A conserved protonation-dependent switch controls drug binding in the Abl kinase

Y Shan, MA Seeliger, MP Eastwood… - Proceedings of the …, 2009 - National Acad Sciences
Y Shan, MA Seeliger, MP Eastwood, F Frank, H Xu, MØ Jensen, RO Dror, J Kuriyan
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2009National Acad Sciences
In many protein kinases, a characteristic conformational change (the “DFG flip”) connects
catalytically active and inactive conformations. Many kinase inhibitors—including the cancer
drug imatinib—selectively target a specific DFG conformation, but the function and
mechanism of the flip remain unclear. Using long molecular dynamics simulations of the Abl
kinase, we visualized the DFG flip in atomic-level detail and formulated an energetic model
predicting that protonation of the DFG aspartate controls the flip. Consistent with our model's …
In many protein kinases, a characteristic conformational change (the “DFG flip”) connects catalytically active and inactive conformations. Many kinase inhibitors—including the cancer drug imatinib—selectively target a specific DFG conformation, but the function and mechanism of the flip remain unclear. Using long molecular dynamics simulations of the Abl kinase, we visualized the DFG flip in atomic-level detail and formulated an energetic model predicting that protonation of the DFG aspartate controls the flip. Consistent with our model's predictions, we demonstrated experimentally that the kinetics of imatinib binding to Abl kinase have a pH dependence that disappears when the DFG aspartate is mutated. Our model suggests a possible explanation for the high degree of conservation of the DFG motif: that the flip, modulated by electrostatic changes inherent to the catalytic cycle, allows the kinase to access flexible conformations facilitating nucleotide binding and release.
National Acad Sciences
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果