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Exploration of the HIF-1α/p300 interface using peptide and Adhiron phage display technologies

Hannah F. Kyle abc, Kate F. Wickson d, Jonathan Stott d, George M. Burslem ab, Alexander L. Breeze ac, Christian Tiede c, Darren C. Tomlinson ac, Stuart L. Warriner ab, Adam Nelson ab, Andrew J. Wilson ab and Thomas A. Edwards *ac
aAstbury Centre for Structural Molecular Biology, University of Leeds, Woodhouse Lane, Leeds, LS2 9JT, UK. E-mail: t.a.edwards@leeds.ac.uk
bSchool of Chemistry, University of Leeds, Woodhouse Lane, Leeds, LS2 9JT, UK
cSchool of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Faculty of Biological Sciences, University of Leeds, Woodhouse Lane, Leeds, LS2 9JT, UK
dAstraZeneca Discovery Sciences, Structure & Biophysics, AstraZeneca Darwin Building, Cambridge, Science Park, Milton Road, Cambridge, CB4 0WG, UK

Received 22nd April 2015 , Accepted 8th June 2015

First published on 10th June 2015


Abstract

The HIF-1α/p300 protein–protein interaction plays a key role in tumor metabolism and thus represents a high value target for anticancer drug-development. Although several studies have identified inhibitor candidates using rationale design, more detailed understanding of the interaction and binding interface is necessary to inform development of superior inhibitors. In this work, we report a detailed biophysical analysis of the native interaction with both peptide and Adhiron phage display experiments to identify novel binding motifs and binding regions of the surface of p300 to inform future inhibitor design.


Introduction

An emerging opportunity for anticancer therapy is to identify ligands which affect metabolic and cellular processes enabling the survival and growth of tumours.1 Hypoxia is a hallmark of many solid tumours; the ability to adapt to hypoxic conditions is crucial to their growth and survival2,3 and occurs via a coordinated homeostatic response dominated by the transcription factor hypoxia-inducible factor 1 (HIF-1). Overexpression of HIF-1 in cancer patients has been associated with resistance to some therapies, increased risk of invasion and metastasis, and poor prognosis.4 Inhibition of the HIF-1 pathway may therefore have anticancer therapeutic utility.5

HIF-1 is a heterodimer made up of two subunits: HIF-1α and HIF-1β (also known as the aryl hydrocarbon receptor nuclear translocator, ARNT). With oxygen at normal physiological concentrations, HIF-1α is rapidly degraded mostly via the von Hippel–Lindau pathway (an oxygen-dependent process).6 Under hypoxic conditions, however, the stability and thus transcriptional activity of HIF-1α increases. HIF-1α can then translocate to the nucleus, where it forms heterodimers with HIF-1β and recruits transcriptional coactivator proteins; one of which is p300.7,8 Transcriptional activation by the HIF-1α/p300 complex leads to the hypoxic response cascade, resulting in expression of multiple genes (e.g., VEGF) that mediate angiogenesis, various metabolic processes and cell proliferation and survival. In rapidly developing solid tumours, hypoxic conditions are generated; cancerous cells exploit this HIF-1 activated pathway to develop new vasculature which initiates the resupply of the tumour with oxygen.5

There has been considerable focus on inhibiting the hypoxic response, but this has been challenging because HIF’s function as a transcription factor is exerted predominantly through protein–protein interactions (PPIs), such as the HIF-1α/p300 interaction. Designing small molecule inhibitors of PPIs is challenging because the interfaces are generally large, and can lack well-defined pockets in comparison to enzyme active sites.9–12 Using mutational studies, Clackson and Wells demonstrated that a small subset of residues – termed “hot-spots” – tend to contribute much of the free energy of binding to many PPIs.13–16 By focusing only on the hot-spots and not the full interface, the challenge of designing small molecule PPI inhibitors becomes less daunting. Consequently identification and characterization of PPI hot-spots represents a precursor to effective small molecule design.17

Several approaches to inhibit the HIF-1 hypoxic response pathway have been described, which can broadly be classified in to five categories:18 (1) HIF-1α mRNA expression,19 (2) HIF-1α protein translation,20–27 (3) HIF-1α protein degradation,28 (4) HIF-1α DNA binding29 and (5) HIF-1α transcriptional activity; which fall in to two main groups, disruptors of HIF-1 dimerization30,31 and disruption of binding of co-activator proteins.30,32–37 One approach for inhibition of the HIF-1 pathway, which falls into the category of transcriptional activity inhibition, is to target the interaction between HIF-1α and the co-activator protein p300.5 We and others have had some success in targeting this interaction using protein domain36 and α-helix mimetics35,37 as well as natural products,33 designed protein ligands (optimised from natural products)38 and small molecule arylsulfonamides.39,40

The structure of the complex of the CH1 domain of p300 bound to the C-TAD of HIF-1α was solved using multidimensional NMR methods (PDB IDs: 1L8C and 1L3E).7,8 The NMR structure (Fig. 1) suggests that the interaction is complex: when bound, HIF-1α C-TAD consists of three distinct helical regions and wraps around the p300 CH1 domain.8 A conventional small molecule41 could not cover the whole interacting interface; consequently a detailed understanding of the interface is necessary to inform inhibitor design. Mutational studies have proposed key binding residues of HIF-1α.42 Helices 2 and 3 of the HIF-1α C-TAD have been shown to be required for binding; helix 2 contains two key residues: Cys800 and Asn803,34,43,44 and helix 3 contains 3 key binding residues, Leu818, Leu822 and Val825.42 Additionally, other helix 3 residues have been suggested to be important in the interaction (Asp823 and Gln824).36,37 Beyond these mutational analyses, a number of studies provide contradictory conclusions as to the relative importance of various regions and residues on the HIF-1α C-TAD.36,37,42,45 The binding potency of sequences derived from HIF-1α C-TAD (HIF-1α776–826, HIF-1α786–826 HIF-1α788–8222 HIF-1α776–813) with p300 CH1 was compared using fluorescence polarization.45 From this experiment it was concluded that the C-terminus of HIF-1α C-TAD is important for binding, in agreement with the mutagenesis studies.7,42 However these data do not narrow down the interaction area to one of the individual helices and the interaction area is still a relatively large surface area; therefore a single cluster of residues (hot-spots) that could be targeted for disruption has yet to be identified and small molecule design is still challenging.

In this study we exploited two approaches to probe the HIF-1α binding surface on p300, to refine our understanding of the most productive regions to target using designed small-molecules: first, by analysis of the binding of shorter HIF-1α peptide fragments; and second, by phage display experiments. Binding analysis of fragments of the native peptide allow identification of the highest affinity region of the HIF-1α peptide, whereas phage display permits the unbiased exploration of the p300 CH1 protein surface to discover high affinity binders. Two phage display technologies were used:46 a peptide phage library (NEB47–49) and an Adhiron50 (commercially known as Affimers51,52) phage library. The location and binding mode of phage display derived ligands provides new information on suitable chemotypes for orthosteric small-molecule inhibitor development.

Results and discussion

The CH1 domain of p300 (amino acids 330–420) was cloned and expressed as a GST fusion protein; p300 was subsequently cleaved from GST. The C-TAD of HIF-1α786–826 was purchased from ProteoGenix. The binding of p300 to HIF-1α786–826 was measured by fluorescence anisotropy (using FITC-HIF-1α786–826) and orthogonally by isothermal titration calorimetry. The Kd was determined to be 16.11 ± 0.06 nM by fluorescence anisotropy and 45 ± 10 nM by ITC (Fig. 2 and Table S1, ESI).
image file: c5mb00284b-f1.tif
Fig. 1 NMR structure of the HIF-1α/p300 interaction (Pymol). (a) Cartoon overview of the interaction illustrating the three helices of HIF-1α C-TAD (blue) wrapping around the CH1 p300 (green). (b) Key binding residues of helix 2: Cys800 and Asn803 (magenta). (c) Key binding residue of helix 3: Leu818, Leu822 and Val825 (magenta).

image file: c5mb00284b-f2.tif
Fig. 2 Direct binding of HIF-1α786–826 C-TAD to CH1 p300. (a) Fluorescence anisotropy using the FITC-HIF-1α786–826. (b) ITC measurement of unlabelled HIF-1α786–826 c-TAD peptide titrated in to p300 CH1.

To investigate whether the binding interface could be restricted, smaller sections of the HIF-1α C-TAD were selected. The truncated peptides tested are summarised in Fig. 3. Whilst it is likely there will be contributions to binding along the length of the 41 amino acid HIF-1α peptide, each of these peptides was assessed for either direct binding to p300 CH1, or competitive inhibition of the HIF1α/p300 complex, to ascertain which regions are most important for binding.


image file: c5mb00284b-f3.tif
Fig. 3 Schematic of peptide fragments to be investigated to highlight key binding regions of HIF-1α.

α-helices have been highlighted as major binding hot-spots of PPIs,53–55 so initial assessment centered on identification of the highest affinity helix. The affinity of helices 2 and 3 was investigated by fluorescence anisotropy using FITC-HIF-1α794–804 and FITC-HIF-1α816–826 (Fig. 4a). Both peptides showed weak binding to p300 (compared to 16 ± 0.06 nM for HIF-1α786–826): FITC-HIF-1α816–826Kd approximately 200 μM and FITC-HIF-1α794–804Kd > 1 mM. Notably, FITC-HIF-1α816–826 had a higher affinity than FITC-HIF-1α794–804, indicating that helix 3 has a higher affinity than helix 2; therefore helix 3 may be important for high affinity binding of the native complex.


image file: c5mb00284b-f4.tif
Fig. 4 Fluorescence anisotropy investigation of native HIF-1α fragments binding. (a) Binding of the fluorescence labeled helical regions of HIF-1α C-TAD, FITC-HIF-1α794–804 (violet) FITC-HIF-1α816–826 (red) to p300 CH1 compared to FITC-HIF-1α786–826 (black). (b) Assessment of the co-operatively the helical regions of HIF-1α. FITC-HIF-1α781–816 (green), FITC-HIF-1α816–826 (red) and FITC-HIF-1α816–826 in the presence of unlabeled HIF-1α794–804 (grey). Note the overlap of the red and grey data sets. (c) Schematic of the peptide fragments using in this experiment.

To examine further the binding energy contributions of the individual helices to the interaction and the effect of linking, peptide FITC-HIF-1α794–826, comprising helices 2 and 3 with the intervening linker region, was also tested in the fluorescence anisotropy assay. A Kd of 6.74 ± 0.54 μM was measured, showing that linking helices 2 and 3 together results in an increase in affinity for p300 compared with either individual helix. Linking can increase binding affinity either through enhanced local concentration of each binding entity (avidity or chelate effect), or through co-operative interaction between them mediated through allosteric conformational change in the binding site. To distinguish between chelate and allosteric co-operativity, the fluorescence anisotropy assay was used to test the binding of FITC-HIF-1α816–826 in the presence of HIF-1α794–804 (unlabeled). This demonstrated that the presence of HIF-1α794–804 had no effect on the affinity of FITC-HIF-1α816–826, suggesting either an avidity (chelate) effect or a direct contribution from the linker, rather than allosteric co-operativity between helix 3 and helix 2 (Fig. 4b). The avidity effect is modest, however, as the affinity measured for FITC-HIF-1α794–826 implies less than additive contributions from the individual binding energies of helices 2 and 3. This is consistent with the linker sequence having a considerable degree of flexibility when not bound to p300.

The reduced affinity of the FITC-HIF-1α794–826 (Kd = 6.74 ± 0.54 μM), compared to FITC-HIF-1α786–826 (Kd = 16.11 ± 0.06 nM), indicates that the additional N-terminal residues have some role in binding, although this may be a consequence of enhanced stability of helix 2 in addition to any contribution from interaction of the N-terminal residues themselves. The importance of the N-terminal residues, which include helix 1, was explored by measuring the difference in inhibitor capabilities of fragments of HIF-1α to disrupt the HIF-1α786–826/p300 interaction.

All of the peptides illustrated in Fig. 3 were tested in a fluorescence anisotropy competition assay (Table S2, ESI); however only peptides that contained more than one helix were able to disrupt the HIF-1α786–826/p300 interaction (Fig. 5). HIF-1α782–826 inhibited the interaction with an IC50 = 0.59 ± 0.05 μM; this is superior to HIF-1α794–826 (IC50 = 89.26 ± 28 μM) and HIF-1α782–804 (IC50 > 1 mM). HIF-1α794–826 showed a greater capability to disrupt the complex than HIF-1α782–804 demonstrating the importance of the C-terminus of HIF-1α and reinforcing the importance of the helix 3 region.


image file: c5mb00284b-f5.tif
Fig. 5 Fluorescence anisotropy competition assay to test the disruption of the HIF-1α C-TAD/p300 CH1 complex by HIF-1α CTAD fragments. HIF-1α782–826 (black) HIF-1α794–826 (red) and HIF-1α782–804 (violet).

To further investigate the importance of helix 3, mutants of p300 (H20A, L47M, I71M, Fig. 6a) in the HIF-1α helix 3 binding pocket (as shown in the NMR structure7,8Fig. 1) were generated and their fold and stability confirmed by Circular Dichroism (CD) (Fig. S1, ESI). H20A was selected, as the NMR structure shows this residue makes a contact to HIF-1α, and mutation to alanine would remove this contact. Both L47M and I71M were selected as we hypothesised they would introduce steric clashes. Each of the three mutants caused a reduction in the binding affinity of to FITC-HIF-1α786–826, with the greatest effect observed for I71M, which caused a 18-fold reduction in binding affinity (Table 1) confirming that helix 3 has a critical role in driving p300 binding.


image file: c5mb00284b-f6.tif
Fig. 6 Investigation of the HIF-1α helix 3 binding pocket on p300. (a) Schematic highlighting the three residues of the helix p300 binding pocket of p300 which were mutated. (b) Fluorescence anisotropy comparison of the binding of FITC-HIF-1α786–826 to wild-type p300 (black) and mutant p300 I71M (red).
Table 1 Binding study of p300 helix 3 binding pocket mutant proteins binding to FITC-HIF-1α786–826 as measured by fluorescence anisotropy
p300 K d (nM)
Wild type 16.11 ± 0.06
H20A 25 ± 0.35
L47M 29.55 ± 5.58
I71M 285 ± 5.06


Taken together, these data demonstrated that helix 3 appears to be the most important of the helical regions of HIF-1α in terms of affinity. However, the absence of a dominant high affinity fragment of the HIF-1α C-TAD sequence encouraged us to perform phage display studies to identify short but high potency peptide sequences that may serve as better starting points for small-molecule elaboration.

Phage display technologies can be used to present many different forms of binder; in this study 7mer and 12mer peptides libraries (NEB47–49) and Adhiron libraries50 were tested. For the peptide libraries, both the 7mer and 12mer libraries were chosen. The 7mer library should have full coverage (all amino acids represented in all positions47–49), however due to the length of the 7mer the generation of high affinity binding peptides was anticipated to be less likely. The 12mer library does not have full coverage, but the longer peptide may yield higher affinity peptide binders. As well as the two phage libraries, two different buffer conditions were used in the wash step: a high sodium chloride (1.5 M) and low sodium chloride (0.5 M) buffer (TBS + 0.1% tween) were used to eliminate any nonspecific electrostatic contributions. Elution using native HIF-1α786–826 (500 μM) was performed to ensure elution of specific binders. The experiment was also performed with a different protein (eIF4E); this parallel experiment acted as a selectivity control.

p300 was selectively N-terminally labelled with biotin using a biotin-depsipeptide and sortase A56 to enable immobilisation on to streptavidin plates. Three panning rounds were completed. Each round of panning led to enrichment of binders in the phage pool (Fig. S2, ESI for the ELISA for each condition). The eluents for the unpanned libraries, round 1 and round 3 were sent for next generation sequencing using the Illumina platform.57 The top 5 clones from each condition and their frequency in the pool are summarized in the ESI (Table S3). Three peptides were selected for synthesis: VHWDFRQWWQPS, (phage display derived peptide 1; PDDP1) SGVYKVAYDWQH (PDDP2) and ATNLFKS (PDDP3). The next generation sequencing showed an increase in enrichment of these peptides through the panning rounds. Initially the FITC-labelled peptides were tested for binding to p300 using a fluorescence anisotropy assay. The highest affinity peptide was PDDP1 with an affinity of 20.67 ± 3.17 μM. PDDP1 is predicted be 35% helical in isolation (as assessed by Agadir58), indicating that a helical bound conformation is plausible. Although this is a relatively low affinity for phage display-derived peptides, where low nM and pM binders are often generated,59,60 the phage display-derived peptide had a higher affinity for p300 than any of the HIF-1α C-TAD peptide fragments discussed above. PDDP1 showed selectivity for p300 over eIF4e (Fig. S3, ESI).

To locate the binding site of the phage display derived peptide on p300 15N–1H HSQC experiments were performed; the PDDP1 peptide was titrated (300–750 μM) into a solution of 15N-labelled p300 (230 μM). Peak shifts were observed confirming binding (Fig. 7a). The size of the shift for each peak (Fig. 7b) was measured and those with the largest shift were mapped on to p300 (assignments from BMRM: 626861). The location of the shifts indicates that PDDP1 may bind towards the top of the helix 3 binding pocket; the red area highlighted in Fig. 7c highlights a potential groove for interaction. In addition a shift was observed in the Trp indole peak; a change in the Trp environment has previously been used as an indicator of ligand binding to the helix 3 binding pocket.37


image file: c5mb00284b-f7.tif
Fig. 7 Analysis of the binding site of PDDP1. (A) p300 15N–1H HSQC experiment, apo_p300 (black) upon titration of PDDP1 at increasing concentrations, 300 μM (blue), 545 μM (green) and 750 μM (red). Insert shows a concentration-dependent shift in one peak and no effect on another peak upon titration of peptide. (B) Bar chart showing the size of the shift of all the assigned peaks (BMRB-6268) of p300 after titration of 750 μM PDDP1. (C) Mapping of the largest shifts (red) in or around the helix 3 binding site of p300 (green), the helix 3 of HIF-1α is shown in blue with the rest of the peptide shown in teal. The two mutations which cause a statistically significant decrease in affinity (L47M and I71M) are highlighted in magenta. (D) Fluorescence anisotropy direct binding measurement of FITC-PDDP1 binding to mutant p300 L71M, the Kd of the mutant is significantly higher then that of wild-type (p < 0.05).

To further corroborate the binding of the phage display derived peptide in the helix 3 binding site, the binding of PDDP1 to both the wild type p300 and p300 with mutations in the helix 3 binding pocket (H20A, L47M, I71M) was investigated using fluorescence anisotropy (Table 2). The mutants L47M and I71M bound to PDDP1 with a statistically significant reduced affinity (p < 0.05) (Table 2). The reduction in binding affinity complements the NMR data, as the decrease in binding affinity of the mutant indicates that PDDP1 binds towards the top of the helix 3 binding pocket. The location of L47M and I71M is highlighted in Fig. 7c (magenta). This additionally highlights the HIF-1α helix 3 binding pocket as a key binding area.

Table 2 Binding study of p300 helix 3 binding pocket mutant proteins binding to FITC-PDDP1 as measured by fluorescence anisotropy
p300 K d (μM)
*p < 0.05.
Wild type 20.67 ± 3.17
H20A 57.71 ± 7.87*
L47M 57.76 ± 7.82*
I71M 36.73 ± 11.0


The second phage display experiment used non-antibody binding proteins presented on the surface of the phage as opposed to short peptides; such scaffolds are designed to constrain and present variable peptide sequences for protein recognition.62 There are many different types of scaffold;63–69 the scaffold used in this study was the Adhiron scaffold (commercially named Affimer51,52). Adhirons are engineered non-antibody binding proteins which mimic the molecular recognition properties of antibodies but with improved properties (small, monomeric, thermostable, soluble and easy to express in E. coli and mammalian cells giving high protein yield).50 The Adhiron library has two randomised loops of 9 residues which are suitable for molecular recognition and are expected to adapt to form appropriate molecular contacts with a wide range of targets including protein pockets, protein surfaces, peptides and small molecules.50

Four panning rounds were carried out, and an ELISA was used to select those clones to be sequenced (Fig. S4, ESI). Nine clones were sent for sequencing (5, 11, 12, 24, 34, 36, 37, 41 and 43; Fig. S4, ESI) with four independent sequences present (Fig. S4 and Table S4, ESI). Three Adhirons were taken forward: Ad24, Ad34 and Ad41 (note that the sequence of Ad41 is represented 6 times out of 9). These were initially tested using BLitz™ (ForteBio) to give an indication of affinity; BLitz™ is a dip and read system which enables the real time (kinetic) quantification of molecular interactions in solution.

The highest affinity Adhiron was Ad34 with an estimated Kd of 89 nM (Table 3). Therefore this Adhiron was taken forward to confirm binding by SPR, where an affinity of 157 nM (Chi2 0.114) was measured (Fig. S5, ESI). The affinity of the phage display-derived Adhiron, Ad34, for p300 is higher than the phage display-derived peptides and the shorter native peptide sequences and is in the same range as HIF-1α786–826, which has an affinity of 16.11 ± 0.06 nM by fluorescence anisotropy and 45 ± 10 nM by ITC. However, Ad34 might be anticipated to bind at a more localised site than HIF-1α786–826. Each of the Adhirons was assessed for their ability to inhibit the HIF-1α/p300 interaction using the fluorescence anisotropy competition assay. All 3 Adhirons had an IC50 of 1–5 μM (Table 3, Fig. S6, ESI). This is significantly better than fragments of native HIF-1α, or the phage peptides described above (which were unable to disrupt the interaction). However, the binding site of the Adhiron on p300 is not yet defined, and unfortunately excessive peak broadening in HSQC spectra on addition of Adhirons precludes interpretation of the resulting NMR shifts. These Adhiron sequences do not appear in a selection of Adhirons raised against a variety of other PPI targets, suggesting selectivity.

Table 3 Phage display derived Adhiron binding data, Kd measured by BLITZ and IC50 measured by fluorescence anisotropy competition assay
Adhiron K d (nM) IC50 (μM)
Ad41 105 1.98 ± 0.32
Ad34 89 4.78 ± 2.12
Ad24 140 2.96 ± 0.46


To further characterise Ad34 it was crystallised from 0.8 M di-sodium succinate pH 7; crystals were then supplemented with 20% glycerol for cryo-cooling and X-ray diffraction data collection. Data were phased to 2.8 Å (Fig. 8a). Crystallographic data is summarised Table S5 (ESI).


image file: c5mb00284b-f8.tif
Fig. 8 Adhiron structure and potential binding model to p300. (a) Crystal structure of Ad34, variable loops shown in cyan. (b) Adhiron Ad34 (magenta) docked to the NMR structure of p300 (green) using HADDOCK; key binding residues are shown in cyan. (c) NMR structure of HIF-1α (blue) bound to p300 (green) in the same orientation as the docked Adhiron (shown in b). (d) Overlay of the docked Ad34 (magenta) and HIF-1α (blue) bound p300 (green), highlighting Ad34 does not dock in a helix binding pocket.

The binding mode of the Adhiron was then investigated by in silico docking. Ad34 was docked against the NMR structure of p300 (PDB 1L8C)8 using HADDOCK (High Ambiguity Driven protein–protein Docking).70 The docking results for the highest scored and most frequently predicted complex suggested that both variable loops are involved in binding, with both of the loops buried in hydrophobic areas of p300 (Fig. 8). Neither loop docked in the HIF-1α helix 3 region, suggesting that Ad34 may bind to a different region from the highest affinity phage display derived peptide (PDDP1) and the highest affinity native helix (HIF-1α816–826) (Fig. 8). The modelling suggests the two Adhiron loops bind in different crevices on p300; these pocket-like structures are in mutual proximity to each over. Given the proximity of the two sites identified, fragment-based approaches may be appropriate to link small molecules that target each site, although further experimental work is required to validate the binding site.

Conclusion

The purpose of this study was to understand the details of what drives the interaction between p300 and HIF-1α. Which may yield important information for inhibitor discovery and development. Characterisation of the native binding interface has demonstrated that the HIF-1α helix 3 region has the highest affinity for p300; we did not identify a short sequence of the native HIF-1α C-TAD peptide which has high affinity for p300 CH1 in isolation. We, and others, have targeted the helix 3 region using α-helix35,37 and protein domain mimetics36 allowing identification of HIF1α/p300 inhibitors with low micromolar affinity. Peptide phage display generated a 12mer peptide that had a higher affinity for p300 than any native HIF-1α fragment of the same length, providing a new template for small molecule development. Phage display generated competitive Adhirons of around 100 nM affinity which is in the same range as the binding affinity of the HIF-1α786–826 to p300. If binding occurs as predicted, mediated through the two 9mer loops, the Adhiron exploits a smaller binding interface than the HIF-1α786–826 peptide. The Adhirons themselves inhibit the HIF-1α/p300 interaction with a low micromolar IC50; therefore, mimicking the pharmacophore of the loops in a small molecule has the potential to generate novel high affinity inhibitors.

Adhirons provide a simple and non-biased way to produce binders with high affinity and selectivity to blockade protein–protein interactions. Adhirons can be used as tool reagents for assay development work, as model interactions that can be used to direct pharmacophore development, and also have great potential as therapeutics in their own right.

The combination of a detailed biophysical analysis of the interaction between HIF-1α and p300, along with two orthogonal phage display techniques, has provided detailed information that can be used to inform design of highly potent compounds to disrupt an extremely challenging but pharmaceutically important protein–protein interaction.

Experimental

p300 protein purification

p300 CH1 was cloned into the pGex-6P-2 (GE Healthcare) plasmid and expressed as a GST fusion from which it was subsequently cleaved. GST-p300 containing BL21 Gold cells were grown to O.D600 0.6–0.8 and induced with 0.1 mM IPTG supplemented with 50 μM zinc sulphate and incubated for 18 hours at 18 °C. Cells were harvested and disrupted by sonication, then the soluble protein was separated from insoluble protein by centrifugation. GST-p300 was purified by affinity chromatography on glutathione beads (GE Healthcare); the GST was cleaved by PreScission protease and separated from p300 by size exclusion chromatography.

p300 was biotin labeled by the chemoselective attachment of a biotin-depsipeptide to the N-terminal glycine of p300 catalysed by sortase A.56 The reaction consisted of 100 μM p300 (50 mM HEPES pH 7.5, 150 mM sodium phosphate and 5 mM calcium chloride), 300 μM biotin-depsipeptide and 20 μM sortase, the reaction was incubated at 37 °C with agitation for 3.5 hours. The biotin-p300 was separated from the unreacted biotin-depsipeptide by dialysis and from the sortase A by nickel affinity chromatography (the sortase A has a His tag). The biotinylatoin was confirmed by western blot and mass spectrometry.

15N labeled GST-p300 was purified after autoinduction with a glucose to lactose ratio 1[thin space (1/6-em)]:[thin space (1/6-em)]4; the full media recipe is outlined in Table S6 (ESI). The cells were grown at 37 °C for four hours and then 20 °C for 40 hours. Cells were harvested and the protein purified in the same way as native p300.

Mutants H20A, L47M and I71M were all made as per Q5 site- directed mutagenesis kit (NEB). They were expressed and purified in the same way as wild-type p300. CD was performed at 0.2 mg mL−1 in buffer: 40 mM sodium phosphate pH 7.5, 100 mM sodium chloride, 1 mM DTT and 5% glycerol.

eIF4E-SUMO expression by autoinduction and purification have been outlined previously.35

Peptides

All peptides outlined in Fig. 3 were purchased either FITC labeled of or unlabeled from PreoGenix (France), except HIF-1α794–804 and HIF-1α816–826 which were by standard Fmoc SPPS and purified by preparative HPLC. Characterisation outlined in ESI Fig. S7–S10.

Florescence anisotropy

Direct binding. p300 protein was serially diluted in buffer (40 mM sodium phosphate, 100 mM NaCl, 1 mM DTT, 5% glycerol, 0.1% triton) and labeled peptide (40 nM) was added, the plates were then incubated for 30 minutes at room temperature. Each experiment was run in triplicate and the fluorescence anisotropy measured using a EnVision 2103 MultiLabel plate reader (Perkin Elmer) with excitation at 480 nm and emission at 535 nm (30 nm bandwidths). In parallel, a control experiment was performed in which no labeled peptide was added and the volume made up with additional buffer, this blank was deducted from the raw data for each of the three repeats. The intensity was calculated for each point using eqn (1) and used to calculated anisotropy using eqn (2). From a plot of anisotropy against p300 concentration the minimum and maximum anisotropies were obtained using a logistic sigmoidal fit in OriginPro 8.6. This allowed the conversion to fraction bound (eqn (3)). The data were then fitted using eqn (4) in OriginPro 8.6 to determine the dissociation constant, Kd.
 
I = (2PG) + S(1)
 
R = (S − PG)/I(2)
 
Lb = (RRmin)/((λ(RmaxR)) + RRmin)(3)
 
y = ((Kd + x + [FL]) − √((Kd + x + [FL])2 − 4x[FL]))/2(4)
R = anisotropy, I = total intensity, P = perpendicular intensity, S = parallel intensity, G = an instrument factor set to 1, Lb = fraction ligand bound, λ = Ibound/Iunbound = 1, [FL] = concentration of fluorescent peptide, Kd = dissociation constant, y = Lb multiplied by [FL], x = protein concentration.
Competition. Unlabeled peptide was serially diluted across a 384 well plate in buffer (40 mM sodium phosphate, 100 mM NaCl, 1 mM DTT, 5% glycerol, 0.1% triton) and 40 nM labeled HIF-1α786–826 peptide and 0.1 μM protein were added sequentially. The plates were then incubated for 30 minutes at room temperature. Each experiment was run in triplicate and the fluorescence anisotropy measured using a EnVision 2103 MultiLabel plate reader (Perkin Elmer) with excitation at 480 nm and emission at 535 nm (5 nm bandwidths). A control experiment was performed in which no labeled peptide was added and the volume made up with additional buffer, this blank was deducted from the raw data each of the three repeats. Intensity and anisotropy were calculated as above using eqn (1) and (2) respectively. Plots of anisotropy against unlabeled peptide were fitted to a logistic sigmoidal dose response model to determine and an IC50.
Isothermal titration calorimetry. The ITC experiment was conducted at 25 °C in 40 mM sodium phosphate, 100 mM sodium chloride and 5% glycerol. 10 μM p300 was present in the cell and 100 μM HIF-1α786–826 in the syringe. One injection of 10 μL for 20 seconds of HIF-1α786–826 was made every 300 seconds for 30 injections.
Peptide phage display experiment. The biotin-p300 (10 pM) was mixed with each phage library (10 μL), incubated at room temperature for one hour, then isolated on to a streptavidin plate via the biotin tag (ten minute incubation), additional biotin (0.1 mM final concentration) was added to each well to block the unbound streptavidin (5 minute incubation at room temperature). The wells were then emptied and washed 3 times with high and low salt TBS-T (0.5 M NaCl and 1.5 M NaCl respectively). The phage were then eluted with 500 μM HIF-1α. To re-amplify the phage cultures of ER278 cells were grown to mid-log phase (O.D600 0.6–0.8) and the elutes were added (one elute condition per culture). The cultures were then grown at 37 °C with vigorous shaking (300 rpm) for 4.5 hours, the first 10 minutes of this growth period the shaking was set to 80 rpm. To isolate phage the cultures were then pelleted and the supernatant was mixed with a chilled 20% PEG 8000/2.5 M NaCl solution and the mixture was centrifuged at 13,000 rpm for 20 minutes (at 20 °C). The pellet was resuspended in 1 ml TBS, spun down at 13,000 rpm, the chilled 20% PEG 8000/2.5 M NaCl solution was again added to the supernatant and incubated on ice for 30 minutes. The mixture was again centrifuged at 13000 rpm for 5 minutes and the pellet resuspended in TBS. 1011 plaque forming units were added to start the next round of panning, in total three panning rounds were completed.
Enrichment ELISA. Streptavidin plates were coated in biotin-p300 (5 μg mL−1), incubated at room temperature for 30 minutes. The plates were washed with TBS-T to remove excess target. 1 × 1010 pfu of re-amplified phage from each panning elute and incubate for one hour at room temperature, (also added to an uncoated well as a control). The plates were washed with TBS-T and anti M13-HRP antibody was added and incubated for one hour, washed with TBS-T, developed with 100 μl per well TMB. Plate was read at A370.
Peptide phage display sequencing. DNA was isolated from pan elute 1 and 3 and from the unpanned library and PCR was used to amplify the DNA. Blunt end repair of the resultant ds-DNA was conducted using Illumina Paired-end DNA sample preparation kit. The primers with the unique bar codes (Illumina adaptors) were ligated to each fragment and the fragments with the adaptors were amplified by a second round PCR. This resulted in 12 different pools which each had a unique bar code; the unpanned 7mer and 12mer libraries were also sequenced to assess the presence of any propagation related clones at the start of the experiment. Sequencing was performed by the Centre for Genomic Research, University of Liverpool. The Matlab analysis was performed using scripts based on published code57 and modified for correctness and the specific sequences used. Modification used were:

• Cope with smaller files by not discarding partial blocks

• Allow for variable length adaptor sequences, and unequal adaptor sequences

• Allow for variable file tags (i.e. not just Illumina)

• Allow for variable length peptide libraries (tested with 7-mer and 12-mer)

Scripts were run over all ‘pure’ 7-mer and 12-mer libraries. Locus specific sequences rather than full primers were used and the quality control cut off was A.

NMR analysis. The NMR experiments were all conducted in 10 mM Tris-HCl pH 6.9, 50 mM NaCl, 2 mM DTT and 2% glycerol. 300–750 μM peptide was titrated into 230 μM 15N-p300. Data were collected on a 600 MHz Agilent NMR system at 25 °C and analysed with CCPN Analysis software.
Adhiron phage display experiment. p300 was expressed and biotinylated as described above. Biotin-p300 was added and incubated on pre-blocked steptavdin plate, the plate was then washed using a KingFisher robotic platform (ThermoFisher) and 1012 cfu of the pre-panned phage library was added and incubated for 2.5 h with shaking. Wells were wash ten times and eluted with 100 μL 0.2 M glycine (pH 2.2) for ten minutes neutralized with 15 μL 1 M Tris-HCl (pH 9.1), further eluted with triethylamine 100 mM for 6 min, and neutralised with 1 M Tris-HCl (pH 7). Eluted phage were used to infect ER2738 cells for 1 h at 37 °C and 90 rpm then plated onto LB agar plates with 100 μg ml−1 carbenicillin and grown overnight. All colonies were scrapped into 5 mL of 2XYT with carbenicillin (10 μg mL−1) and 1 × 109 M13K07 helper phage were added. After an overnight incubation phage were precipitated with 4% polyethylene glycol 8000, 0.3 M NaCl and resuspended in 1 ml of 10 mM Tris, pH 8.0, 1 mM EDTA (TE buffer). 2 μL phage suspension was used for the second round panning round streptavidin magnetic beads as opposed to streptavidin plates (Invitrogen); otherwise the second pan was conducted in the same way as the first pan. The third pan was conducting using neutravidin high binding capacity plates (Pierce). During the fourth and final pan 50 μM of HIF-1α peptide was added as competitor before elution. After the final pan colonies were picked, an ELISA was conducted to select positive clones (in the same way as the enrichment ELISA) which were sent for Sanger sequencing.
Adhiron expression. Adhiron cDNA were cloned in to pET-11 and expressed by induction with 0.5 mM IPTG (at O.D600 0.6–0.8) and induced at 18 °C for 18 hours. Each Adhiron had a 6-HIS tag and was purified by affinity chromatography using Ni-column follow by size exclusion chromatography using the buffer 10 mM HEPES pH 7.5, 100 mM sodium chloride and 2% glycerol.
Blitz™. The BLitz™ (ForteBio) dip and read Ni biosensors were used to estimate the affinity of p300 (10 μM) binding to immobilized Adhirons (1 μM) and a global fit was used to calculate the binding affinities using the advanced kinetic software.
SPR. 1 pM biotin-p300 was isolated on to one flow cell of a streptavidin chip (100 response units), at a flow rate of 5 μL min−1, while the other flow cell was left unfunctionalised. 5 concentrations of Ad34 were tested (100 nM−1 μM). Each concentration was flowed over both the functionalised and the unfunctionalised flow cells at 40 μL min−1 and the on- and off-rates were calculated using the Biacore software. The on- and off-rates were used to calculate the Kd.
d[AB]/−dt = ka[A][B]·d[AB]/dt = kd[AB]

Kd = kd/ka
Ad34 crystallography. Ad34 was concentrated to 10 mg mL−1 and crystallized in the condition 0.8 M di-sodium succinate pH 7. The crystals grew overnight at 18 °C. They were picked and cryo protected with 20% glycerol. The structure was solved using molecular replacement from the structure published by Tiede et al., (PDB 4N6U).50 Initially Ad34 was subjected to molecular replacement with no loops present using the program Balbes,71 and Buccaneer72 was used to rebuild the loops. The structure was then refined using Phenix73 and Refmac.74
Docking. Docking was performing using HADDOCK (High Ambiguity Driven protein–protein Docking).70 Using the NMR structure of p300 and the crystal structure of Ad34. The restraint used was that the binding was mediated through the loop regions.

Acknowledgements

We thank AstraZeneca and EPSRC for PhD studentships for G.M.B. and H.F.K. and the European Research Council (ERC-StG-240324) for support. We would also like to thank the Wellcome Trust (094232) for funding CD, ITC, X-ray generator and SPR facilities and the BBSRC (BB/L015056/1) for the crystallisation robotics and imaging facilities. We thank Arnout Kalverda and Gary Thompson for assistance with NMR experiments, Chi Trinh for assistance with crystallography, Iain Manfield for help with ITC and SPR and Daniel Williamson for help with biotin labeling of p300.

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Footnotes

Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c5mb00284b
Adhiron crystal structure PDB accession code: 5a0o.

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