Abstract

Abstract Disclosure: S. Khowal: None. D. Zhang: None. R. Damoiseaux: None. K. Javaherian: None. A.P. Heaney: None. Cushing Disease (CD), due to an adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)-secreting pituitary tumor, leads to excess cortisol and is a life-threatening “orphan disease”. Although surgical removal can be effective, CD frequently recurs. Thereafter, repeat surgery, radiation therapy and/or bilateral adrenalectomy are not always successful and cause significant morbidity. Medical therapy has significantly improved but there is a clear unmet need for efficacious and safe therapies that target the pituitary corticotroph tumor itself to offer biochemical and tumor control. We previously demonstrated that the orphan testicular receptor 4 (TR4) regulates pro-opiomelanocortin gene transcription and ACTH secretion. Herein, we used the Flexi Vector system to identify TR4 modulators by fusing the TR4 LBD (380-615aa) to a 3’ GAL4 DBD to generate a chimeric fusion plasmid, pBIND-TR4-LBD. The pBIND-TR4-LBD construct and an exogenous luciferase reporter construct pGL4.35 (luc2P/9XGAL4UAS), containing 9 copies of a GAL4 responsive upstream activating sequence (UAS), were then transiently transfected into human embryonic kidney (HEK293) cells. Following treatment with TR4 ligands or modulators, our TR4-LBD undergoes a conformational change and recruits additional cofactors and RNA polymerase II to the complex to drive GAL4-directed firefly luciferase expression. In a high throughput screen (HTS) of 27,705 chemicals, we identified several potential “hit” TR4 modulators that induced or inhibited TR4 LBD-directed GAL4UAS-directed luciferase expression by >3 -fold. Compounds from the HTS included ATP-sensitive K+ and calcium channel blockers, steroid hormones and modulators of cell proliferation and inflammation and several agonist and antagonist “hit” compounds induced TR4 >10 fold or inhibited TR4 by 90% respectively with minimal cell toxicity (<10%). In silico analysis of interactions between the TR4 LBD and these potential ligands indicated that the GLU-534 & ARG-565 may be crucial residues involved in TR4 ligand binding. Dose-response curves to calculate EC50 of these potential TR4 hit compounds and mode-of-action characterization are in progress. Our studies have identified several potent TR4 agonistic and antagonistic compounds and lay the framework for the discovery of safe and efficacious lead TR4 ligands that can be further advanced as potential drug therapies for CD and other diseases. Presentation: Friday, June 16, 2023

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