Conservation, variability and the modeling of active protein kinases.

The human proteome is rich with protein kinases, and this richness has made the kinase of crucial importance in initiating and maintaining cell behavior. Elucidating cell signaling networks and manipulating their components to understand and alter behavior require well designed inhibitors. These inh...

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Main Authors: James D R Knight, Bin Qian, David Baker, Rashmi Kothary
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2007-10-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC1989141?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-0c363d79f5de4c13ae2b9ba701acb0e12020-11-25T01:44:29ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032007-10-01210e98210.1371/journal.pone.0000982Conservation, variability and the modeling of active protein kinases.James D R KnightBin QianDavid BakerRashmi KotharyThe human proteome is rich with protein kinases, and this richness has made the kinase of crucial importance in initiating and maintaining cell behavior. Elucidating cell signaling networks and manipulating their components to understand and alter behavior require well designed inhibitors. These inhibitors are needed in culture to cause and study network perturbations, and the same compounds can be used as drugs to treat disease. Understanding the structural biology of protein kinases in detail, including their commonalities, differences and modes of substrate interaction, is necessary for designing high quality inhibitors that will be of true use for cell biology and disease therapy. To this end, we here report on a structural analysis of all available active-conformation protein kinases, discussing residue conservation, the novel features of such conservation, unique properties of atypical kinases and variability in the context of substrate binding. We also demonstrate how this information can be used for structure prediction. Our findings will be of use not only in understanding protein kinase function and evolution, but they highlight the flaws inherent in kinase drug design as commonly practiced and dictate an appropriate strategy for the sophisticated design of specific inhibitors for use in the laboratory and disease therapy.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC1989141?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author James D R Knight
Bin Qian
David Baker
Rashmi Kothary
spellingShingle James D R Knight
Bin Qian
David Baker
Rashmi Kothary
Conservation, variability and the modeling of active protein kinases.
PLoS ONE
author_facet James D R Knight
Bin Qian
David Baker
Rashmi Kothary
author_sort James D R Knight
title Conservation, variability and the modeling of active protein kinases.
title_short Conservation, variability and the modeling of active protein kinases.
title_full Conservation, variability and the modeling of active protein kinases.
title_fullStr Conservation, variability and the modeling of active protein kinases.
title_full_unstemmed Conservation, variability and the modeling of active protein kinases.
title_sort conservation, variability and the modeling of active protein kinases.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2007-10-01
description The human proteome is rich with protein kinases, and this richness has made the kinase of crucial importance in initiating and maintaining cell behavior. Elucidating cell signaling networks and manipulating their components to understand and alter behavior require well designed inhibitors. These inhibitors are needed in culture to cause and study network perturbations, and the same compounds can be used as drugs to treat disease. Understanding the structural biology of protein kinases in detail, including their commonalities, differences and modes of substrate interaction, is necessary for designing high quality inhibitors that will be of true use for cell biology and disease therapy. To this end, we here report on a structural analysis of all available active-conformation protein kinases, discussing residue conservation, the novel features of such conservation, unique properties of atypical kinases and variability in the context of substrate binding. We also demonstrate how this information can be used for structure prediction. Our findings will be of use not only in understanding protein kinase function and evolution, but they highlight the flaws inherent in kinase drug design as commonly practiced and dictate an appropriate strategy for the sophisticated design of specific inhibitors for use in the laboratory and disease therapy.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC1989141?pdf=render
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