| Literature DB >> 28272423 |
Stanley G Kimani1, Sushil Kumar1, Nitu Bansal2, Kamalendra Singh3, Vladyslav Kholodovych4,5, Thomas Comollo1, Youyi Peng2, Sergei V Kotenko1, Stefan G Sarafianos3, Joseph R Bertino2, William J Welsh2,5, Raymond B Birge1.
Abstract
TAM receptors (Tyro-3, Axl, and Mertk) are a family of three homologous type I receptor tyrosine kinases that are implicated in several human malignancies. Overexpression of TAMs and their major ligand Growth arrest-specific factor 6 (Gas6) is associated with more aggressive staging of cancers, poorer predicted patient survival, acquired drug resistance and metastasis. Here we describe small molecule inhibitors (RU-301 and RU-302) that target the extracellular domain of Axl at the interface of the Ig-1 ectodomain of Axl and the Lg-1 of Gas6. These inhibitors effectively block Gas6-inducible Axl receptor activation with low micromolar IC50s in cell-based reporter assays, inhibit Gas6-inducible motility in Axl-expressing cell lines, and suppress H1299 lung cancer tumor growth in a mouse xenograft NOD-SCIDγ model. Furthermore, using homology models and biochemical verifications, we show that RU301 and 302 also inhibit Gas6 inducible activation of Mertk and Tyro3 suggesting they can act as pan-TAM inhibitors that block the interface between the TAM Ig1 ectodomain and the Gas6 Lg domain. Together, these observations establish that small molecules that bind to the interface between TAM Ig1 domain and Gas6 Lg1 domain can inhibit TAM activation, and support the further development of small molecule Gas6-TAM interaction inhibitors as a novel class of cancer therapeutics.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28272423 PMCID: PMC5341070 DOI: 10.1038/srep43908
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Molecular representation of drug targetable region in Axl-Gas6 complex, from RCSB PDB-2C5D.
(A) Ribbon model depicting the targetable interfaces (in space filling) between Gas6 (orange) and Axl-Ig1 (cyan), with magnification of two targetable sites: Site 1 (blue space filling) and Site 2 (red space filling). (B) Inset of the detailed targetable interfaces between Gas6 and Axl from panel A. (C) Structures of RU-301 and RU-302 (D) Putative docking pose of RU-301 in Site 2, lined by contact residues in Gas6 (orange) and Axl (cyan).
Figure 2Lead compounds RU-301 and RU-302 show inhibitory activity in blocking TAM signaling.
(A) Schematic representation of wild-type and chimeric TAM receptors. (B) Activation of the TAM-IFNγR1 chimeric receptors with Gas6 with pSTAT1 phosphorylation as readout for TAM activation. (C) Summary of small molecule inhibitors (10 μM) screening using TAM-IFNγR1 chimeric assay system showing RU-301 and RU-302 as the lead compounds. (D) Dose-response inhibition of Gas6-induced receptor activation by RU-301 (0.625–5.0 μM) using Axl-IFNγR1 cell lines. (E) Dose-response inhibition of Gas6-induced receptor activation by RU-302 (0.625–5.0 μM) using Axl-IFNγR1 cell lines. (F) Comparative inhibition of Gas6-induced receptor activation by 10.0 μM RU-301 and RU-302 on TAMs using TAM-IFNγR1 cell lines. (G,H) Comparison of R428 (a known Axl kinase domain targeting inhibitor) and RU-301 (Axl/Gas6 interaction inhibitor) by KinomeScan™ profiling for kinase domain interactions in the human kinome. Red circles represent drug binding kinases and the diameter of the circles represent the relative binding affinities.
Figure 3RU-301 and RU-302 inhibitors block the transforming potential of Gas6-induced endogenous TAM-dependent signaling.
(A) Immunoblot screening of human cancer cell lines for inducible native Axl signaling by exogenous Gas6 treatment. (B,C) RU-301 and RU-302 inhibition of Gas6-induced Axl signaling in H1299 at 10.0 μM (B) and MDA-MB-231 at 5.0 μM (C) cells. (D,E) Immunoblot analysis of the effects of RU-301 and RU-302 on Gas6-mediated pAkt and pERK induction in H1299 at 10.0 μM (D) and MDA-MB-231 at 5.0 μM (E) cells. (F) The inhibitory effect of RU-301 and RU-302 on Gas6-induced phosphorylation of TAMs in H1299 cells at 10.0 μM. (G) Summary of percent inhibition of Gas6-induced receptor activation by 10.0 μM RU compounds on H1299, U2-OS and Calu-1 cells. (H) Transwell migration assay to test the efficacy of 10.0 μM RU-301 and RU-302 on Gas6-induced H1299 cells migration. (I–K) xCELLigence™ assay to measure the effect of 10.0 μM RU-301, RU-302 and R428 on real-time cell migration in MDA-MB-231 (I,J) and H1299 (K) cells. (L) Colony formation assay to estimate the effect of 10.0 μM RU-301 and RU-302 on clonogenic growth potential of Gas6 induced Axl activation in H1299 cells.
Figure 4RU-301 and RU-302 suppress TAM mediated tumorigenicity in mice.
(A) Schematics of the experimental design to assess the effect of lead compounds RU-301 and RU-302 on TAM mediated tumorigenicity by subcutaneous injection with 5 × 105 human H1299 cells. (B) Pharmacokinetic profiles of RU-301 following intraperitoneal injection of 100 and 300 mg/kg to mice. (C) Body weight measurements of tumor-bearing mice upon administration with 100 mg/kg RU-301 or RU-302. (D) Suppression of tumor growth upon treatment with 100 mg/kg RU-301 or RU-302. (E) Body weight measurements upon treatment with 300 mg/kg RU-301. (F) Suppression of tumor growth upon treatment with 300 mg/kg RU-301. Error bars represent standard error of mean. p value indicated by *is <0.05.