Development of a genetically encoded and potent PDE6D inhibitor

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Abstract

PDE6D is a trafficking chaperone of prenylated proteins, such as small GTPases. Several small molecule inhibitors have been developed against it, given that the oncogene K-Ras is one of the cargo proteins. Inhibitor development suffered from the fact that inhibitors against the hydrophobic pocket of PDE6D were typically poorly water-soluble. Here we describe the development of genetically encoded inhibitors that are inspired by high-affinity natural cargo of PDE6D. Our most potent inhibitor, SNAP-STI, encodes merely a farnesylated tetra-peptide, which efficiently blocks PDE6D binding of farnesylated cargo. Direct comparison with small molecule PDE6D inhibitors suggests its higher potency. We show that inhibition of K-Ras membrane anchorage and K-RasG12C-dependent MAPK-signaling by SNAP-STI is weak, consistent with what is observed after PDE6D knockdown. Our data therefore further support that PDE6D is not a suitable surrogate target for efficient inhibition of K-Ras membrane anchorage and MAPK-activity. Nonetheless, by exploiting contacts at the pocket entry, we established a generalizable strategy to design high-affinity PDE6D inhibitors, providing powerful tools for PDE6D biology and target validation.

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