fusion proteins (50ng) , and bound protein was retrieved using streptavidin-coupled paramagnetic bead ⁇ . After wa ⁇ hing the bead ⁇ exten ⁇ ively, the GST fusion proteins were then eluted, electrophoresed on an SDS-polyacrylamide gel and detected by Western blotting using an anti-GST monoclonal antibody. Only the ST(P) peptide but not the unphosphorylated peptide (ST) nor the S(P)T phosphopeptide was able to specifically retreive the GST-FHA1 protein. This pattern of phosphopeptide binding is therefore identical to the pattern observed in the competition experiments, and provides strong support for the notion that FHAl binds Rad9p via the direct recognition of a Rad9p pho ⁇ pho-epitope.
- the inventor ⁇ generated a GST-FHA2 fu ⁇ ion and GST-FHAl fusion proteins containing the R70A, H88A or E117A mutations, and tested these for their ability to bind the ST(P) peptide using the biotinylated-peptide pull-down a ⁇ ay described above. Consistent with the in vivo functional data and the Rad9p binding studie ⁇ , wild-type GST-FHAl and GST-FHA1 (E117A) but not GST-FHAl (R70A) nor GST-FHAl (H88A) is able to bind specifically to this phosphopeptide. Furthermore, GST-FHA2 also does not bind to the ST(P) peptide, further demonstrating that FHA2 has a different binding specificity from FHAl.
- K D represent ⁇ the di ⁇ sociation constant, RU the resonnance units observed, and [FHA] the concentration of the FHA domain.
- the KALEIDAGRAPH program was used; best fit indicated by solid lines) .
- the inventors ascertained the binding affinities of the
- the phosphothreonine residue of ST(P) can be protected from pho ⁇ phata ⁇ e activity by GST-FHAl but not the H88A FHAl mutant ( Figure 5) .
- the FHA domain protects the phosphate group from pho ⁇ phata ⁇ e activity. 1 protein phosphatase was added to binding reactions containing the ST(P) peptide and GST-FHAl (FHAl) or GST-FHAl (H88A) fusion proteins and aliquots were taken after 30 and 60 min.
- ITC Isothermal titration calorimetry
- the ITC measurments enabled calculation of the enthalpy of binding ( ⁇ H) to be -7.228 kcal/mol and to evaluate the stoichimetry of binding (N) to be 0.849 phosphopeptides per FHAl unit in the GST-FHAl dimer (thus 1.698 phosphopeptides per GST-fusion dimer).
- the data fit a model in which the binding is non-cooperative between the two FHA units .
- the inventors ob ⁇ erved that the ⁇ pecificity of the peptide- FHAl interaction resides mainly C-terminal of the phosphoamino acid residue and mainly at the +3 position.
- Peptide libraries were generated based on the ST or ST(P) peptides in which each of the three position ⁇ C-terminal to the threonine or phosphothreonine were fully degenerate for all amino acid residue ⁇ , except cysteine (yielding T and T(P) peptide libraries, respectively; Figure 7A) .
- FHAl and FHA2 FHAl and FHA2 , Yhrll5cp) , Arabidopsis (KAPP), human (KIAA0170 and the Nibrin/NBSl protein) and Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- the FHAl domain avidly bound the peptide mixture and this binding was dependent on the critical His-88 residue ( Figure 7B) .
- the FHA2 domain was also able to bind peptides of the
- T(P) library in an FHA-dependent manner ( Figure 7B) . All the other FHA domains tested were also able to bind to peptides in the T(P) library; displaying at least ten-fold more binding toward the T(P) peptides than to the unphosphorylated peptides of the T library. The extent and kinetics of T(P) binding was clearly different for each FHA domain and most did not bind the ST(P) peptide, further indicating that each FHA domain has its own binding specificity.
- 150 ng of ST(P) peptide was incubated with 500 ng of GST fusion protein in 100 ml of IX phosphatase buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl, 0.1 mM EDTA, 5 mM DTT, 0.01% Brij 35, pH 7.5) for an hour on ice. 1200 units of 1 protein phosphatase (New England Biolabs) and 2 mM final MnCl 2 were then added and reactions were stopped after 30 or 60 min by addition of 5 0 ml of 0.5M EDTA.
- IX phosphatase buffer 50 mM Tris-HCl, 0.1 mM EDTA, 5 mM DTT, 0.01% Brij 35, pH 7.5
- 1200 units of 1 protein phosphatase (New England Biolabs) and 2 mM final MnCl 2 were then added and reactions were stopped after 30 or 60 min by addition of 5 0 ml of 0.5M EDTA.
- the entire reaction was spotted on nitrocellulose using a dot blot apparatus followed by probing with a phospho- ⁇ pecific antibody recognising the phosphothreonine-18 of p53 (B. Hann, N. Lakin and SPJ, unpublished data) .
- the data wa ⁇ quantified using the NIH image software.
- the inventors have shown that the FHAl and FHA2 domains of Rad53p are important in mediation of effective responses to DNA damage or replication arrest, and have revealed that mutations in conserved residue ⁇ within the ⁇ e domains abrogate their function.
- the inventors also investigated the binding of the FHAl domain to Rad9p. Data provided herein demonstrate that despite teachings to the contrary, the FHAl domain does bind with high specificity to phosphorylated forms of Rad9p which arise after DNA damage.
- the inventors have shown that this binding of FHAl to Rad9p can be effectively blocked by specific phosphopeptides but not by their unphosphorylated derivatives, and that the FHAl domain in fact bind ⁇ directly to such blocking pho ⁇ phopeptides with a high degree of specificity, and with an affinity comparable with other interactions of e ⁇ tabli ⁇ hed biological importance. Accordingly, the inventor ⁇ have thu ⁇ e ⁇ tabli ⁇ hed the FHA domain a ⁇ a pho ⁇ pho- ⁇ pecific binding module.
- the FHA domain as a phospho-dependent protein-protein interaction motif
- the inventor ⁇ have conducted an alanine scan of residues surrounding the phosphothreonine on the ST(P) peptide and have revealed that the residue at position +3 is a major determinant of the binding specificity, just as is the case for characterised SH2-pho ⁇ phopeptide interactions (Waksman, G., et al.,(1993)).
- the ⁇ tructure of the SH2-phosphotyrosyl- peptide interaction has demonstrated a "two plugs, two sockets" mode of binding, in which the phosphotyrosine residue binds in a groove independently of the residue at position +3 that binds to an adjacent cleft (Kuriyan and Cowburn, 1997; Waksman, et al . , 1993).
- FHA2 domains have different roles during checkpoint ⁇ ignalling. Although the re ⁇ ult ⁇ provided herein demon ⁇ trate that there may be unique, non-redundant roles for each of the Rad53p FHA domains, they illustrate that both domains have a high degree of redundancy at a genetic level . This is reflected at a molecular level ⁇ ince the present inventors have shown that both domains bind phosphorylated forms of Rad9p. Taken together, the data indicate that FHAl and FHA2 may function cooperatively, through binding to distinct phosphoepitope ⁇ of Rad9p, and that either or both of the domains may also bind additional phosphoprotein ( ⁇ ) .
- ⁇ additional phosphoprotein
- the present inventors have formulated a model of DNA damage signalling which is conceptually analogous to growth factor signal transduction pathway ( Figure 4) .
- FHA domains are analogous to SH2 domains and act as phosphodependent protein-protein binding motifs.
- the FHA domains of Rad53p might locate Rad53p to putative Meclp-Tellp complexes, perhaps at the ⁇ ite of the DNA lesion itself.
- Thi ⁇ would allow very specific activation and subsequent amplification of the DNA damage signal, leading to the series of events known as the DNA damage respon ⁇ e.
- the main function of the FHA domain may be to localise proteins to subcellular compartments or protein complexes in manner regulated by protein phosphorylation.
- the putative targeting of Rad53p to sites of DNA damage through the regulated phosphorylation of Rad9p is certainly in line with this idea.
- Another FHA- containing protein with a dynamic and regulated localisation within the cell is human Ki-67, a nuclear antigen required for cellular proliferation, which shuttles from the nucleolus to the periphery of the chromosomes during mitosis (Kill, I. R., (1996) Journal of Cell Science 109, 1253-1263; Starborg,
- the localisation of the Rad50-Mrell complex to site ⁇ of DNA damage in human cell ⁇ ha ⁇ been shown to require NBSl/Nibrin, an as ⁇ ociated protein that contain ⁇ an FHA domain and a BRCT domain, and which i ⁇ the product of the gene mutated in the developmental abnormality and cancer- prone condition, Nijmegen breakage ⁇ yndrome (Carney, et al . , 1998; Matsuura, et al . , 1998; Varon, et al . , 1998).
- NBS1-Rad50-Mrell requires the function of ATM, a protein kinase of the PIKL family (Maser, et al . , 1997) .
- An attractive model therefore, is that ATM- dependent phosphorylation of a DNA-bound target triggers an FHA-dependent localisation of the complex to sites of DNA damage .
- I F 2 138816 Same as ILF-1 EST C17 2 82 C17282 Human Rabbit , mouse possible sarcolemmal protein (EST AA762997)
- NIPP-1 2136792 Bovine ND Inhibitor of protein phosphatase, RNA processing
- KIAA0170 1136400 Human ND similar to Ki-67, possesses BRCT domains
- P78/MSP58 3201964 Human Mouse Cell cycle regulated protein, binds to viral protein ICP22 during HSV infection Rad53 134835 S cerevisiae S pombe Cd ⁇ l Checkpoint kinase
- Mekl 127299 S cerevisiae S pombe Mekl+ Meiotic checkpoint kinase
- Fhll 729486 S cerevisiae ND Contains a forkhead domain Involved in RNA processing
- Ydr200c 1077544 S cerevisiae ND Homologous to yl238w PinA 1688322 Dictyostelium ND Mitotic peptide-directed discoidum prolyl isomerase
- KARP KARP binding protein
- KAB2 5734603 Human ND KAB was found as a KARP binding protein KARP is the protein arising from the Ku80 locus--members of a protein family comprising KABl, KIAA0284, KIAA0470
- ILF3 Q13624* Human ND Forkhead-type transcription factor see ILF1 and -2)
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Cited By (4)
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WO2001064913A2 (en) * | 2000-03-02 | 2001-09-07 | Rigel Pharmaceuticals, Inc. | Cell cycle proteins associated with rad9, compositions and methods of use |
US8008035B2 (en) | 2007-01-25 | 2011-08-30 | Roche Diagnostics Operations, Inc. | Enhancement of vanadium-containing phosphatase inhibitors |
EP1949894A3 (en) * | 2007-01-25 | 2011-12-28 | Roche Diagnostics GmbH | Enhancement of vanadium-containing phosphatase inhibitors by polyols |
EP3702495A1 (en) * | 2014-09-25 | 2020-09-02 | Idea Orchard, LLC | Antibody like protein |
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US5763164A (en) * | 1993-04-16 | 1998-06-09 | Northwestern University | Immunogenic cancer proteins and peptides and methods of use |
WO1999042833A1 (en) * | 1998-02-19 | 1999-08-26 | Imperial Cancer Research Technology Limited | Protein kinase c |
-
2000
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Patent Citations (2)
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US5763164A (en) * | 1993-04-16 | 1998-06-09 | Northwestern University | Immunogenic cancer proteins and peptides and methods of use |
WO1999042833A1 (en) * | 1998-02-19 | 1999-08-26 | Imperial Cancer Research Technology Limited | Protein kinase c |
Non-Patent Citations (7)
Title |
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DUROCHER D. ET AL.: "The FHA domain is a modular phosphopeptide recognition motif" MOLECULAR CELL, vol. 4, September 1999 (1999-09), pages 387-394, XP002151809 * |
EMILI A.: "MEC1-dependent phosphorylation of Rad9p in response to DNA damage" MOLECULAR CELL, vol. 2, 1998, pages 183-189, XP002151812 cited in the application * |
HOFMANN K. ET AL.: "The FHA domain: a putative nuclear signalling domain found in protein kinases and transcription factors" TIBS, vol. 20, 1995, pages 347-349, XP002151811 cited in the application * |
LI J. ET AL.: "Kinase interaction domain of kinase-associated protein phosphatase, a phosphoprotein-binding domain." PROC. NATL. ACAD. SCI. USA, vol. 96, July 1999 (1999-07), pages 7821-7826, XP002151814 * |
PERICH J.W. ET AL.: "Synthesis of phosphopeptides by the Multipin method: evaluation of coupling methods for the incorporation of Fmoc-Tyr(PO3Bzl,H)-OH, Fmoc-Ser(PO3Bzl,H)-OH and Fmoc-Thr(PO3Bzl,H)-OH" LETTERS IN PEPTIDE SCIENCE, vol. 6, 1999, pages 91-97, XP000961751 * |
SUN Z. ET AL.: "Rad53 FHA domain associated with phosphorylated Rad9 in the DNA damage checkpoint" SCIENCE, vol. 281, 10 July 1998 (1998-07-10), pages 272-274, XP002151810 cited in the application * |
VIALARD J.E. ET AL.: "The budding yeast Rad9 checkpoint protein is subjected to Mec1/Tel1-dependent hyperphosphorylation and interacts with Rad53 after DNA damage." THE EMBO JOURNAL, vol. 17, no. 19, 1998, pages 5679-5688, XP002151813 cited in the application * |
Cited By (8)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
WO2001064913A2 (en) * | 2000-03-02 | 2001-09-07 | Rigel Pharmaceuticals, Inc. | Cell cycle proteins associated with rad9, compositions and methods of use |
WO2001064913A3 (en) * | 2000-03-03 | 2002-04-18 | Rigel Pharmaceuticals Inc | Cell cycle proteins associated with rad9, compositions and methods of use |
US7384761B2 (en) | 2000-03-03 | 2008-06-10 | Rigel Pharmaceuticals, Inc. | Methods of identifying an agent capable of interfering with Rad9 dephosphorylation |
US8008035B2 (en) | 2007-01-25 | 2011-08-30 | Roche Diagnostics Operations, Inc. | Enhancement of vanadium-containing phosphatase inhibitors |
EP1949894A3 (en) * | 2007-01-25 | 2011-12-28 | Roche Diagnostics GmbH | Enhancement of vanadium-containing phosphatase inhibitors by polyols |
US8278086B2 (en) | 2007-01-25 | 2012-10-02 | Roche Diagnostics Operations, Inc. | Enhancement of vanadium-containing phosphatase inhibitors |
US8563263B2 (en) | 2007-01-25 | 2013-10-22 | Roche Diagnostics Operations Inc. | Enhancement of vanadium-containing phosphatase inhibitors |
EP3702495A1 (en) * | 2014-09-25 | 2020-09-02 | Idea Orchard, LLC | Antibody like protein |
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GB2348701A (en) | 2000-10-11 |
GB0006533D0 (en) | 2000-05-10 |
WO2000057184A3 (en) | 2001-03-08 |
GB2348701B (en) | 2001-06-20 |
AU3440700A (en) | 2000-10-09 |
EP1163521A2 (en) | 2001-12-19 |
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