| Literature DB >> 29787268 |
Satish R Malwal1, Bing O'Dowd1, Xinxin Feng1, Petri Turhanen2, Christopher Shin1, Jiaqi Yao1, Boo Kyung Kim1, Noman Baig1, Tianhui Zhou1, Sandhya Bansal1, Rahul L Khade3, Yong Zhang3, Eric Oldfield1.
Abstract
Bisphosphonates are a major class of drugs used to treat osteoporosis, Paget's disease, and cancer. They have been proposed to act by inhibiting one or more targets including protein prenylation, the epidermal growth factor receptor, or the adenine nucleotide translocase. Inhibition of the latter is due to formation in cells of analogs of ATP: the isopentenyl ester of ATP (ApppI) or an AppXp-type analog of ATP, such as AMP-clodronate (AppCCl2p). We screened both ApppI as well as AppCCl2p against a panel of 369 kinases finding potent inhibition of some tyrosine kinases by AppCCl2p, attributable to formation of a strong hydrogen bond between tyrosine and the terminal phosphonate. We then synthesized bisphosphonate preprodrugs that are converted in cells to other ATP-analogs, finding low nM kinase inhibitors that inhibited cell signaling pathways. These results help clarify our understanding of the mechanisms of action of bisphosphonates, potentially opening up new routes to the development of bone resorption, anticancer, and anti-inflammatory drug leads.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29787268 PMCID: PMC6022752 DOI: 10.1021/jacs.8b02363
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Chem Soc ISSN: 0002-7863 Impact factor: 15.419