1. Academic Validation
  2. A proteome-wide CDK/CRK-specific kinase inhibitor promotes tumor cell death in the absence of cell cycle progression

A proteome-wide CDK/CRK-specific kinase inhibitor promotes tumor cell death in the absence of cell cycle progression

  • Chem Biol. 2005 Oct;12(10):1103-15. doi: 10.1016/j.chembiol.2005.08.008.
Maureen Caligiuri 1 Frank Becker Krishna Murthi Faith Kaplan Severine Dedier Christine Kaufmann Andy Machl Gabriele Zybarth Judson Richard Nick Bockovich Art Kluge Nikolai Kley
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 GPC Biotech, Inc., Waltham, Massachusetts 02451, USA.
Abstract

The identification of molecular determinants of tumor cell survival is an important objective in Cancer research. Here, we describe a small-molecule kinase inhibitor (RGB-286147), which, besides inhibiting tumor cell cycle progression, exhibits potent cytotoxic activity toward noncycling tumor cells, but not nontransformed quiescent fibroblasts. Extensive yeast three-hybrid (Y3H)-based proteome/kinome scanning with chemical dimerizers revealed CDK1/2/3/5/7/9 and the less well-characterized CDK-related kinases (CRKs) p42/CCRK, PCTK1/3, and PFTK1 as its predominant targets. Thus, RGB-286147 is a proteome-wide CDK/CRK-specific kinase inhibitor whose further study could yield new insight into molecular determinants of tumor cell survival. Our results also suggest that the [1, 3, 6]-tri-substituted-pyrazolo[3,4-d]-pyrimidine-4-one kinase inhibitor scaffold is a promising template for the rational design of kinase inhibitors with potential applications to disease indications other than Cancer, such as neurodegeneration, cardiac hypertrophic growth, and AIDS.

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