Metabolic glues as a means of purine sensing and chemotherapeutic response

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Molecular glues stabilize weak interactions to impart novel functionalities onto complexes. While plant hormones or drugs are known molecular glues, it is still unknown whether this modality provides endogenous regulation in human cells. Here, we show that purine nucleotides are molecular glues that tether the rate-limiting enzyme of purine biosynthesis, phosphoribosyl-pyrophosphate-amidotransferase (PPAT), to its inhibitor NUDT5. This mechanism allows cells to sense purine levels and establish essential feedback control of their synthesis. Thiopurine chemotherapeutics, in clinical use since the 1950’s, act as molecular glues of the same complex, but adopt unique orientations for enhanced function. Distinct from the recognition of many therapeutic glues, metabolic glue pockets can adjust their conformation to significant compound alterations and thereby enable increasing glue potency without sacrificing specificity. Our findings therefore identify endogenous metabolic glues as a mode of nutrient sensing that can be exploited to obtain compounds that rewire metabolic pathways for therapeutic benefit.

Article activity feed