Peptide-based drugs are powerful inhibitors of therapeutically relevant protein-protein interactions. Their affinity and selectivity for target proteins are commonly assessed using fluorescence-based assays such as anisotropy/polarization or quantitative microarrays. This study reveals that labeling can perturb peptide/protein binding by more than 1 order of magnitude. We have recently developed inhibitors targeted to the N-terminal Src homology 2 (SH2) domain of oncogenic phosphatase SHP2. Despite their high activity and selectivity, these molecules demonstrated an undesired interaction with the SH2 domain of another protein, known as APS, in a fluorescence microarray assay. Fluorescence anisotropy measurement in solution showed that the dissociation constant was significantly influenced by labeling (similar to 10 times), and the effect depended on the specific fluorophore and SH2 domain. Notably, displacement assays performed with unlabeled peptides were successfully used to eliminate these artifacts, demonstrating that the inhibitors' affinity for their target is over 1,000 times higher than for APS.
Bobone, S., Storti, C., Fulci, C., Damiani, A., Innamorati, C., Roversi, D., et al. (2024). Fluorescent Labeling Can Significantly Perturb Measured Binding Affinity and Selectivity of Peptide-Protein Interactions. THE JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY LETTERS, 15(40), 10252-10257 [10.1021/acs.jpclett.4c01767].
Fluorescent Labeling Can Significantly Perturb Measured Binding Affinity and Selectivity of Peptide-Protein Interactions
Bobone S.;Storti C.;Fulci C.;Innamorati C.;Roversi D.;Calligari P.;Bocchinfuso G.;Stella L.
2024-01-01
Abstract
Peptide-based drugs are powerful inhibitors of therapeutically relevant protein-protein interactions. Their affinity and selectivity for target proteins are commonly assessed using fluorescence-based assays such as anisotropy/polarization or quantitative microarrays. This study reveals that labeling can perturb peptide/protein binding by more than 1 order of magnitude. We have recently developed inhibitors targeted to the N-terminal Src homology 2 (SH2) domain of oncogenic phosphatase SHP2. Despite their high activity and selectivity, these molecules demonstrated an undesired interaction with the SH2 domain of another protein, known as APS, in a fluorescence microarray assay. Fluorescence anisotropy measurement in solution showed that the dissociation constant was significantly influenced by labeling (similar to 10 times), and the effect depended on the specific fluorophore and SH2 domain. Notably, displacement assays performed with unlabeled peptides were successfully used to eliminate these artifacts, demonstrating that the inhibitors' affinity for their target is over 1,000 times higher than for APS.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.