TTLL12 has a potential oncogenic activity, suppression of ligation of nitrotyrosine to the C-terminus of detyrosinated α-tubulin, that can be overcome by molecules identified by screening a compound library

PLoS One. 2024 Feb 23;19(2):e0296960. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0296960. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Tubulin tyrosine ligase 12 (TTLL12) is a promising target for therapeutic intervention since it has been implicated in tumour progression, the innate immune response to viral infection, ciliogenesis and abnormal cell division. It is the most mysterious of a fourteen-member TTL/TTLL family, since, although it is the topmost conserved in evolution, it does not have predicted enzymatic activities. TTLL12 seems to act as a pseudo-enzyme that modulates various processes indirectly. Given the need to target its functions, we initially set out to identify a property of TTLL12 that could be used to develop a reliable high-throughput screening assay. We discovered that TTLL12 suppresses the cell toxicity of nitrotyrosine (3-nitrotyrosine) and its ligation to the C-terminus of detyrosinated α-tubulin (abbreviated to ligated-nitrotyrosine). Nitrotyrosine is produced by oxidative stress and is associated with cancer progression. Ligation of nitrotyrosine has been postulated to be a check-point induced by excessive cell stress. We found that the cytotoxicities of nitrotyrosine and tubulin poisons are independent of one another, suggesting that drugs that increase nitrotyrosination could be complementary to current tubulin-directed therapeutics. TTLL12 suppression of nitrotyrosination of α-tubulin was used to develop a robust cell-based ELISA assay that detects increased nitrotyrosination in cells that overexpress TTLL12 We adapted it to a high throughput format and used it to screen a 10,000 molecule World Biological Diversity SETTM collection of low-molecular weight molecules. Two molecules were identified that robustly activate nitrotyrosine ligation at 1 μM concentration. This is the pioneer screen for molecules that modulate nitrotyrosination of α-tubulin. The molecules from the screen will be useful for the study of TTLL12, as well as leads for the development of drugs to treat cancer and other pathologies that involve nitrotyrosination.

MeSH terms

  • Cell Division
  • Humans
  • Microtubules
  • Neoplasms*
  • Tubulin*
  • Tyrosine / analogs & derivatives*
  • Tyrosine / pharmacology

Substances

  • Tubulin
  • 3-nitrotyrosine
  • Tyrosine

Grants and funding

This study was funded by the EU FP6 Prima project 504587 (https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/504587; all authors); EU Cancure MSC EST ID 20970 (https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/20970/reporting/fr; AD); Institut National du Cancer PL099 (https://www.e-cancer.fr/Institut-national-du-cancer/Appels-a-projets/Portail-appelsprojetsrecherche.fr; BW) and institutional funding to the IGBMC (https://www.igbmc.fr/) from the CNRS (https://www.cnrs.fr/fr; BW), INSERM (https://www.inserm.fr/en/about-us/; BW) and UNISTRA (https://www.unistra.fr/; BW). This work of the Interdisciplinary Thematic Institute IMCBio+, as part of the ITI 2021-2028 program of the University of Strasbourg, CNRS and Inserm, was supported by IdEx Unistra (ANR-10-IDEX-0002), and by SFRI-STRAT’US project (ANR-20-SFRI-0012) and EUR IMCBio (ANR-17-EURE-0023) under the framework of the France 2030 Program (BW). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.