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Item Displacement of WDR5 from Chromatin by a WIN Site Inhibitor with Picomolar Affinity(Elsevier, 2019-03-12) Aho, Erin R.; Wang, Jing; Gogliotti, Rocco D.; Howard, Gregory C.; Phan, Jason; Acharya, Pankaj; Macdonald, Jonathan D.; Cheng, Ken; Lorey, Shelly L.; Lu, Bin; Wenzel, Sabine; Foshage, Audra M.; Alvarado, Joseph; Wang, Feng; Shaw, J. Grace; Zhao, Bin; Weissmiller, April M.; Thomas, Lance R.; Vakoc, Christopher R.; Hall, Matthew D.; Hiebert, Scott W.; Liu, Qi; Stauffer, Shaun R.; Fesik, Stephen W.; Tansey, William P.; Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, School of MedicineThe chromatin-associated protein WDR5 is a promising target for pharmacological inhibition in cancer. Drug discovery efforts center on the blockade of the "WIN site" of WDR5, a well-defined pocket that is amenable to small molecule inhibition. Various cancer contexts have been proposed to be targets for WIN site inhibitors, but a lack of understanding of WDR5 target genes and of the primary effects of WIN site inhibitors hampers their utility. Here, by the discovery of potent WIN site inhibitors, we demonstrate that the WIN site links WDR5 to chromatin at a small cohort of loci, including a specific subset of ribosome protein genes. WIN site inhibitors rapidly displace WDR5 from chromatin and decrease the expression of associated genes, causing translational inhibition, nucleolar stress, and p53 induction. Our studies define a mode by which WDR5 engages chromatin and forecast that WIN site blockade could have utility against multiple cancer types.Item Targeted Disruption of the Interaction between WD-40 Repeat Protein 5 (WDR5) and Mixed Lineage Leukemia (MLL)/SET1 Family Proteins Specifically Inhibits MLL1 and SETd1A Methyltransferase Complexes(American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, 2016-10-21) Alicea-Velázquez, Nilda L.; Shinsky, Stephen A.; Loh, Daniel M.; Lee, Jeong-Heon; Skalnik, David G.; Cosgrove, Michael S.; Biology, School of ScienceMLL1 belongs to the SET1 family of histone H3 lysine 4 (H3K4) methyltransferases, composed of MLL1–4 and SETd1A/B. MLL1 translocations are present in acute leukemias, and mutations in several family members are associated with cancer and developmental disorders. MLL1 associates with a subcomplex containing WDR5, RbBP5, ASH2L, and DPY-30 (WRAD), forming the MLL1 core complex required for H3K4 mono- and dimethylation and transcriptional activation. Core complex assembly requires interaction of WDR5 with the MLL1 Win (WDR5 interaction) motif, which is conserved across the SET1 family. Agents that mimic the SET1 family Win motif inhibit the MLL1 core complex and have become an attractive approach for targeting MLL1 in cancers. Like MLL1, other SET1 family members interact with WRAD, but the roles of the Win motif in complex assembly and enzymatic activity remain unexplored. Here, we show that the Win motif is necessary for interaction of WDR5 with all members of the human SET1 family. Mutation of the Win motif-WDR5 interface severely disrupts assembly and activity of MLL1 and SETd1A complexes but only modestly disrupts MLL2/4 and SETd1B complexes without significantly altering enzymatic activity in vitro. Notably, in the absence of WDR5, MLL3 interacts with RAD and shows enhanced activity. To further probe the role of the Win motif-WDR5 interaction, we designed a peptidomimetic that binds WDR5 (Kd ∼3 nm) and selectively inhibits activity of MLL1 and SETd1A core complexes within the SET1 family. Our results reveal that SET1 family complexes with the weakest Win motif-WDR5 interaction are more susceptible to Win motif-based inhibitors.