Development of actionable targets of multi-kinase inhibitors (AToMI) screening platform to dissect kinase targets of staurosporines in glioblastoma cells
Taipale Mikko; Aittokallio Tero; Merisaari Joni; Yetukuri Laxman; Jumppanen Mikael; Von Schantz-Fant Carina; Ohlmeyer Michael; Wennerberg Krister; Westermarck Jukka; Kaur Amanpreet; Denisova Oxana V
Development of actionable targets of multi-kinase inhibitors (AToMI) screening platform to dissect kinase targets of staurosporines in glioblastoma cells
Taipale Mikko
Aittokallio Tero
Merisaari Joni
Yetukuri Laxman
Jumppanen Mikael
Von Schantz-Fant Carina
Ohlmeyer Michael
Wennerberg Krister
Westermarck Jukka
Kaur Amanpreet
Denisova Oxana V
NATURE PORTFOLIO
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on:
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2022102462968
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2022102462968
Tiivistelmä
Therapeutic resistance to kinase inhibitors constitutes a major unresolved clinical challenge in cancer and especially in glioblastoma. Multi-kinase inhibitors may be used for simultaneous targeting of multiple target kinases and thereby potentially overcome kinase inhibitor resistance. However, in most cases the identification of the target kinases mediating therapeutic effects of multi-kinase inhibitors has been challenging. To tackle this important problem, we developed an actionable targets of multi-kinase inhibitors (AToMI) strategy and used it for characterization of glioblastoma target kinases of staurosporine derivatives displaying synergy with protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) reactivation. AToMI consists of interchangeable modules combining drug-kinase interaction assay, siRNA high-throughput screening, bioinformatics analysis, and validation screening with more selective target kinase inhibitors. As a result, AToMI analysis revealed AKT and mitochondrial pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase PDK1 and PDK4 as kinase targets of staurosporine derivatives UCN-01, CEP-701, and K252a that synergized with PP2A activation across heterogeneous glioblastoma cells. Based on these proof-of-principle results, we propose that the application and further development of AToMI for clinically applicable multi-kinase inhibitors could provide significant benefits in overcoming the challenge of lack of knowledge of the target specificity of multi-kinase inhibitors.
Kokoelmat
- Rinnakkaistallenteet [19207]