| Literature DB >> 19462975 |
Matthäus Getlik1, Christian Grütter, Jeffrey R Simard, Sabine Klüter, Matthias Rabiller, Haridas B Rode, Armin Robubi, Daniel Rauh.
Abstract
The emergence of drug resistance remains a fundamental challenge in the development of kinase inhibitors that are effective over long-term treatments. Allosteric inhibitors that bind to sites lying outside the highly conserved ATP pocket are thought to be more selective than ATP-competitive inhibitors and may circumvent some mechanisms of drug resistance. Crystal structures of type I and allosteric type III inhibitors in complex with the tyrosine kinase cSrc allowed us to employ principles of structure-based design to develop these scaffolds into potent type II kinase inhibitors. One of these compounds, 3c (RL46), disrupts FAK-mediated focal adhesions in cancer cells via direct inhibition of cSrc. Details gleaned from crystal structures revealed a key feature of a subset of these compounds, a surprising flexibility in the vicinity of the gatekeeper residue that allows these compounds to overcome a dasatinib-resistant gatekeeper mutation emerging in cSrc.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19462975 DOI: 10.1021/jm9002928
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Chem ISSN: 0022-2623 Impact factor: 7.446