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Cardiac myosin-binding protein C interaction with actin is inhibited by compounds identified in a high-throughput fluorescence lifetime screen
Authors:Thomas A. Bunch  Piyali Guhathakurta  Victoria C. Lepak  Andrew R. Thompson  Rhye-Samuel Kanassatega  Anna Wilson  David D. Thomas  Brett A. Colson
Affiliation:1.Department of Cellular & Molecular Medicine, University of Arizona, Tucson Arizona, USA;2.Department of Biochemistry, Molecular Biology, and Biophysics, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
Abstract:Cardiac myosin-binding protein C (cMyBP-C) interacts with actin and myosin to modulate cardiac muscle contractility. These interactions are disfavored by cMyBP-C phosphorylation. Heart failure patients often display decreased cMyBP-C phosphorylation, and phosphorylation in model systems has been shown to be cardioprotective against heart failure. Therefore, cMyBP-C is a potential target for heart failure drugs that mimic phosphorylation or perturb its interactions with actin/myosin. Here we have used a novel fluorescence lifetime-based assay to identify small-molecule inhibitors of actin-cMyBP-C binding. Actin was labeled with a fluorescent dye (Alexa Fluor 568, AF568) near its cMyBP-C binding sites; when combined with the cMyBP-C N-terminal fragment, C0-C2, the fluorescence lifetime of AF568-actin decreases. Using this reduction in lifetime as a readout of actin binding, a high-throughput screen of a 1280-compound library identified three reproducible hit compounds (suramin, NF023, and aurintricarboxylic acid) that reduced C0-C2 binding to actin in the micromolar range. Binding of phosphorylated C0-C2 was also blocked by these compounds. That they specifically block binding was confirmed by an actin-C0-C2 time-resolved FRET (TR-FRET) binding assay. Isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) and transient phosphorescence anisotropy (TPA) confirmed that these compounds bind to cMyBP-C, but not to actin. TPA results were also consistent with these compounds inhibiting C0-C2 binding to actin. We conclude that the actin-cMyBP-C fluorescence lifetime assay permits detection of pharmacologically active compounds that affect cMyBP-C-actin binding. We now have, for the first time, a validated high-throughput screen focused on cMyBP-C, a regulator of cardiac muscle contractility and known key factor in heart failure.
Keywords:actin   cardiac muscle   cardiac myosin-binding protein C (cMyBP-C)   contractile proteins   fluorescence lifetime   high-throughput screening (HTS)   library of pharmacologically active compounds (LOPAC)   phosphorylation   protein kinase A (PKA)   site-directed spectroscopy
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