Dissecting glucose signalling with diversity-oriented synthesis and small-molecule microarrays.

Nature
Authors
Keywords
Abstract

Small molecules that alter protein function provide a means to modulate biological networks with temporal resolution. Here we demonstrate a potentially general and scalable method of identifying such molecules by application to a particular protein, Ure2p, which represses the transcription factors Gln3p and Nil1p. By probing a high-density microarray of small molecules generated by diversity-oriented synthesis with fluorescently labelled Ure2p, we performed 3,780 protein-binding assays in parallel and identified several compounds that bind Ure2p. One compound, which we call uretupamine, specifically activates a glucose-sensitive transcriptional pathway downstream of Ure2p. Whole-genome transcription profiling and chemical epistasis demonstrate the remarkable Ure2p specificity of uretupamine and its ability to modulate the glucose-sensitive subset of genes downstream of Ure2p. These results demonstrate that diversity-oriented synthesis and small-molecule microarrays can be used to identify small molecules that bind to a protein of interest, and that these small molecules can regulate specific functions of the protein.

Year of Publication
2002
Journal
Nature
Volume
416
Issue
6881
Pages
653-7
Date Published
2002 Apr 11
ISSN
0028-0836
DOI
10.1038/416653a
PubMed ID
11948353
Links
Grant list
GM-38627 / GM / NIGMS NIH HHS / United States