Reversible lysine-targeted probes reveal residence time-based kinase selectivity.
Tangpo YangAdolfo CuestaXiaobo WanGregory B CravenBrad HirakawaPenney KhamphavongJeffrey R MayJohn C KathJohn D LapekSherry NiessenAlma L BurlingameJordan D CarelliJack TauntonPublished in: Nature chemical biology (2022)
The expansion of the target landscape of covalent inhibitors requires the engagement of nucleophiles beyond cysteine. Although the conserved catalytic lysine in protein kinases is an attractive candidate for a covalent approach, selectivity remains an obvious challenge. Moreover, few covalent inhibitors have been shown to engage the kinase catalytic lysine in animals. We hypothesized that reversible, lysine-targeted inhibitors could provide sustained kinase engagement in vivo, with selectivity driven in part by differences in residence time. By strategically linking benzaldehydes to a promiscuous kinase binding scaffold, we developed chemoproteomic probes that reversibly and covalently engage >200 protein kinases in cells and mice. Probe-kinase residence time was dramatically enhanced by a hydroxyl group ortho to the aldehyde. Remarkably, only a few kinases, including Aurora A, showed sustained, quasi-irreversible occupancy in vivo, the structural basis for which was revealed by X-ray crystallography. We anticipate broad application of salicylaldehyde-based probes to proteins that lack a druggable cysteine.
Keyphrases
- living cells
- structural basis
- protein kinase
- small molecule
- tyrosine kinase
- amino acid
- fluorescent probe
- single molecule
- fluorescence imaging
- social media
- induced apoptosis
- cancer therapy
- protein protein
- single cell
- gene expression
- magnetic resonance
- metabolic syndrome
- type diabetes
- mass spectrometry
- signaling pathway
- genome wide
- dna methylation
- crystal structure
- insulin resistance
- dual energy