Simple SummaryBy combining drug screens, transcriptomic studies, and in vitro assays, our study identified the natural product toyocamycin as a potent and selective CDK9 inhibitor. Thus, toyocamycin can be used as a new small molecule to modulate CDK9 activity in preclinical research. Through docking simulations, we identified its specific binding sites, which could spark some interest to design novel small molecule CDK9 inhibitors.Aberrant transcription in cancer cells involves the silencing of tumor suppressor genes (TSGs) and activation of oncogenes. Transcriptomic changes are associated with epigenomic alterations such as DNA-hypermethylation, histone deacetylation, and chromatin condensation in promoter regions of silenced TSGs. To discover novel drugs that trigger TSG reactivation in cancer cells, we used a GFP-reporter system whose expression is silenced by promoter DNA hypermethylation and histone deacetylation. After screening a natural product drug library, we identified that toyocamycin, an adenosine-analog, induces potent GFP reactivation and loss of clonogenicity in human colon cancer cells. Connectivity-mapping analysis revealed that toyocamycin produces a pharmacological signature mimicking cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) inhibitors. RNA-sequencing revealed that the toyocamycin transcriptomic signature resembles that of a specific CDK9 inhibitor (HH1). Specific inhibition of RNA Pol II phosphorylation level and kinase assays confirmed that toyocamycin specifically inhibits CDK9 (IC50 = 79 nM) with a greater efficacy than other CDKs (IC50 values between 0.67 and 15 µM). Molecular docking showed that toyocamycin efficiently binds the CDK9 catalytic site in a conformation that differs from other CDKs, explained by the binding contribution of specific amino acids within the catalytic pocket and protein backbone. Altogether, we demonstrated that toyocamycin exhibits specific CDK9 inhibition in cancer cells, highlighting its potential for cancer chemotherapy.
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