Login / Signup

Modulating multi-functional ERK complexes by covalent targeting of a recruitment site in vivo.

Tamer S KaoudWilliam H JohnsonNancy Danielle EbeltAndrea PiserchioDiana Zamora-OlivaresSabrina X Van RavensteinJacey R PridgenRamakrishna EdupugantiRachel M SammonsMicael CanoMangalika WarthakaMatthew HargerClint D J TavaresJihyun ParkMohamed F RadwanPengyu RenEric V AnslynKenneth Y TsaiRanajeet GhoseKevin N Dalby
Published in: Nature communications (2019)
Recently, the targeting of ERK with ATP-competitive inhibitors has emerged as a potential clinical strategy to overcome acquired resistance to BRAF and MEK inhibitor combination therapies. In this study, we investigate an alternative strategy of targeting the D-recruitment site (DRS) of ERK. The DRS is a conserved region that lies distal to the active site and mediates ERK-protein interactions. We demonstrate that the small molecule BI-78D3 binds to the DRS of ERK2 and forms a covalent adduct with a conserved cysteine residue (C159) within the pocket and disrupts signaling in vivo. BI-78D3 does not covalently modify p38MAPK, JNK or ERK5. BI-78D3 promotes apoptosis in BRAF inhibitor-naive and resistant melanoma cells containing a BRAF V600E mutation. These studies provide the basis for designing modulators of protein-protein interactions involving ERK, with the potential to impact ERK signaling dynamics and to induce cell cycle arrest and apoptosis in ERK-dependent cancers.
Keyphrases