Quantitative, wide-spectrum kinase profiling in live cells for assessing the effect of cellular ATP on target engagement

For kinase inhibitors, intracellular target selectivity is fundamental to pharmacological mechanism. Although a number of acellular techniques have been developed to measure kinase binding or enzymatic inhibition, such approaches can fail to accurately predict engagement in cells. Here we report the...

詳細記述

書誌詳細
主要な著者: Vasta, JD, Corona, CR, Wilkinson, J, Zimprich, CA, Hartnett, JR, Ingold, MR, Zimmerman, K, Machleidt, T, Kirkland, TA, Huwiler, KG, Ohana, RF, Slater, M, Otto, P, Cong, M, Wells, CI, Berger, B-T, Hanke, T, Glas, C, Ding, K, Drewry, DH, Huber, KVM, Willson, TM, Knapp, S, Müller, S, Meisenheimer, PL, Fan, F, Wood, KV, Robers, MB
フォーマット: Journal article
言語:English
出版事項: Cell Press 2017
その他の書誌記述
要約:For kinase inhibitors, intracellular target selectivity is fundamental to pharmacological mechanism. Although a number of acellular techniques have been developed to measure kinase binding or enzymatic inhibition, such approaches can fail to accurately predict engagement in cells. Here we report the application of an energy transfer technique that enabled the first broad-spectrum, equilibrium-based approach to quantitatively profile target occupancy and compound affinity in live cells. Using this method, we performed a selectivity profiling for clinically relevant kinase inhibitors against 178 full-length kinases, and a mechanistic interrogation of the potency offsets observed between cellular and biochemical analysis. For the multikinase inhibitor crizotinib, our approach accurately predicted cellular potency and revealed improved target selectivity compared with biochemical measurements. Due to cellular ATP, a number of putative crizotinib targets are unexpectedly disengaged in live cells at a clinically relevant drug dose.