| Literature DB >> 24593284 |
Seungil Han1, Robert M Czerwinski2, Nicole L Caspers1, David C Limburg1, WeiDong Ding1, Hong Wang1, Jeffrey F Ohren1, Francis Rajamohan1, Thomas J McLellan1, Ray Unwalla1, Chulho Choi1, Mihir D Parikh1, Nilufer Seth2, Jason Edmonds2, Chris Phillips1, Subarna Shakya2, Xin Li2, Vikki Spaulding2, Samantha Hughes1, Andrew Cook1, Colin Robinson1, John P Mathias2, Iva Navratilova, Quintus G Medley2, David R Anderson1, Ravi G Kurumbail1, Ann Aulabaugh1.
Abstract
ITK (interleukin-2-inducible T-cell kinase) is a critical component of signal transduction in T-cells and has a well-validated role in their proliferation, cytokine release and chemotaxis. ITK is an attractive target for the treatment of T-cell-mediated inflammatory diseases. In the present study we describe the discovery of kinase inhibitors that preferentially bind to an allosteric pocket of ITK. The novel ITK allosteric site was characterized by NMR, surface plasmon resonance, isothermal titration calorimetry, enzymology and X-ray crystallography. Initial screening hits bound to both the allosteric pocket and the ATP site. Successful lead optimization was achieved by improving the contribution of the allosteric component to the overall inhibition. NMR competition experiments demonstrated that the dual-site binders showed higher affinity for the allosteric site compared with the ATP site. Moreover, an optimized inhibitor displayed non-competitive inhibition with respect to ATP as shown by steady-state enzyme kinetics. The activity of the isolated kinase domain and auto-activation of the full-length enzyme were inhibited with similar potency. However, inhibition of the activated full-length enzyme was weaker, presumably because the allosteric site is altered when ITK becomes activated. An optimized lead showed exquisite kinome selectivity and is efficacious in human whole blood and proximal cell-based assays.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24593284 DOI: 10.1042/BJ20131139
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem J ISSN: 0264-6021 Impact factor: 3.857