Using ancient protein kinases to unravel a modern cancer drug’s mechanism

Macromolecular function is rooted in energy landscapes, where sequence determines not a single structure but an ensemble of conformations. Hence, evolution modifies a protein’s function by altering its energy landscape. Consequently, we recreate the evolutionary pathway between two modern human onco...

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Veröffentlicht in:Science (American Association for the Advancement of Science) 2015-02, Vol.347 (6224)
Hauptverfasser: Wilson, C., Agafonov, R. V., Hoemberger, M., Kutter, S., Zorba, A., Halpin, J., Buosi, V., Otten, R., Waterman, D., Theobald, D. L., Kern, D.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Macromolecular function is rooted in energy landscapes, where sequence determines not a single structure but an ensemble of conformations. Hence, evolution modifies a protein’s function by altering its energy landscape. Consequently, we recreate the evolutionary pathway between two modern human oncogenes, Src and Abl, by reconstructing their common ancestors. Our evolutionary reconstruction combined with x-ray structures of the common ancestor and pre–steady-state kinetics reveals a detailed atomistic mechanism for selectivity of the successful cancer drug Gleevec. Gleevec affinity is gained during the evolutionary trajectory toward Abl and lost toward Src, primarily by shifting an induced-fit equilibrium that is also disrupted in the clinical T315I resistance mutation. Lastly, this work reveals the mechanism of Gleevec specificity while offering insights into how energy landscapes evolve.
ISSN:0036-8075
1095-9203