Discovery of a Covalent Inhibitor Selectively Targeting the Autophosphorylation Site of c-Src Kinase

  • Huimin Zhang
  • , Dounan Xu
  • , Hongchan Huang
  • , Hao Jiang
  • , Linghao Hu
  • , Liping Liu
  • , Ge Sun
  • , Jing Gao
  • , Yuanqing Li
  • , Cuicui Xia
  • , Shijie Chen
  • , Hu Zhou
  • , Xiangqian Kong*
  • , Mingliang Wang*
  • , Cheng Luo*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

Nonreceptor tyrosine kinase c-Src plays a crucial role in cell signaling and contributes to tumor progression. However, the development of selective c-Src inhibitors turns out to be challenging. In our previous study, we performed posttranslational modification-inspired drug design (PTMI-DD) to provide a plausible way for designing selective kinase inhibitors. In this study, after identifying a unique pocket comprising a less conserved cysteine and an autophosphorylation site in c-Src as well as a promiscuous covalent inhibitor, chemical optimization was performed to obtain (R)-LW-Srci-8 with nearly 75-fold improved potency (IC50 = 35.83 ± 7.21 nM). Crystallographic studies revealed the critical C-F···C═O interactions that may contribute to tight binding. The kinact and Ki values validated the improved binding affinity and decreased warhead reactivity of (R)-LW-Srci-8 for c-Src. Notably, in vitro tyrosine kinase profiling and cellular activity-based protein profiling (ABPP) cooperatively indicated a specific inhibition of c-Src by (R)-LW-Srci-8. Intriguingly, (R)-LW-Srci-8 preferentially binds to inactive c-Src with unphosphorylated Y419 both in vitro and in cells, subsequently disrupting the autophosphorylation. Collectively, our study demonstrated the feasibility of developing selective kinase inhibitors by cotargeting a nucleophilic residue and a posttranslational modification site and providing a chemical probe for c-Src functional studies.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)999-1010
Number of pages12
JournalACS Chemical Biology
Volume19
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - 19 Apr 2024
Externally publishedYes

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