Structure of the human protein kinase ZAK in complex with vemurafenib.

The mixed lineage kinase ZAK is a key regulator of the MAPK pathway mediating cell survival and inflammatory response. ZAK is targeted by several clinically approved kinase inhibitors, and inhibition of ZAK has been reported to protect fromdoxorubicin-induced cardiomyopathy. On the other hand, unint...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mathea, S, Abdul Azeez, K, Salah, E, Tallant, C, Wolfreys, F, Konietzny, R, Fischer, R, Lou, H, Brennan, P, Schnapp, G, Pautsch, A, Kessler, B, Turk, B, Knapp, S
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: American Chemical Society 2016
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Summary:The mixed lineage kinase ZAK is a key regulator of the MAPK pathway mediating cell survival and inflammatory response. ZAK is targeted by several clinically approved kinase inhibitors, and inhibition of ZAK has been reported to protect fromdoxorubicin-induced cardiomyopathy. On the other hand, unintended targeting of ZAK has been linked to severe adverse effects such as the development of cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma. Therefore, both specific inhibitors of ZAK, as well as anticancer drugs lacking off-target activity against ZAK, may provide therapeutic benefit. Here we report the first crystal structure of ZAK in complex with the B-RAF inhibitor vemurafenib. The co-crystal structure displayed a number of ZAK-specific features including a highly distorted P loop conformation enabling rational inhibitor design. Positional scanning peptide library analysis revealed a unique substrate specificity of the ZAK kinase including unprecedented preferences for istidine residues at positions -1 and +2 relative to the phosphoacceptor site. In addition, we screened a library of clinical kinase inhibitors identifying several inhibitors that potently inhibit ZAK, demonstrating that this kinase is commonly mistargeted by currently used anticancer drugs.