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Covalent Inhibition of Pro-Apoptotic BAX

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2023-06-01

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McHenry, Matthew William. 2023. Covalent Inhibition of Pro-Apoptotic BAX. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard University Graduate School of Arts and Sciences.

Abstract

BCL-2-associated X protein (BAX) is a promising therapeutic target for activating or restraining apoptosis in diseases of pathologic cell survival or cell death, respectively. In response to cellular stress, BAX transforms from a quiescent cytosolic monomer into a toxic oligomer that permeabilizes the mitochondria, releasing key apoptogenic factors. The mitochondrial lipid trans-2-hexadecenal (t-2-hex) sensitizes BAX activation by covalent derivatization of cysteine 126 (C126). Here, we performed a disulfide tethering screen to discover C126-reactive molecules that modulate BAX activity. We identified covalent BAX inhibitor 1 (CBI1) as a compound that selectively derivatizes BAX at C126 and inhibits BAX activation by the physiologic ligand tBID or point mutagenesis. Biochemical and structural analyses revealed that CBI1 can inhibit BAX by a dual mechanism of action: conformational constraint and competitive blockade of lipidation. These data inform a pharmacologic strategy for blocking apoptosis in diseases of unwanted cell death by covalent targeting of BAX C126.

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Apoptosis, BAX, BCL-2 family, Covalent Inhibition, Biochemistry, Chemistry

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