| Literature DB >> 34762849 |
Mandy Beyer1, Sven J Henninger1, Patricia S Haehnel2, Al-Hassan M Mustafa3, Ece Gurdal4, Bastian Schubert1, Markus Christmann1, Andreas Sellmer5, Siavosh Mahboobi5, Sebastian Drube6, Wolfgang Sippl7, Thomas Kindler2, Oliver H Krämer8.
Abstract
Internal tandem duplications (ITDs) in the FMS-like tyrosine kinase-3 (FLT3) are causally linked to acute myeloid leukemia (AML) with poor prognosis. Available FLT3 inhibitors (FLT3i) preferentially target inactive or active conformations of FLT3. Moreover, they co-target kinases for normal hematopoiesis, are vulnerable to therapy-associated tyrosine kinase domain (TKD) FLT3 mutants, or lack low nanomolar activity. We show that the tyrosine kinase inhibitor marbotinib suppresses the phosphorylation of FLT3-ITD and the growth of permanent and primary AML cells with FLT3-ITD. This also applies to leukemic cells carrying FLT3-ITD/TKD mutants that confer resistance to clinically used FLT3i. Marbotinib shows high selectivity for FLT3 and alters signaling, reminiscent of genetic elimination of FLT3-ITD. Molecular docking shows that marbotinib fits in opposite orientations into inactive and active conformations of FLT3. The water-soluble marbotinib-carbamate significantly prolongs survival of mice with FLT3-driven leukemia. Marbotinib is a nanomolar next-generation FLT3i that represents a hybrid inhibitory principle.Entities:
Keywords: Acute myeloid leukemia; FLT3-ITD; FLT3-TKD; FMS-like tyrosine kinase-3; TKi; molecular modeling; next generation tyrosine kinase inhibitor; p27; therapy resistance; tyrosine kinase domain
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34762849 DOI: 10.1016/j.chembiol.2021.10.011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Chem Biol ISSN: 2451-9448 Impact factor: 8.116