作者
Lei Shi,William Shen,Mindy I. Davis,Ke Kong,Phuong Vu,Supriya K. Saha,Ramzi Adil,Johannes Kreuzer,Regina K. Egan,Tobie D. Lee,Patricia Greninger,Jonathan H. Shrimp,Wei Zhao,Ting-Yu Wei,Mi Zhou,Jason Eccleston,Jonathan Sussman,Ujjawal Manocha,Vajira K. Weerasekara,Hiroshi Kondo,Vindhya Vijay,Meng‐Ju Wu,Sara E. Kearney,Jeffrey D. Ho,Joseph McClanaghan,Ellen Murchie,Giovanna Stein Crowther,Samarjit Patnaik,Matthew B. Boxer,Min Shen,David T. Ting,William Y. Kim,Ben Z. Stanger,Vikram Deshpande,Cristina R. Ferrone,Cyril H. Benes,Wilhelm Haas,Matthew D. Hall,Nabeel Bardeesy
摘要
Adult liver malignancies, including intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma and hepatocellular carcinoma, are the second leading cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide. Most individuals are treated with either combination chemotherapy or immunotherapy, respectively, without specific biomarkers for selection. Here using high-throughput screens, proteomics and in vitro resistance models, we identify the small molecule YC-1 as selectively active against a defined subset of cell lines derived from both liver cancer types. We demonstrate that selectivity is determined by expression of the liver-resident cytosolic sulfotransferase enzyme SULT1A1, which sulfonates YC-1. Sulfonation stimulates covalent binding of YC-1 to lysine residues in protein targets, enriching for RNA-binding factors. Computational analysis defined a wider group of structurally related SULT1A1-activated small molecules with distinct target profiles, which together constitute an untapped small-molecule class. These studies provide a foundation for preclinical development of these agents and point to the broader potential of exploiting SULT1A1 activity for selective targeting strategies. Shi et al. report a sulfonation-dependent vulnerability of liver tumors expressing the sulfotransferase SULT1A1 by showing their sensitivity to the small molecule YC-1 and identifying structurally related compounds that can be modified by SULT1A1.