Notum is a carboxylesterase that suppresses Wnt signaling through deacylation of an essential palmitoleate group on Wnt proteins. There is a growing understanding of the role Notum plays in human disease such as colorectal cancer and Alzheimer'ss disease supporting the need to discover improved inhibitors, especially for use in models of neurodegeneration. Here, we describe the discovery and profile of 8l (ARUK3001185) as a potent, selective and brain pentrant inhibitor of Notum activity suitable for oral dosing in rodent models of disease. Crystallographic fragment screening of the Diamond-SGC Poised Library for binding to Notum, supported by a biochemical enzyme assay to rank inhibition activity, identifed 6a and 6b as a pair of outstanding hits. Fragment development of 6 delivered 8l that restored Wnt signaling in the presence of Notum in a cell-based reporter assay. Assessment in pharmacology screens showed 8l to be selective against serine hydrolases, kinases and drug targets.
The Wnt signaling suppressor Notum is a promising target for osteoporosis, Alzheimer's disease, and colorectal cancers. To develop novel Notum inhibitors, we used an X-ray crystallographic fragment screen with the Diamond-SGC Poised Library (DSPL) and identified 59 fragment hits from the analysis of 768 data sets. Fifty-eight of the hits were found bound at the enzyme catalytic pocket with potencies ranging from 0.5 to >1000 microM. Analysis of the fragments' diverse binding modes, enzymatic inhibitory activities, and chemical properties led to the selection of six hits for optimization, and five of these resulted in improved Notum inhibitory potencies. One hit, 1-phenyl-1,2,3-triazole 7, and its related cluster members, have shown promising lead-like properties. These became the focus of our fragment development activities, resulting in compound 7d with IC(50) 0.0067 microM. The large number of Notum fragment structures and their initial optimization provided an important basis for further Notum inhibitor development.
Regulation of the Wnt signaling pathway is critically important for a number of cellular processes in both development and adult mammalian biology. This Perspective will provide a summary of current and emerging therapeutic opportunities in modulating Wnt signaling, especially through inhibition of Notum carboxylesterase activity. Notum was recently shown to act as a negative regulator of Wnt signaling through the removal of an essential palmitoleate group. Inhibition of Notum activity may represent a new approach to treat disease where aberrant Notum activity has been identified as the underlying cause. Reliable screening technologies are available to identify inhibitors of Notum, and structural studies are accelerating the discovery of new inhibitors. A selection of these hits have been optimized to give fit-for-purpose small molecule inhibitors of Notum. Three noteworthy examples are LP-922056 (26), ABC99 (27), and ARUK3001185 (28), which are complementary chemical tools for exploring the role of Notum in Wnt signaling.
The tumour suppressor APC is the most commonly mutated gene in colorectal cancer. Loss of Apc in intestinal stem cells drives the formation of adenomas in mice via increased WNT signalling(1), but reduced secretion of WNT ligands increases the ability of Apc-mutant intestinal stem cells to colonize a crypt (known as fixation)(2). Here we investigated how Apc-mutant cells gain a clonal advantage over wild-type counterparts to achieve fixation. We found that Apc-mutant cells are enriched for transcripts that encode several secreted WNT antagonists, with Notum being the most highly expressed. Conditioned medium from Apc-mutant cells suppressed the growth of wild-type organoids in a NOTUM-dependent manner. Furthermore, NOTUM-secreting Apc-mutant clones actively inhibited the proliferation of surrounding wild-type crypt cells and drove their differentiation, thereby outcompeting crypt cells from the niche. Genetic or pharmacological inhibition of NOTUM abrogated the ability of Apc-mutant cells to expand and form intestinal adenomas. We identify NOTUM as a key mediator during the early stages of mutation fixation that can be targeted to restore wild-type cell competitiveness and provide preventative strategies for people at a high risk of developing colorectal cancer.
OBJECTIVES: The only proteins known to be modified by O-linked lipidation are Wnts and ghrelin, and enzymatic removal of this post-translational modification inhibits ligand activity. Indeed, the Wnt-deacylase activity of Notum is the basis of its ability to act as a feedback inhibitor of Wnt signalling. Whether Notum also deacylates ghrelin has not been determined. METHODS: We used mass-spectrometry to assay ghrelin deacylation by Notum and co-crystallisation to reveal enzyme-substrate interactions at the atomic level. CRISPR/Cas technology was used to tag endogenous Notum and assess its localisation in mice while liver-specific Notum knock-out mice allowed us to investigate the physiological role of Notum in modulating the level of ghrelin deacylation. RESULTS: Mass-spectrometry detected the removal of octanoyl from ghrelin by purified active Notum, but not by an inactive mutant. The 2.2 A resolution crystal structure of the Notum-ghrelin complex shows the octanoyl lipid is accommodated in the hydrophobic pocket of Notum. The knock-in allele expressing HA-tagged Notum reveals that Notum is produced in the liver and present in the bloodstream, albeit at a low level. Liver-specific inactivation of Notum in animals fed with a high fat diet leads to a small but significant increase in acylated ghrelin in the circulation, while no such increase is seen in wildtype animals on the same diet. CONCLUSIONS: Overall our data demonstrate Notum can act as a ghrelin deacylase, and that this may be physiologically relevant under high fat diet conditions. Our work therefore adds Notum to the list of enzymes, including butylcholineasterase and other carboxylesterases, that modulate the acylation state of ghrelin. The contribution of multiple enzymes could help tune the activity of this important hormone to a wide range of physiological conditions.
Carboxylesterase Notum is a negative regulator of the Wnt signaling pathway. There is an emerging understanding of the role Notum plays in disease, supporting the need to discover new small-molecule inhibitors. A crystallographic X-ray fragment screen was performed, which identified fragment hit 1,2,3-triazole 7 as an attractive starting point for a structure-based drug design hit-to-lead program. Optimization of 7 identified oxadiazol-2-one 23dd as a preferred example with properties consistent with drug-like chemical space. Screening 23dd in a cell-based TCF/LEF reporter gene assay restored the activation of Wnt signaling in the presence of Notum. Mouse pharmacokinetic studies with oral administration of 23dd demonstrated good plasma exposure and partial blood-brain barrier penetration. Significant progress was made in developing fragment hit 7 into lead 23dd (>600-fold increase in activity), making it suitable as a new chemical tool for exploring the role of Notum-mediated regulation of Wnt signaling.
Signalling by Wnt proteins is finely balanced to ensure normal development and tissue homeostasis while avoiding diseases such as cancer. This is achieved in part by Notum, a highly conserved secreted feedback antagonist. Notum has been thought to act as a phospholipase, shedding glypicans and associated Wnt proteins from the cell surface. However, this view fails to explain specificity, as glypicans bind many extracellular ligands. Here we provide genetic evidence in Drosophila that Notum requires glypicans to suppress Wnt signalling, but does not cleave their glycophosphatidylinositol anchor. Structural analyses reveal glycosaminoglycan binding sites on Notum, which probably help Notum to co-localize with Wnt proteins. They also identify, at the active site of human and Drosophila Notum, a large hydrophobic pocket that accommodates palmitoleate. Kinetic and mass spectrometric analyses of human proteins show that Notum is a carboxylesterase that removes an essential palmitoleate moiety from Wnt proteins and thus constitutes the first known extracellular protein deacylase.
        
Title: Cholinesterases display genuine arylacylamidase activity but are totally devoid of intrinsic peptidase activities Checler F, Grassi J, Vincent JP Ref: Journal of Neurochemistry, 62:756, 1994 : PubMed
The purpose of this article was to evaluate the intrinsic character of arylacylamidase and peptidase activities that are often detected along with cholinesterase activities. Various pools of commercial or affinity-purified acetylcholinesterases (AChEs) were examined. Affinity-purified AChE displays esterase- and amidase-specific activities that are similarly enriched when compared with commercial AChE. By contrast, commercial AChE exhibits much higher tryptic-like and carboxypeptidase-specific activities than the affinity-purified enzyme. The parallel enrichment in esterase and arylacylamidase suggests that these two activities are copurified, whereas peptidases do not seem to behave similarly. We show that trypsinolysis or spontaneous degradation of affinity-purified AChE leads to the conversion of the 75-kDa monomer protein into two fragments of 50 and 25 kDa after sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis. However, these modifications are without effect on the esterase, arylacylamidase, and peptidase activities. This clearly shows that AChE does not behave as a zymogen of peptidases that would have been activated on autolysis of AChE. Immunoprecipitation of AChEs with a purified monoclonal antibody directed toward electric eel AChE totally separated the esterase and arylacylamidase activities (pellet) from peptidase activities (supernatant). The immunoprecipitated AChEs could be dissociated from the interaction with IgGs. These resolubilized AChE preparations have kept the same percentage of initial esterase and arylacylamidase activities but were totally devoid of peptidase activities.
        
Title: Monoclonal antibodies allow precipitation of esterasic but not peptidasic activities associated with butyrylcholinesterase Checler F, Grassi J, Masson P, Vincent JP Ref: Journal of Neurochemistry, 55:750, 1990 : PubMed
Commercially available and affinity-purified butyrylcholinesterases isolated from human serum were examined for their esterasic activity and their ability to hydrolyze various neuropeptides, including neurotensin, substance P, and leucine-enkephalin. The three pools that displayed the lowest esterasic activities were shown to hydrolyze neurotensin with the same HPLC degradative pattern. By contrast, noticeable qualitative and quantitative discrepancies were observed when hydrolyses of substance P and leucine-enkephalin by these three butyrylcholinesterase pools were studied. The pool that exhibited the highest esterasic activity appeared to be homogeneously constituted by 90- and 180-kDa protein bands by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis and was totally unable to hydrolyze these three neuropeptides. This suggested that the three other butyrylcholinesterase preparations could be contaminated by exogenous peptidases. This was confirmed by means of three distinct monoclonal antibodies directed toward human serum butyrylcholinesterase. The three IgG-purified fractions precipitated the esterasic activity, whereas they failed to precipitate the neuropeptide-hydrolyzing activities whatever the substrate examined. Altogether, these results demonstrate that peptidases associated with butyrylcholinesterase are contaminating enzymes that cannot be considered as intrinsic activities of this enzyme.