Misfolded glycoprotein recognition and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) retention are mediated by the ER glycoprotein folding Quality Control (ERQC) checkpoint enzyme, UDP-Glucose glycoprotein glucosyltransferase (UGGT). UGGT modulation is a promising strategy for broad-spectrum antivirals, rescue-of-secretion therapy in rare disease caused by responsive mutations in glycoprotein genes, and many cancers, but to date no selective UGGT inhibitors are known. We carried out a fragment-based lead discovery screen via X-ray crystallography and discovered that the small molecule 5-[(morpholin4-yl)methyl]quinolin-8-ol (5M-8OH-Q) binds a CtUGGTGT24 ‘WY’ conserved surface motif conserved across UGGTs but not present in other GT24 family glycosyltransferases. 5M-8OH-Q has a 47 µM binding affinity for human UGGT1 in vitro as measured by ligand-enhanced fluorescence. In cellula, 5M8OH-Q inhibits both human UGGT isoforms at concentrations higher than 750 µM. 5M-8OH-Q likely binds to the site of recognition of the first GlcNAc residue of the substrate N -glycan. 5M-8OH-Q binding to CtUGGTGT24 appears to be mutually exclusive to M5-9 glycan binding in an in vitro competition experiment. A medicinal program based on 5M-8OH-Q will yield the next generation of UGGT inhibitors.
UGGT inhibitor
,CtUGGTGT24
,5-[(morpholin-4-yl)methyl]quinolin-8-ol
,X-ray crystallography
,fragment-based lead discovery
,saturation transfer difference NMR spectroscopy
,fluorescence polarisation anisotropy
,ligand-enhanced fluorescence
,microscale thermophoresis