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Discovery of PDK1 Kinase Inhibitors with a Novel Mechanism of Action by Ultrahigh Throughput Screening
Authors:Ekaterina V Bobkova  Michael J Weber  Zangwei Xu  Yan-Ling Zhang  Joon Jung  Peter Blume-Jensen  Alan Northrup  Priya Kunapuli  Jannik N Andersen  Ilona Kariv
Institution:From the Merck Research Laboratories, Boston, Massachusetts 02115 and ;§Merck Research Laboratories, North Wales, Pennsylvania 19454
Abstract:The phosphoinositide 3-kinase/AKT signaling pathway plays a key role in cancer cell growth, survival, and angiogenesis. Phosphoinositide-dependent protein kinase-1 (PDK1) acts at a focal point in this pathway immediately downstream of phosphoinositide 3-kinase and PTEN, where it phosphorylates numerous AGC kinases. The PDK1 kinase domain has at least three ligand-binding sites: the ATP-binding pocket, the peptide substrate-binding site, and a groove in the N-terminal lobe that binds the C-terminal hydrophobic motif of its kinase substrates. Based on the unique PDK1 substrate recognition system, ultrahigh throughput TR-FRET and Alphascreen® screening assays were developed using a biotinylated version of the PDK1-tide substrate containing the activation loop of AKT fused to a pseudo-activated hydrophobic motif peptide. Using full-length PDK1, Km values were determined as 5.6 μm for ATP and 40 nm for the fusion peptide, revealing 50-fold higher affinity compared with the classical AKT(Thr-308)-tide. Kinetic and biophysical studies confirmed the PDK1 catalytic mechanism as a rapid equilibrium random bireactant reaction. Following an ultrahigh throughput screen of a large library, 2,000 compounds were selected from the reconfirmed hits by computational analysis with a focus on novel scaffolds. ATP-competitive hits were deconvoluted by dose-response studies at 1× and 10× Km concentrations of ATP, and specificity of binding was assessed in thermal shift assay. Inhibition studies using fusion PDK1-tide1 substrate versus AKT(Thr-308)-tide and kinase selectivity profiling revealed a novel selective alkaloid scaffold that evidently binds to the PDK1-interacting fragment pocket. Molecular modeling suggests a structural paradigm for the design of inhibitory versus activating allosteric ligands of PDK1.
Keywords:Allosteric Regulation  Carcinogenesis  Enzyme Catalysis  Enzyme Inactivation  Enzyme Inhibitors  Enzyme Kinetics  Enzyme Mechanisms  Phosphatidylinositol-dependent Kinase-1 (PDK1)  Serine-Threonine Protein Kinase
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