| Literature DB >> 30102854 |
Jinhua Wang1,2, Tatiana Erazo3, Fleur M Ferguson1,2, Dennis L Buckley1, Nestor Gomez3, Pau Muñoz-Guardiola3, Nora Diéguez-Martínez3, Xianming Deng1,2, Mingfeng Hao1, Walter Massefski1, Oleg Fedorov4, Nana Kwaku Offei-Addo1, Paul M Park1, Lingling Dai1, Amy DiBona5, Kelly Becht5, Nam Doo Kim6, Michael R McKeown7, Justin M Roberts7, Jinwei Zhang8, Taebo Sim9,10, Dario R Alessi8, James E Bradner7,11, Jose M Lizcano3, Stephen C Blacklow1,2, Jun Qi1,11, Xiang Xu1,2, Nathanael S Gray1,2.
Abstract
Bromodomains have been pursued intensively over the past several years as emerging targets for the development of anticancer and anti-inflammatory agents. It has recently been shown that some kinase inhibitors are able to potently inhibit the bromodomains of BRD4. The clinical activities of PLK inhibitor BI-2536 and JAK2-FLT3 inhibitor TG101348 have been attributed to this unexpected polypharmacology, indicating that dual-kinase/bromodomain activity may be advantageous in a therapeutic context. However, for target validation and biological investigation, a more selective target profile is desired. Here, we report that benzo[e]pyrimido-[5,4- b]diazepine-6(11H)-ones, versatile ATP-site directed kinase pharmacophores utilized in the development of inhibitors of multiple kinases, including several previously reported kinase chemical probes, are also capable of exhibiting potent BRD4-dependent pharmacology. Using a dual kinase-bromodomain inhibitor of the kinase domains of ERK5 and LRRK2, and the bromodomain of BRD4 as a case study, we define the structure-activity relationships required to achieve dual kinase/BRD4 activity, as well as how to direct selectivity toward inhibition of either ERK5 or BRD4. This effort resulted in identification of one of the first reported kinase-selective chemical probes for ERK5 (JWG-071), a BET selective inhibitor with 1 μM BRD4 IC50 (JWG-115), and additional inhibitors with rationally designed polypharmacology (JWG-047, JWG-069). Co-crystallography of seven representative inhibitors with the first bromodomain of BRD4 demonstrate that distinct atropisomeric conformers recognize the kinase ATP-site and the BRD4 acetyl lysine binding site, conformational preferences supported by rigid docking studies.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30102854 PMCID: PMC6333101 DOI: 10.1021/acschembio.7b00638
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Chem Biol ISSN: 1554-8929 Impact factor: 5.100