| Literature DB >> 20152788 |
Doriano Fabbro1, Paul W Manley, Wolfgang Jahnke, Janis Liebetanz, Alexandra Szyttenholm, Gabriele Fendrich, Andre Strauss, Jianming Zhang, Nathanael S Gray, Francisco Adrian, Markus Warmuth, Xavier Pelle, Robert Grotzfeld, Frederic Berst, Andreas Marzinzik, Sandra W Cowan-Jacob, Pascal Furet, Jürgen Mestan.
Abstract
The ATP-competitive inhibitors dasatinib and nilotinib, which bind to catalytically different conformations of the Abl kinase domain, have recently been approved for the treatment of imatinib-resistant CML. These two new drugs, albeit very efficient against most of the imatinib-resistant mutants of Bcr-Abl, fail to effectively suppress the Bcr-Abl activity of the T315I (or gatekeeper) mutation. Generating new ATP site-binding drugs that target the T315I in Abl has been hampered, amongst others, by target selectivity, which is frequently an issue when developing ATP-competitive inhibitors. Recently, using an unbiased cellular screening approach, GNF-2, a non-ATP-competitive inhibitor, has been identified that demonstrates cellular activity against Bcr-Abl transformed cells. The exquisite selectivity of GNF-2 is due to the finding that it targets the myristate binding site located near the C-terminus of the Abl kinase domain, as demonstrated by genetic approaches, solution NMR and X-ray crystallography. GNF-2, like myristate, is able to induce and/or stabilize the clamped inactive conformation of Abl analogous to the SH2-Y527 interaction of Src. The molecular mechanism for allosteric inhibition by the GNF-2 inhibitor class, and the combined effects with ATP-competitive inhibitors such as nilotinib and imatinib on wild-type Abl and imatinib-resistant mutants, in particular the T315I gatekeeper mutant, are reviewed. Copyright 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20152788 DOI: 10.1016/j.bbapap.2009.12.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochim Biophys Acta ISSN: 0006-3002