Structural Basis for Variations in Polo-like Kinase 1 Conformation and Intracellular Stability Induced by ATP-Competitive and Novel Noncompetitive Abbapolin Inhibitors.
Danda ChapagaiGeorge MerhejCampbell McInnesMichael D WyattPublished in: ACS chemical biology (2023)
Polo-like kinase 1 (PLK1) is an essential protein kinase with multiple roles in mitotic progression. PLK1 consists of a kinase domain (KD) and a phosphopeptide-binding polobox domain (PBD), which is responsible for substrate recognition and subcellular localization. The regulation of PLK1 involves an autoinhibitory conformation in which KD and PBD interact. Our previous work identified PBD-binding molecules termed abbapolins that inhibit the cellular phosphorylation of a PLK1 substrate and induce the loss of intracellular PLK1. Here, we describe a comparison of the abbapolin activity with that of KD inhibitors to gain insight into conformational features of PLK1. As measured by a cellular thermal shift assay, abbapolins produce ligand-induced thermal stabilization of PLK1. In contrast, KD inhibitors decreased the soluble PLK1, suggesting that catalytic-site binding causes a less thermally stable PLK1 conformation. Binding measurements with full-length PLK1 and a KD inhibitor also demonstrated a conformational change. Interestingly, the cellular consequences of KD versus PBD engagement contrast as KD binding causes the accumulation of intracellular PLK1, whereas PBD binding produces a striking loss of nuclear PLK1. These data are consistent with the relief of autoinhibited PLK1 by KD binders; an explanation for these observations is presented using structures for the catalytic domain and full-length PLK1 predicted by AlphaFold. Collectively, the results highlight an underappreciated aspect of targeting PLK1, namely, conformational perturbations induced by KD versus PBD binding. In addition to their significance for PBD-binding ligands, these observations have implications for the development of ATP-competitive PLK1 inhibitors because catalytic inhibitors may conversely promote PLK1 noncatalytic functions, which may explain their lack of clinical efficacy to date.