Chemical proteomics reveals target selectivity of clinical Jak inhibitors in human primary cells.
H Christian EberlThilo WernerFriedrich B M ReinhardStephanie LehmannDouglas ThomsonPeiling ChenCunyu ZhangChristina RauMarcel MuelbaierGerard DrewesDavid Harold DrewryMarcus BantscheffPublished in: Scientific reports (2019)
Kinobeads are a set of promiscuous kinase inhibitors immobilized on sepharose beads for the comprehensive enrichment of endogenously expressed protein kinases from cell lines and tissues. These beads enable chemoproteomics profiling of kinase inhibitors of interest in dose-dependent competition studies in combination with quantitative mass spectrometry. We present improved bead matrices that capture more than 350 protein kinases and 15 lipid kinases from human cell lysates, respectively. A multiplexing strategy is suggested that enables determination of apparent dissociation constants in a single mass spectrometry experiment. Miniaturization of the procedure enabled determining the target selectivity of the clinical BCR-ABL inhibitor dasatinib in peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) lysates from individual donors. Profiling of a set of Jak kinase inhibitors revealed kinase off-targets from nearly all kinase families underpinning the need to profile kinase inhibitors against the kinome. Potently bound off-targets of clinical inhibitors suggest polypharmacology, e.g. through MRCK alpha and beta, which bind to decernotinib with nanomolar affinity.
Keyphrases
- mass spectrometry
- single cell
- peripheral blood
- endothelial cells
- tyrosine kinase
- capillary electrophoresis
- liquid chromatography
- cell therapy
- high resolution
- induced apoptosis
- gene expression
- computed tomography
- acute lymphoblastic leukemia
- stem cells
- gas chromatography
- minimally invasive
- magnetic resonance
- pluripotent stem cells
- amino acid
- magnetic resonance imaging
- bone marrow
- cell cycle arrest
- cell death
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- kidney transplantation
- diffusion weighted imaging