AI Article Synopsis

  • Over the last ten years, new inhibitors targeting ATP-binding sites of protein kinases, like imatinib (Gleevec), have been developed, which stabilize a specific inactive conformation of their kinase targets.
  • Imatinib is highly selective for the Abl kinase over other similar kinases like Src and is sensitive to the phosphorylation state of Abl's activation loop, a trait shared by inhibitors like it.
  • The report analyzes various ATP-competitive inhibitors that stabilize a similar inactive conformation and finds that many of them are equally potent against both Abl and Src, with only some being sensitive to phosphorylation, revealing differences in conformational preferences between related kinases.

Article Abstract

Over the past decade, an increasingly diverse array of potent and selective inhibitors that target the ATP-binding sites of protein kinases have been developed. Many of these inhibitors, like the clinically approved drug imatinib (Gleevec), stabilize a specific catalytically inactive ATP-binding site conformation of their kinases targets. Imatinib is notable in that it is highly selective for its kinase target, Abl, over other closely related tyrosine kinases, such as Src. In addition, imatinib is highly sensitive to the phosphorylation state of Abl's activation loop, which is believed to be a general characteristic of all inhibitors that stabilize a similar inactive ATP-binding site conformation. In this report, we perform a systematic analysis of a diverse series of ATP-competitive inhibitors that stabilize a similar inactive ATP-binding site conformation as imatinib with the tyrosine kinases Src and Abl. In contrast to imatinib, many of these inhibitors have very similar potencies against Src and Abl. Furthermore, only a subset of this class of inhibitors is sensitive to the phosphorylation state of the activation loop of these kinases. In attempting to explain this observation, we have uncovered an unexpected correlation between Abl's activation loop and another flexible active site feature, called the phosphate-binding loop (p-loop). These studies shed light on how imatinib is able to obtain its high target selectivity and reveal how the conformational preference of flexible active site regions can vary between closely related kinases.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3880807PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/cb400663kDOI Listing

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