15 research outputs found

    A Three-Hybrid Approach to Scanning the Proteome for Targets of Small Molecule Kinase Inhibitors

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    AbstractIn this study, we explored the application of a yeast three-hybrid (Y3H)-based compound/protein display system to scanning the proteome for targets of kinase inhibitors. Various known cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) inhibitors, including purine and indenopyrazole analogs, were displayed in the form of methotrexate-based hybrid ligands and deployed in cDNA library or yeast cell array-based screening formats. For all inhibitors, known cell cycle CDKs as well as novel candidate CDK-like and/or CDK-unrelated kinase targets could be identified, many of which were independently confirmed using secondary enzyme assays and affinity chromatography. The Y3H system described here may prove generally useful in the discovery of candidate drug targets

    A Proteome-Wide CDK/CRK-Specific Kinase Inhibitor Promotes Tumor Cell Death in the Absence of Cell Cycle Progression

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    SummaryThe identification of molecular determinants of tumor cell survival is an important objective in cancer research. Here, we describe a small-molecule kinase inhibitor (RGB-286147), which, besides inhibiting tumor cell cycle progression, exhibits potent cytotoxic activity toward noncycling tumor cells, but not nontransformed quiescent fibroblasts. Extensive yeast three-hybrid (Y3H)-based proteome/kinome scanning with chemical dimerizers revealed CDK1/2/3/5/7/9 and the less well-characterized CDK-related kinases (CRKs) p42/CCRK, PCTK1/3, and PFTK1 as its predominant targets. Thus, RGB-286147 is a proteome-wide CDK/CRK-specific kinase inhibitor whose further study could yield new insight into molecular determinants of tumor cell survival. Our results also suggest that the [1, 3, 6]-tri-substituted-pyrazolo[3,4-d]-pyrimidine-4-one kinase inhibitor scaffold is a promising template for the rational design of kinase inhibitors with potential applications to disease indications other than cancer, such as neurodegeneration, cardiac hypertrophic growth, and AIDS

    Structure-Based Identification of Ureas as Novel Nicotinamide Phosphoribosyltransferase (Nampt) Inhibitors

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    Nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase (Nampt) is a promising anticancer target. Virtual screening identified a thiourea analogue, compound <b>5</b>, as a novel highly potent Nampt inhibitor. Guided by the cocrystal structure of <b>5</b>, SAR exploration revealed that the corresponding urea compound <b>7</b> exhibited similar potency with an improved solubility profile. These studies also indicated that a 3-pyridyl group was the preferred substituent at one inhibitor terminus and also identified a urea moiety as the optimal linker to the remainder of the inhibitor structure. Further SAR optimization of the other inhibitor terminus ultimately yielded compound <b>50</b> as a urea-containing Nampt inhibitor which exhibited excellent biochemical and cellular potency (enzyme IC<sub>50</sub> = 0.007 μM; A2780 IC<sub>50</sub> = 0.032 μM). Compound <b>50</b> also showed excellent in vivo antitumor efficacy when dosed orally in an A2780 ovarian tumor xenograft model (TGI of 97% was observed on day 17)
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