Bromodomains have emerged as attractive candidates for the development of inhibitors targeting gene transcription. Inhibitors of the bromo and extraterminal (BET) family recently showed promising activity in diverse disease models. However, the pleiotropic nature of BET proteins regulating tissue-specific transcription has raised safety concerns and suggested that attempts should be made for domain-specific targeting. Here, we report that RVX-208, a compound currently in phase II clinical trials, is a BET bromodomain inhibitor specific for second bromodomains (BD2s). Cocrystal structures revealed binding modes of RVX-208 and its synthetic precursor, and fluorescent recovery after photobleaching demonstrated that RVX-208 displaces BET proteins from chromatin. However, gene-expression data showed that BD2 inhibition only modestly affects BET-dependent gene transcription. Our data demonstrate the feasibility of specific targeting within the BET family resulting in different transcriptional outcomes and highlight the importance of BD1 in transcriptional regulation.small molecule inhibitor | epigenetics | microarray | ApoA1
Concomitant inhibition of multiple cancer-driving kinases is an established strategy to improve the durability of clinical responses to targeted therapies. The difficulty of discovering kinase inhibitors with an appropriate multi-target profile has, however, necessitated the application of combination therapies, which can pose significant clinical development challenges. Epigenetic reader domains of the bromodomain family have recently emerged as novel targets for cancer therapy. Here we report that several clinical kinase inhibitors also inhibit bromodomains with therapeutically relevant potencies and are best classified as dual kinase/bromodomain inhibitors. Nanomolar activity on BRD4 by BI-2536 and TG-101348, clinical PLK1 and JAK2/FLT3 kinase inhibitors, respectively, is particularly noteworthy as these combinations of activities on independent oncogenic pathways exemplify a novel strategy for rational single agent polypharmacological targeting. Furthermore, structure-activity relationships and co-crystal structures identify design features that enable a general platform for the rational design of dual kinase/bromodomain inhibitors.
Small-molecule inhibitors that target
bromodomains outside
of the bromodomain and extra-terminal (BET) sub-family are lacking.
Here, we describe highly potent and selective ligands for the bromodomain
module of the human lysine acetyl transferase CBP/p300, developed
from a series of 5-isoxazolyl-benzimidazoles. Our starting
point was a fragment hit, which was optimized into a more potent and
selective lead using parallel synthesis employing Suzuki couplings,
benzimidazole-forming reactions, and reductive aminations.
The selectivity of the lead compound against other bromodomain
family members was investigated using a thermal stability assay, which
revealed some inhibition of the structurally related BET family members.
To address the BET selectivity issue, X-ray crystal structures of
the lead compound bound to the CREB binding protein (CBP) and the
first bromodomain of BRD4 (BRD4(1)) were used to guide the design
of more selective compounds. The crystal structures obtained revealed
two distinct binding modes. By varying the aryl substitution pattern
and developing conformationally constrained analogues, selectivity
for CBP over BRD4(1) was increased. The optimized compound is highly
potent (Kd = 21 nM) and selective, displaying
40-fold selectivity over BRD4(1). Cellular activity was demonstrated
using fluorescence recovery after photo-bleaching (FRAP) and a p53
reporter assay. The optimized compounds are cell-active and have nanomolar
affinity for CBP/p300; therefore, they should be useful in studies
investigating the biological roles of CBP and p300 and to validate
the CBP and p300 bromodomains as therapeutic targets.
The histone acetyltransferases CBP/p300 are involved in recurrent leukemia-associated chromosomal translocations and are key regulators of cell growth. Therefore, efforts to generate inhibitors of CBP/p300 are of clinical value. We developed a specific and potent acetyl-lysine competitive protein-protein interaction inhibitor, I-CBP112, that targets the CBP/p300 bromodomains. Exposure of human and mouse leukemic cell lines to I-CBP112 resulted in substantially impaired colony formation and induced cellular differentiation without significant cytotoxicity. I-CBP112 significantly reduced the leukemia-initiating potential of MLL-AF9 þ acute myeloid leukemia cells in a dose-dependent manner in vitro and in vivo. Interestingly, I-CBP112 increased the cytotoxic activity of BET bromodomain inhibitor JQ1 as well as doxorubicin. Collectively, we report the development and preclinical evaluation of a novel, potent inhibitor targeting CBP/p300 bromodomains that impairs aberrant self-renewal of leukemic cells. The synergistic effects of I-CBP112 and current standard therapy (doxorubicin) as well as emerging treatment strategies (BET inhibition) provide new opportunities for combinatorial treatment of leukemia and potentially other cancers. Cancer Res; 75(23); 5106-19. Ó2015 AACR.
The benzoxazinone and dihydroquinoxalinone fragments were employed as novel acetyl lysine mimics in the development of CREBBP bromodomain ligands. While the benzoxazinone series showed low affinity for the CREBBP bromodomain, expansion of the dihydroquinoxalinone series resulted in the first potent inhibitors of a bromodomain outside the BET family. Structural and computational studies reveal that an internal hydrogen bond stabilizes the protein-bound conformation of the dihydroquinoxalinone series. The side chain of this series binds in an induced-fit pocket forming a cation–π interaction with R1173 of CREBBP. The most potent compound inhibits binding of CREBBP to chromatin in U2OS cells.
The bromodomain protein module, which
binds to acetylated lysine,
is emerging as an important epigenetic therapeutic target. We report
the structure-guided optimization of 3,5-dimethylisoxazole derivatives
to develop potent inhibitors of the BET (bromodomain and extra terminal
domain) bromodomain family with good ligand efficiency. X-ray crystal
structures of the most potent compounds reveal key interactions required
for high affinity at BRD4(1). Cellular studies demonstrate that the
phenol and acetate derivatives of the lead compounds showed strong
antiproliferative effects on MV4;11 acute myeloid leukemia cells,
as shown for other BET bromodomain inhibitors and genetic BRD4 knockdown,
whereas the reported compounds showed no general cytotoxicity in other
cancer cell lines tested.
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