Tyrosine Kinase 2-mediated Signal Transduction in T Lymphocytes Is Blocked by Pharmacological Stabilization of Its Pseudokinase Domain

Inhibition of signal transduction downstream of the IL-23 receptor represents an intriguing approach to the treatment of autoimmunity. Using a chemogenomics approach marrying kinome-wide inhibitory profiles of a compound library with the cellular activity against an IL-23-stimulated transcriptional...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of biological chemistry 2015-04, Vol.290 (17), p.11061-11074
Hauptverfasser: Tokarski, John S., Zupa-Fernandez, Adriana, Tredup, Jeffrey A., Pike, Kristen, Chang, ChiehYing, Xie, Dianlin, Cheng, Lihong, Pedicord, Donna, Muckelbauer, Jodi, Johnson, Stephen R., Wu, Sophie, Edavettal, Suzanne C., Hong, Yang, Witmer, Mark R., Elkin, Lisa L., Blat, Yuval, Pitts, William J., Weinstein, David S., Burke, James R.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Inhibition of signal transduction downstream of the IL-23 receptor represents an intriguing approach to the treatment of autoimmunity. Using a chemogenomics approach marrying kinome-wide inhibitory profiles of a compound library with the cellular activity against an IL-23-stimulated transcriptional response in T lymphocytes, a class of inhibitors was identified that bind to and stabilize the pseudokinase domain of the Janus kinase tyrosine kinase 2 (Tyk2), resulting in blockade of receptor-mediated activation of the adjacent catalytic domain. These Tyk2 pseudokinase domain stabilizers were also shown to inhibit Tyk2-dependent signaling through the Type I interferon receptor but not Tyk2-independent signaling and transcriptional cellular assays, including stimulation through the receptors for IL-2 (JAK1- and JAK3-dependent) and thrombopoietin (JAK2-dependent), demonstrating the high functional selectivity of this approach. A crystal structure of the pseudokinase domain liganded with a representative example showed the compound bound to a site analogous to the ATP-binding site in catalytic kinases with features consistent with high ligand selectivity. The results support a model where the pseudokinase domain regulates activation of the catalytic domain by forming receptor-regulated inhibitory interactions. Tyk2 pseudokinase stabilizers, therefore, represent a novel approach to the design of potent and selective agents for the treatment of autoimmunity. Background: Interleukin-23 mediates pathobiology in many autoimmune disorders. Results: A chemogenomics approach identified small molecule agents that block receptor-mediated activation or tyrosine kinase 2 (Tyk2) and downstream signaling. Compounds stabilize the pseudokinase domain of Tyk2. Conclusion: Small molecule ligands of the Tyk2 pseudokinase domain stabilize an autoinhibitory interaction with the catalytic domain. Significance: This work enables the discovery of selective therapeutics targeting Tyk2-dependent pathways critical in autoimmunity.
ISSN:0021-9258
1083-351X
DOI:10.1074/jbc.M114.619502