Publication Details

AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS

SHINING A SPOTLIGHT ON AFRICAN RESEARCH

biochemistry, genetics and molecular biology

1-Hydroxy-xanthine derivatives inhibit the human Caf1 nuclease and Caf1-containing nuclease complexes via Mg 2+ -dependent binding

FEBS Open Bio, Volume 9, No. 4, Year 2019

In eukaryotic cells, cytoplasmic mRNA is characterised by a 3′ poly(A) tail. The shortening and removal of poly(A) tails (deadenylation) by the Ccr4-Not nuclease complex leads to reduced translational efficiency and RNA degradation. Using recombinant human Caf1 (CNOT7) enzyme as a screening tool, we recently described the discovery and synthesis of a series of substituted 1-hydroxy-3,7-dihydro-1H-purine-2,6-diones (1-hydroxy-xanthines) as inhibitors of the Caf1 catalytic subunit of the Ccr4-Not complex. Here, we used a chemiluminescence-based AMP detection assay to show that active 1-hydroxy-xanthines inhibit both isolated Caf1 enzyme and human Caf1-containing complexes that also contain the second nuclease subunit Ccr4 (CNOT6L) to a similar extent, indicating that the active site of the Caf1 nuclease subunit does not undergo substantial conformational change when bound to other Ccr4-Not subunits. Using differential scanning fluorimetry, we also show that binding of active 1-hydroxy-xanthines requires the presence of Mg 2+ ions, which are present in the active site of Caf1.

Statistics
Citations: 5
Authors: 5
Affiliations: 4
Identifiers