Guiqun Wang, Nico J. Seidler, Dr. Sandra Röhm, Yufeng Pan, Xiaojun Julia Liang, Dr. Lisa Haarer, Dr. Benedict-Tilman Berger, Saran Aswathaman Sivashanmugam, Valentin R. Wydra, Dr. Michael Forster, Prof. Dr. Stefan A. Laufer, Dr. Apirat Chaikuad, Prof. Dr. Matthias Gehringer, Prof. Dr. Stefan Knapp
{"title":"用共价片段检测蛋白激酶的半胱氨酸","authors":"Guiqun Wang, Nico J. Seidler, Dr. Sandra Röhm, Yufeng Pan, Xiaojun Julia Liang, Dr. Lisa Haarer, Dr. Benedict-Tilman Berger, Saran Aswathaman Sivashanmugam, Valentin R. Wydra, Dr. Michael Forster, Prof. Dr. Stefan A. Laufer, Dr. Apirat Chaikuad, Prof. Dr. Matthias Gehringer, Prof. Dr. Stefan Knapp","doi":"10.1002/anie.202419736","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Protein kinases are important drug targets, yet specific inhibitors have been developed for only a fraction of the more than 500 human kinases. A major challenge in designing inhibitors for highly related kinases is selectivity. Unlike their non-covalent counterparts, covalent inhibitors offer the advantage of selectively targeting structurally similar kinases by modifying specific protein side chains, particularly non-conserved cysteines. Previously, covalent fragment screens yielded potent and selective inhibitors for individual kinases such as ERK1/2 but have not been applied to the broader kinome. Furthermore, many of the accessible cysteine positions have not been addressed so far. Here, we outline a generalizable approach to sample ATP-site cysteines with fragment-like covalent inhibitors. We present the development of a kinase-focused covalent fragment library and its systematic screening against a curated selection of 47 kinases, with 60 active site-proximal cysteines using LC/MS and differential scanning fluorimetry (DSF) assays, followed by hit validation through various complementary techniques. Our findings expand the repertoire of targetable cysteines within protein kinases, provide insight into unique binding modes identified from crystal structures and deliver isoform-specific hits with promising profiles as starting points for the development of highly potent and selective covalent inhibitors.</p>","PeriodicalId":125,"journal":{"name":"Angewandte Chemie International Edition","volume":"64 8","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":16.9000,"publicationDate":"2024-12-24","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/anie.202419736","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Probing the Protein Kinases′ Cysteinome by Covalent Fragments\",\"authors\":\"Guiqun Wang, Nico J. Seidler, Dr. Sandra Röhm, Yufeng Pan, Xiaojun Julia Liang, Dr. Lisa Haarer, Dr. Benedict-Tilman Berger, Saran Aswathaman Sivashanmugam, Valentin R. Wydra, Dr. Michael Forster, Prof. Dr. Stefan A. 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We present the development of a kinase-focused covalent fragment library and its systematic screening against a curated selection of 47 kinases, with 60 active site-proximal cysteines using LC/MS and differential scanning fluorimetry (DSF) assays, followed by hit validation through various complementary techniques. 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Probing the Protein Kinases′ Cysteinome by Covalent Fragments
Protein kinases are important drug targets, yet specific inhibitors have been developed for only a fraction of the more than 500 human kinases. A major challenge in designing inhibitors for highly related kinases is selectivity. Unlike their non-covalent counterparts, covalent inhibitors offer the advantage of selectively targeting structurally similar kinases by modifying specific protein side chains, particularly non-conserved cysteines. Previously, covalent fragment screens yielded potent and selective inhibitors for individual kinases such as ERK1/2 but have not been applied to the broader kinome. Furthermore, many of the accessible cysteine positions have not been addressed so far. Here, we outline a generalizable approach to sample ATP-site cysteines with fragment-like covalent inhibitors. We present the development of a kinase-focused covalent fragment library and its systematic screening against a curated selection of 47 kinases, with 60 active site-proximal cysteines using LC/MS and differential scanning fluorimetry (DSF) assays, followed by hit validation through various complementary techniques. Our findings expand the repertoire of targetable cysteines within protein kinases, provide insight into unique binding modes identified from crystal structures and deliver isoform-specific hits with promising profiles as starting points for the development of highly potent and selective covalent inhibitors.
期刊介绍:
Angewandte Chemie, a journal of the German Chemical Society (GDCh), maintains a leading position among scholarly journals in general chemistry with an impressive Impact Factor of 16.6 (2022 Journal Citation Reports, Clarivate, 2023). Published weekly in a reader-friendly format, it features new articles almost every day. Established in 1887, Angewandte Chemie is a prominent chemistry journal, offering a dynamic blend of Review-type articles, Highlights, Communications, and Research Articles on a weekly basis, making it unique in the field.