Unlike other classical protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs), PTPRQ (PTP receptor type Q) has dephosphorylating activity towards phosphatidylinositide (PI) substrates. Here, the structure of the catalytic domain of PTPRQ was solved at 1.56 Å resolution. Overall, PTPRQ adopts a tertiary fold typical of other classical PTPs. However, the disordered M6 loop of PTPRQ surrounding the catalytic core and the concomitant absence of interactions of this loop with residues in the PTP loop results in a flat active-site pocket. On the basis of structural and biochemical analyses, it is proposed that this structural feature might facilitate the accommodation of large substrates, making it suitable for the dephosphorylation of PI substrates. Moreover, subsequent kinetic experiments showed that PTPRQ has a strong preferences for PI(3,4,5)P3 over other PI substrates, suggesting that its regulation of cell survival and proliferation reflects downregulation of Akt signalling.
Although the inhibitors of singly mutated epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) kinase are effective for the treatment of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), their clinical efficacy has been limited due to the emergence of various double and triple EGFR mutants with drug resistance. It has thus become urgent to identify potent and selective inhibitors of triple mutant EGFRs resistant to first-, second-, and third-generation EGFR inhibitors. Herein, we report the discovery of potent and highly selective inhibitors of EGFR exon 19 p.E746_A750del/EGFR exon 20 p.T790M/EGFR exon 20 p.C797S (d746-750/T790M/C797S) mutant, which were derived via two-track virtual screening and de novo design. This two-track approach was performed so as to maximize and minimize the inhibitory activity against the triple mutant and the wild type, respectively. Extensive chemical modifications of the initial hit compounds led to the identification of several low-nanomolar inhibitors of the d746-750/T790M/C797S mutant. Among them, two compounds exhibited more than 104-fold selectivity in the inhibition of EGFRd746-750/T790M/C797S over the wild type. The formations of a hydrogen bond with the mutated residue Ser797 and the van der Waals contact with the mutated residue Met790 were found to be a common feature in the interactions between EGFRd746-750/T790M/C797S and the fourth-generation inhibitors. Such an exceptionally high selectivity could also be attributed to the formation of the hydrophobic contact with a Gly loop residue or the hydrogen bond with Asp855 in the activation loop. The discovery of the potent and selective EGFRd746-750/T790M/C797S inhibitors were actually made possible by virtue of the modified protein–ligand binding free energy function involving a new hydration free energy term with enhanced accuracy. The fourth-generation EGFR inhibitors found in this work are anticipated to serve as a new starting point for the discovery of anti-NSCLC medicines to overcome the problematic drug resistance.
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