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Druggable exosites of the human kino-pocketome.


ABSTRACT: Small molecules binding at any of the multiple regulatory sites on the molecular surface of a protein kinase may stabilize or disrupt the corresponding interaction, leading to consequent modulation of the kinase cellular activity. As such, each of these sites represents a potential drug target. Even targeting sites outside the immediate ATP site, the so-called exosites, may cause desirable biological effects through an allosteric mechanism. Targeting exosites can alleviate adverse effects and toxicity that is common when ATP-site compounds bind promiscuously to many other types of kinases. In this study we have identified, catalogued, and annotated all potentially druggable exosites on the protein kinase domains within the existing structural human kinome. We then priority-ranked these exosites by those most amenable to drug design. In order to identify pockets that are either consistent across the kinome, or unique and specific to a particular structure, we have also implemented a normalized representation of all pockets, and displayed these graphically. Finally, we have built a database and designed a web-based interface for users interested in accessing the 3-dimensional representations of these pockets. We envision this information will assist drug discovery efforts searching for untargeted binding pockets in the human kinome.

SUBMITTER: Nicola G 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC7082431 | biostudies-literature | 2020 Mar

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Druggable exosites of the human kino-pocketome.

Nicola George G   Kufareva Irina I   Ilatovskiy Andrey V AV   Abagyan Ruben R  

Journal of computer-aided molecular design 20200110 3


Small molecules binding at any of the multiple regulatory sites on the molecular surface of a protein kinase may stabilize or disrupt the corresponding interaction, leading to consequent modulation of the kinase cellular activity. As such, each of these sites represents a potential drug target. Even targeting sites outside the immediate ATP site, the so-called exosites, may cause desirable biological effects through an allosteric mechanism. Targeting exosites can alleviate adverse effects and to  ...[more]

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