Development of a Three-Hybrid Split-Luciferase System for Interrogating Protein Kinase Inhibition

Eukaryotic protein kinases are one of the most important classes of human proteins, and a great deal of research has focused on the development of small molecule inhibitors as biological probes for the determination of their cellular function or as therapeutics for the treatment of disease, such as...

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Main Author: Jester, Benjamin
Other Authors: Ghosh, Indraneel
Language:en
Published: The University of Arizona. 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/205450
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-2054502015-10-23T04:49:04Z Development of a Three-Hybrid Split-Luciferase System for Interrogating Protein Kinase Inhibition Jester, Benjamin Ghosh, Indraneel Aspinwall, Craig A. Bandarian, Vahe Montfort, William Ghosh, Indraneel split-protein complementation three-hybrid Chemistry inhibitor selectivity protein kinase Eukaryotic protein kinases are one of the most important classes of human proteins, and a great deal of research has focused on the development of small molecule inhibitors as biological probes for the determination of their cellular function or as therapeutics for the treatment of disease, such as cancer. The need for new selective inhibitors and a better understanding of the selectivities of existing small molecules is readily apparent. Towards the goal of better understanding protein kinases and the molecules that inhibit them, I have developed a split-protein-based approach for the investigation of these kinase-small molecule interactions. Employing split-firefly luciferase as a reporter domain, we engineered a three-hybrid system capable of determining kinase inhibition through competitive interactions between an active site-directed ligand and a small molecule of interest. This method measures luciferase activity as a function of ligand binding, as opposed to the more traditional assays which quantify kinase activity directly, and alleviates the laborious process of protein purification. The model kinase PKA and the promiscuous ligand staurosporine were used in an initial test case to successfully validate the general design principles of our assay. The modular nature inherent to the assay's design enabled us to adapt it to roughly 300 additional protein kinases and two different ligands. We were able to establish a protocol for rapidly ascertaining the inhibition of a kinase by a library of 80 commercially available kinase inhibitors in a 96-well, high-throughput format. This protocol was then systematically applied to the AGC group of kinases to observe patterns of inhibition across similarly related kinases. We have further shown how these results might be correlated with the sequence identity between kinases to better anticipate inhibitor promiscuity. Finally, we were able to illustrate how a kinase-centric approach could be applied to correlate alterations to the kinase domain with changes in luminescence. This has use for the interrogation of different modes of inhibition as well as in identifying the specific determinants of inhibitor binding. In total, these efforts represent the optimization of a new, general platform for determining kinase inhibitor selectivity across the kinome, and it could potentially be applied universally to the interrogation of protein-ligand interactions. 2011 text Electronic Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10150/205450 en Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic split-protein complementation
three-hybrid
Chemistry
inhibitor selectivity
protein kinase
spellingShingle split-protein complementation
three-hybrid
Chemistry
inhibitor selectivity
protein kinase
Jester, Benjamin
Development of a Three-Hybrid Split-Luciferase System for Interrogating Protein Kinase Inhibition
description Eukaryotic protein kinases are one of the most important classes of human proteins, and a great deal of research has focused on the development of small molecule inhibitors as biological probes for the determination of their cellular function or as therapeutics for the treatment of disease, such as cancer. The need for new selective inhibitors and a better understanding of the selectivities of existing small molecules is readily apparent. Towards the goal of better understanding protein kinases and the molecules that inhibit them, I have developed a split-protein-based approach for the investigation of these kinase-small molecule interactions. Employing split-firefly luciferase as a reporter domain, we engineered a three-hybrid system capable of determining kinase inhibition through competitive interactions between an active site-directed ligand and a small molecule of interest. This method measures luciferase activity as a function of ligand binding, as opposed to the more traditional assays which quantify kinase activity directly, and alleviates the laborious process of protein purification. The model kinase PKA and the promiscuous ligand staurosporine were used in an initial test case to successfully validate the general design principles of our assay. The modular nature inherent to the assay's design enabled us to adapt it to roughly 300 additional protein kinases and two different ligands. We were able to establish a protocol for rapidly ascertaining the inhibition of a kinase by a library of 80 commercially available kinase inhibitors in a 96-well, high-throughput format. This protocol was then systematically applied to the AGC group of kinases to observe patterns of inhibition across similarly related kinases. We have further shown how these results might be correlated with the sequence identity between kinases to better anticipate inhibitor promiscuity. Finally, we were able to illustrate how a kinase-centric approach could be applied to correlate alterations to the kinase domain with changes in luminescence. This has use for the interrogation of different modes of inhibition as well as in identifying the specific determinants of inhibitor binding. In total, these efforts represent the optimization of a new, general platform for determining kinase inhibitor selectivity across the kinome, and it could potentially be applied universally to the interrogation of protein-ligand interactions.
author2 Ghosh, Indraneel
author_facet Ghosh, Indraneel
Jester, Benjamin
author Jester, Benjamin
author_sort Jester, Benjamin
title Development of a Three-Hybrid Split-Luciferase System for Interrogating Protein Kinase Inhibition
title_short Development of a Three-Hybrid Split-Luciferase System for Interrogating Protein Kinase Inhibition
title_full Development of a Three-Hybrid Split-Luciferase System for Interrogating Protein Kinase Inhibition
title_fullStr Development of a Three-Hybrid Split-Luciferase System for Interrogating Protein Kinase Inhibition
title_full_unstemmed Development of a Three-Hybrid Split-Luciferase System for Interrogating Protein Kinase Inhibition
title_sort development of a three-hybrid split-luciferase system for interrogating protein kinase inhibition
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/205450
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