Thursday, April 24, 2025

Discovery of RNA-Reactive Small Molecules Guides Design of Electrophilic Modules for RNA-Specific Covalent Binders

Noah A. Springer, Patrick R. A. Zanon, Amirhossein Taghavi, Kisu Sung, Matthew D. Disney

bioRxiv 2025.04.22.649986; 

doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2025.04.22.649986

RNA is a key drug target that can be modulated by small molecules, however covalent binders of RNA remain largely unexplored. Using a high-throughput mass spectrometry screen of 2,000 electrophilic compounds, we identified ligands that react with RNA in a binding-dependent manner. RNA reactivity was influenced by both the reactive group and the RNA-binding scaffold. Electrophilic modules such as 3-chloropivalamide, bis(2-chloroethyl)amine, chloroacetamide, and N-acylimidazole that react with proteins also cross-linked to RNA, especially when paired with aromatic heterocycles, particularly those with a thieno[3,2-c]pyridinium core. These results suggest that electrophiles commonly used for protein targeting can also covalently modify RNA, potentially contributing to both on- and off-target effects. This insight enabled the design of an RNA-specific covalent compound by modifying a Hoechst scaffold, originally identified to bind DNA, to react selectively with the expanded triplet repeat RNA, r(CUG)exp, that causes myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1). Selectivity appears to arise from binding to the RNA major groove near the reactive site. Overall, this study highlights the potential of rationally designing covalent RNA-targeting small molecules.

A Tandem Bioorthogonal Retro-Cope and Cope Elimination for the Activation of Covalent Inhibitors with an Acrylamide or Vinylsulfonamide Warhead in Live Cells

Yan Huang, Miao Liu, Dongguang Fan, Fan Xu, Fushuang Xiang, Qingqiang Min, and Xingyue Ji Journal of the American Chemical Society 2026 DOI:...