2 research outputs found
Purification, Cloning, and Characterization of the CEL I Nuclease<sup>†</sup>
CEL I, isolated from celery, is the first eukaryotic nuclease known that cleaves DNA with
high specificity at sites of base-substitution mismatch and DNA distortion. The enzyme requires Mg2+
and Zn2+ for activity, with a pH optimum at neutral pH. We have purified CEL I 33 000-fold to apparent
homogeneity. A key improvement is the use of α-methyl-mannoside in the purification buffers to overcome
the aggregation of glycoproteins with endogenous lectins. The SDS gel electrophoresis band for the
homogeneous CEL I, with and without the removal of its carbohydrate moieties, was extracted, renatured,
and shown to have mismatch cutting specificity. After determination of the amino acid sequence of 28%
of the CEL I polypeptide, we cloned the CEL I cDNA. Potential orthologs are nucleases putatively encoded
by the genes BFN1 of Arabidopsis, ZEN1 of Zinnia, and DSA6 of daylily. Homologies of CEL I with S1
and P1 nucleases are much lower. We propose that CEL I exemplifies a new family of neutral pH optimum,
magnesium-stimulated, mismatch duplex-recognizing nucleases, within the S1 superfamily
Discovery of GSK1070916, a Potent and Selective Inhibitor of Aurora B/C Kinase
The Aurora kinases play critical roles in the regulation of mitosis and are frequently overexpressed or amplified in human tumors. Selective inhibitors may provide a new therapy for the treatment of tumors with Aurora kinase amplification. Herein we describe our lead optimization efforts within a 7-azaindole-based series culminating in the identification of GSK1070916 (17k). Key to the advancement of the series was the introduction of a 2-aryl group containing a basic amine onto the azaindole leading to significantly improved cellular activity. Compound 17k is a potent and selective ATP-competitive inhibitor of Aurora B and C with Ki* values of 0.38 ± 0.29 and 1.5 ± 0.4 nM, respectively, and is >250-fold selective over Aurora A. Biochemical characterization revealed that compound 17k has an extremely slow dissociation half-life from Aurora B (>480 min), distinguishing it from clinical compounds 1 and 2. In vitro treatment of A549 human lung cancer cells with compound 17k results in a potent antiproliferative effect (EC50 = 7 nM). Intraperitoneal administration of 17k in mice bearing human tumor xenografts leads to inhibition of histone H3 phosphorylation at serine 10 in human colon cancer (Colo205) and tumor regression in human leukemia (HL-60). Compound 17k is being progressed to human clinical trials
