Publication | Closed Access
Tethering Small Molecules to a Phage Display Library: Discovery of a Selective Bivalent Inhibitor of Protein Kinase A
64
Citations
12
References
2007
Year
Molecular BiologyNoncovalent Tethering MethodologyChemical BiologySmall MoleculesSelective Bivalent InhibitorProtein Kinase AMolecular RecognitionSmall Molecule LibraryPhage Display LibraryBiochemistryNon-peptide LigandMolecular DockingCyclic PeptideNatural SciencesPeptide LibraryProtein EngineeringChemical ProbeMedicineBivalent LigandsDrug Discovery
We report a noncovalent tethering methodology for the fragment-based selection of bivalent ligands targeting protein kinases. In this approach, a small-molecule warhead, staurosporine, directs a phage display cyclic peptide library to the active site of cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA), allowing for targeted library enrichment. A cyclic peptide discovered through this selection, when covalently attached to a staurosporine derivative, displayed a 90-fold increase in affinity for PKA. Moreover, the bivalent inhibitor was shown to be significantly more selective than the starting warhead when tested against a small panel of kinases. Thus our general methodology allows for covalent linkage of known small-molecule ligands to biological libraries for discovering potent bivalent inhibitors of biological targets.
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