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Identification of highly selective SIK1/2 inhibitors that modulate innate immune activation and suppress intestinal inflammation.

Holger BabbeThomas B SundbergMark S TichenorMark SeierstadGenesis BacaniJames BerstlerWenying ChaiLeon ChangDe Michael ChungKevin CoeBernard CollinsMichael F FinleyAlexander GuletskyChristopher T LemkePuiying A MakAshok MathurEduardo V Mercado-MarinShailesh MetkarDonald D RaymondMarie-Laure RivesMichele RizzolioPaul L ShafferRussell SmithJacqueline SmithRuth A SteeleHelena SteffensJavier SuarezGaochao TianNathan MajewskiLaurie P VolakJianmei WeiPrerak T DesaiLuvena L OngTatiana KoudriakovaSteven D GoldbergGavin HirstVirendar K KaushikTatiana OrtNilufer SethDaniel B GrahamScott PlevyJennifer D VenableRamnik J XavierJennifer E Towne
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2023)
The salt-inducible kinases (SIK) 1-3 are key regulators of pro- versus anti-inflammatory cytokine responses during innate immune activation. The lack of highly SIK-family or SIK isoform-selective inhibitors suitable for repeat, oral dosing has limited the study of the optimal SIK isoform selectivity profile for suppressing inflammation in vivo. To overcome this challenge, we devised a structure-based design strategy for developing potent SIK inhibitors that are highly selective against other kinases by engaging two differentiating features of the SIK catalytic site. This effort resulted in SIK1/2-selective probes that inhibit key intracellular proximal signaling events including reducing phosphorylation of the SIK substrate cAMP response element binding protein (CREB) regulated transcription coactivator 3 (CRTC3) as detected with an internally generated phospho-Ser329-CRTC3-specific antibody. These inhibitors also suppress production of pro-inflammatory cytokines while inducing anti-inflammatory interleukin-10 in activated human and murine myeloid cells and in mice following a lipopolysaccharide challenge. Oral dosing of these compounds ameliorates disease in a murine colitis model. These findings define an approach to generate highly selective SIK1/2 inhibitors and establish that targeting these isoforms may be a useful strategy to suppress pathological inflammation.
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