Issue 8, 2024

Affinity enhancement of polo-like kinase 1 polo box domain-binding ligands by a bivalent approach using a covalent kinase-binding component

Abstract

The polo-like kinase 1 (Plk1) is an important cell cycle regulator that is recognized as a target molecule for development of anti-cancer agents. Plk1 consists of a catalytic kinase domain (KD) and a polo-box domain (PBD), which engages in protein–protein interactions (PPIs) essential to proper Plk1 function. Recently, we developed extremely high-affinity PBD-binding inhibitors based on a bivalent approach using the Plk1 KD-binding inhibitor, BI2536, and a PBD-binding peptide. Certain of the resulting bivalent constructs exhibited more than 100-fold Plk1 affinity enhancement relative to the best monovalent PBD-binding ligands. Herein, we report an extensive investigation of bivalent ligands that utilize the non-selective kinase inhibitor Wortmannin as a Plk1 KD-binding component. We found that bivalent ligands incorporating Wortmannin demonstrated affinity enhancements that could be similar to what we had obtained with BI2536 and that they could tightly bind to the protein. This suggests that these tight binding ligands might be useful for structural analysis of full-length Plk1.

Graphical abstract: Affinity enhancement of polo-like kinase 1 polo box domain-binding ligands by a bivalent approach using a covalent kinase-binding component

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
01 Feb 2024
Accepted
21 May 2024
First published
04 Jun 2024
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

RSC Chem. Biol., 2024,5, 721-728

Affinity enhancement of polo-like kinase 1 polo box domain-binding ligands by a bivalent approach using a covalent kinase-binding component

K. Tsuji, H. Tamamura and T. R. Burke, RSC Chem. Biol., 2024, 5, 721 DOI: 10.1039/D4CB00031E

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