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Adaptors serve as hubs to regulate diverse protein complexes in cells. This multitude of functions can complicate the study of adaptors, as their genetic disruption may simultaneously impair the activities of several compositionally distinct complexes (or adaptor 'complexoforms'). Here we describe the chemical proteomic discovery of bicyclopyrrolidine acrylamide stereoprobes that react with cysteine-100 (C100) of the methyltransferase (MT) adaptor TRMT112 in human cells. Curiously, the stereoprobes showed negligible reactivity with uncomplexed recombinant TRMT112, and we found that this interaction was restored excluively in the presence of METTL5, but not other MTs. A co-crystal structure revealed stereoprobe binding to a composite pocket proximal to C100 of TRMT112 that is templated by METTL5 and absent in other TRMT112:MT complexes. Structural rearrangements promoted by stereoprobe binding in turn lead to allosteric agonism of METTL5, thus revealing how covalent ligands targeting a pleiotropic adaptor can confer partner-specific functional effects through reactivity with a single complexoform.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2025.05.25.655995 | DOI Listing |
bioRxiv
May 2025
Department of Chemistry, Scripps Research, La Jolla, CA, USA.
Adaptors serve as hubs to regulate diverse protein complexes in cells. This multitude of functions can complicate the study of adaptors, as their genetic disruption may simultaneously impair the activities of several compositionally distinct complexes (or adaptor 'complexoforms'). Here we describe the chemical proteomic discovery of bicyclopyrrolidine acrylamide stereoprobes that react with cysteine-100 (C100) of the methyltransferase (MT) adaptor TRMT112 in human cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Chem
October 2024
Department of Chemistry, Scripps Research, La Jolla, CA, USA.
Covalent chemistry is a versatile approach for expanding the ligandability of the human proteome. Activity-based protein profiling (ABPP) can infer the specific residues modified by electrophilic compounds through competition with broadly reactive probes. However, the extent to which such residue-directed platforms fully assess the protein targets of electrophilic compounds in cells remains unclear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF