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Modulation of activation-loop phosphorylation by JAK inhibitors is binding mode dependent

Authors :
Debora Bonenfant
Hans Voshol
Thomas Radimerski
Catherine H. Régnier
Carole Pissot-Soldermann
Francesco Hofmann
Alain De Pover
Eric Vangrevelinghe
Zhiyan Qian
Aviva Goel
Clemens Scheufler
Fanny Marque
Hugues Ryckelynck
Priya Koppikar
Paul W. Manley
Christoph Gaul
Lorenza Wyder
Rita Andraos
Fabienne Baffert
Joëlle Rubert
William R. Sellers
Ross L. Levine
Neha Bhagwat
Gisele A. Tavares
Source :
Cancer discovery. 2(6)
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors are being developed for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis, psoriasis, myeloproliferative neoplasms, and leukemias. Most of these drugs target the ATP-binding pocket and stabilize the active conformation of the JAK kinases. This type I binding mode can lead to an increase in JAK activation loop phosphorylation, despite blockade of kinase function. Here we report that stabilizing the inactive state via type II inhibition acts in the opposite manner, leading to a loss of activation loop phosphorylation. We used X-ray crystallography to corroborate the binding mode and report for the first time the crystal structure of the JAK2 kinase domain in an inactive conformation. Importantly, JAK inhibitor–induced activation loop phosphorylation requires receptor interaction, as well as intact kinase and pseudokinase domains. Hence, depending on the respective conformation stabilized by a JAK inhibitor, hyperphosphorylation of the activation loop may or may not be elicited. Significance: This study shows that JAK inhibitors can lead to an increase of activation loop phosphorylation in a manner that is binding mode dependent. Our results highlight the need for detailed understanding of inhibitor mechanism of action, and that it may be possible to devise strategies that avoid target priming using alternative modes of inhibiting JAK kinase activity for the treatment of JAK-dependent diseases. Cancer Discov; 2(6); 512–23. © 2012 AACR. This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 473

Details

ISSN :
21598290
Volume :
2
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer discovery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8e2c8a24451bfd46f2924a8a79459049