Abstract

SMYD2 is a lysine methyltransferase that catalyzes the monomethylation of several protein substrates including p53. SMYD2 is overexpressed in a significant percentage of esophageal squamous primary carcinomas, and that overexpression correlates with poor patient survival. However, the mechanism(s) by which SMYD2 promotes oncogenesis is not understood. A small molecule probe for SMYD2 would allow for the pharmacological dissection of this biology. In this report, we disclose LLY-507, a cell-active, potent small molecule inhibitor of SMYD2. LLY-507 is >100-fold selective for SMYD2 over a broad range of methyltransferase and non-methyltransferase targets. A 1.63-Å resolution crystal structure of SMYD2 in complex with LLY-507 shows the inhibitor binding in the substrate peptide binding pocket. LLY-507 is active in cells as measured by reduction of SMYD2-induced monomethylation of p53 Lys(370) at submicromolar concentrations. We used LLY-507 to further test other potential roles of SMYD2. Mass spectrometry-based proteomics showed that cellular global histone methylation levels were not significantly affected by SMYD2 inhibition with LLY-507, and subcellular fractionation studies indicate that SMYD2 is primarily cytoplasmic, suggesting that SMYD2 targets a very small subset of histones at specific chromatin loci and/or non-histone substrates. Breast and liver cancers were identified through in silico data mining as tumor types that display amplification and/or overexpression of SMYD2. LLY-507 inhibited the proliferation of several esophageal, liver, and breast cancer cell lines in a dose-dependent manner. These findings suggest that LLY-507 serves as a valuable chemical probe to aid in the dissection of SMYD2 function in cancer and other biological processes.

Highlights

  • SMYD2 is a methyltransferase whose role in cancer is poorly understood and is lacking cell-active chemical tools

  • LLY-507 is a first-in-class cell-potent chemical probe that will be valuable in dissecting SMYD2 biology

  • SMYD2 is overexpressed in a significant percentage of esophageal squamous primary carcinomas, and that overexpression correlates with poor patient survival

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Summary

Conclusion

LLY-507 is potent, selective, cell-active, and binds SMYD2 in a high resolution co-crystal. LLY-507 inhibited the proliferation of several esophageal, liver, and breast cancer cell lines in a dosedependent manner These findings suggest that LLY-507 serves as a valuable chemical probe to aid in the dissection of SMYD2 function in cancer and other biological processes. SMYD3 targets both histone (histone H3K4 and histone H4K5) and non-histone substrates (VEGFR1, estrogen receptor ␣, and MAP3K2), is overexpressed in cancer and implicated in the tumorigenesis of Ras-driven tumors, and plays a role in skeletal atrophy through recruitment of bromodomain protein Brd and regulation of c-Met and myostatin gene expression [7,8,9,10]. SMYD5 trimethylates lysine 20 on histone H4 on a specific subset of Toll-like receptor 4 genes and represses their expression in association with nuclear co-repressor complexes, suggesting a role for this methyltransferase in inflammation [12]. We disclose the biochemical and cellular characterization of LLY-507 as well as the crystal structure of SMYD2 in complex with LLY-507

Experimental Procedures
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