Abstract
Cellular redox networks power a multitude of cellular processes, and are often dysregulated in pathologies including cancer and inflammatory diseases. Quantifying the turnover of the key players in redox homeostasis is crucial for understanding their physiological dynamics and for targeting them in pathologies. However, suitably selective probes for assessing specific redox enzyme activities in cells are lacking. We rationally developed the first chemical probes targeting the mammalian selenoprotein thioredoxin reductase (TrxR) while fully resisting other cellular thiols and oxidoreductases. We used a cyclic selenenylsulfide as a thermodynamically stable and kinetically reversible trigger, oriented to harness the chemistry of TrxR's unique selenolthiol active site, and integrated it into modular probes releasing arbitrary cargos upon reduction. The probes showed remarkable selenocysteine-dependent sensitivity to cytosolic TrxR1, against a panel of oxidoreductases. Lead probe RX1 also had excellent TrxR1-selective performance in cells, as cross-validated by TrxR1 knockout, selenium starvation, TrxR1 knock-in, and TrxRselective chemical inhibitors. Its background-free fluorogenicity enabled us to perform the first quantitative high-throughput live cell screen for TrxR1 inhibitors. This indicated that tempered SNAr electrophiles may be a more favorable drug class than classically-used electrophiles. The RX1 design is thus a robust, cellularly validated, high-performance modular system for mammalian TrxR1. This sets the stage for in vivo imaging TrxR1 activity in health and disease, and can also drive and reorient TrxR1-inhibitor drug design. The thermodynamic and kinetic considerations behind RX1's selectivity also outline paths towards rationally-designed probes for other key players in redox biology.
Supplementary materials
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Supporting Information
Description
Materials and Methods, Synthesis, Supplementary Notes, Analytical data
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Supplementary Datafile
Description
Full dataset of the cellular high-throughput screening of RX1 activity against the LOPAC1280. Data are categorised and evaluated based on their inhibitory performance.
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Supplementary weblinks
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Thorn-Seshold research group website - Redox Probes
Description
Ongoing research into redox probes
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