Publications
2019
CDK12 controls G1/S progression by regulating RNAPII processivity of core DNA replication genes. Chirackal Manavalan, A. P.; Pilarová, K.; Kluge, M.; Bartholomeeusen, K.; Oppelt, J.; Khirsariya, P.; Paruch, K.; Krejčí, L.; Friedel, C. C.; Blažek, D.*
EMBO Rep. 2019, 20: e47592.
CDK12 is a kinase associated with elongating RNA polymerase II (RNAPII) and is frequently mutated in cancer. CDK12 depletion reduces the expression of homologous recombination (HR) DNA repair genes, but comprehensive insight into its target genes and cellular processes is lacking. We use a chemical genetic approach to inhibit analog-sensitive CDK12, and find that CDK12 kinase activity is required for transcription of core DNA replication genes and thus for G1/S progression. RNA-seq and ChIP-seq reveal that CDK12 inhibition triggers an RNAPII processivity defect characterized by a loss of mapped reads from 3′ends of predominantly long, poly(A)-signal-rich genes. CDK12 inhibition does not globally reduce levels of RNAPII-Ser2 phosphorylation. However, individual CDK12-dependent genes show a shift of P-Ser2 peaks into the gene body approximately to the positions where RNAPII occupancy and transcription were lost. Thus, CDK12 catalytic activity represents a novel link between regulation of transcription and cell cycle progression. We propose that DNA replication and HR DNA repair defects as a consequence of CDK12 inactivation underlie the genome instability phenotype observed in many cancers.
Novel Chk1 inhibitor MU380 exhibits significant single-agent activity in TP53-mutated chronic lymphocytic leukemia cells. Boudný, M.; Zemanová, J.; Khirsariya, P.; Borský, M.; Verner, J.; Černá, J.; Oltová, A.; Šeda, V.; Mráz, M.; Jaroš, J.; Kašparková, M.; Jašková, Z.; Spunarová, M.; Brychtová, Y.; Souček, K.; Drápela, S.; Mayer, J.; Paruch, K.*; Trbušek, M.*
Haematologica 2019, 104, 2443.
Introduction of small-molecule inhibitors of B-cell receptor signaling and BCL2 protein significantly improves therapeutic options in chronic lymphocytic leukemia. However, some patients suffer from adverse effects mandating treatment discontinuation, and cases with TP53 defects more frequently experience early progression of the disease. Development of alternative therapeutic approaches is, therefore, of critical importance. Here we report details of the anti-chronic lymphocytic leukemia single-agent activity of MU380, our recently identified potent, selective, and metabolically robust inhibitor of checkpoint kinase 1. We also describe a newly developed enantioselective synthesis of MU380, which allows preparation of gram quantities of the substance. Checkpoint kinase 1 is a master regulator of replication operating primarily in intra-S and G2/M cell cycle checkpoints. Initially tested in leukemia and lymphoma cell lines, MU380 significantly potentiated efficacy of gemcitabine, a clinically used inducer of replication stress. Moreover, MU380 manifested substantial single-agent activity in both TP53-wild type and TP53-mutated leukemia and lymphoma cell lines. In chronic lymphocytic leukemia-derived cell lines MEC-1, MEC-2 (both TP53-mut), and OSU-CLL (TP53-wt) the inhibitor impaired cell cycle progression and induced apoptosis. In primary clinical samples, MU380 used as a single-agent noticeably reduced the viability of unstimulated chronic lymphocytic leukemia cells as well as those induced to proliferate by anti-CD40/IL-4 stimuli. In both cases, effects were comparable in samples harboring p53 pathway dysfunction (TP53 mutations or ATM mutations) and TP53-wt/ATM-wt cells. Lastly, MU380 also exhibited significant in vivo activity in a xenotransplant mouse model (immunodeficient strain NOD-scid IL2Rγnull) where it efficiently suppressed growth of subcutaneous tumors generated from MEC-1 cells.
EU-OPENSCREEN: A novel collaborative approach to facilitate chemical biology. Brennecke, P.; Rasina, D.; Aubi, O.; Herzog, K.; Landskron, J.; Cautain, B.; Vicente, F.; Quintana, J.; Mestres, J.; Stechmann, B.; Ellinger, B.; Brea, J. M.; Kolanowski, J. L.; Pilarski, R.; Orzaez, M.; Pineda-Lucena, A.; Laraia, L.; Nami, F.; Zielenkiewicz, P.; Paruch, K.; Hansen, E.; von Kries, J. P.; Neuenschwander, M.; Specker, E.; Bartunek, P.; Simova, S.; Lesnikowski, Z.; Krauss, S.; Lehtio, L.; Bilitewski, U.; Bronstrup, M.; Tasken, K.; Jirgensons, A.; Lickert, H.; Clausen, M. H.; Andersen, J. H.; Vicent, M. J.; Genilloud, O.; Martinez, A.; Nazare, M.; Fecke, W.*; Gribbon, P.*
SLAS Discovery 2019, 24, 398.
Compound screening in biological assays and subsequent optimization of hits is indispensable for the development of new molecular research tools and drug candidates. To facilitate such discoveries, the European Research Infrastructure EU-OPENSCREEN was founded recently with the support of its member countries and the European Commission. Its distributed character harnesses complementary knowledge, expertise, and instrumentation in the discipline of chemical biology from 20 European partners, and its open working model ensures that academia and industry can readily access EU-OPENSCREEN’s compound collection, equipment, and generated data. To demonstrate the power of this collaborative approach, this perspective article highlights recent projects from EU-OPENSCREEN partner institutions. These studies yielded (1) 2-aminoquinazolin-4(3H)-ones as potential lead structures for new antimalarial drugs, (2) a novel lipodepsipeptide specifically inducing apoptosis in cells deficient for the pVHL tumor suppressor, (3) small-molecule-based ROCK inhibitors that induce definitive endoderm formation and can potentially be used for regenerative medicine, (4) potential pharmacological chaperones for inborn errors of metabolism and a familiar form of acute myeloid leukemia (AML), and (5) novel tankyrase inhibitors that entered a lead-to-candidate program. Collectively, these findings highlight the benefits of small-molecule screening, the plethora of assay designs, and the close connection between screening and medicinal chemistry within EU-OPENSCREEN.
Furo[3,2-b]pyridine: A novel privileged scaffold for highly selective kinase inhibitors and effective modulators of the Hedgehog pathway. Němec, V.; Hylsová, M.; Maier, L.; Flegel, J.; Sievers, S.; Ziegler, S.; Schröder, M. Berger, B.-T.; Chaikuad, A.; Valčíková, B.; Uldrijan, S.; Drápela, S.; Souček, K.; Waldmann, H.; Knapp, S.; Paruch, K.*
Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2019, 58, 1062.
The furo[3,2-b]pyridine core has been identified as a novel scaffold for potent and highly selective inhibitors. A diverse target compound set was prepared by synthetic sequences based on chemoselective metal-mediated couplings. The 3,5-disubstituted furo[3,2-b]pyridine sub-series afforded potent, cell-active, and highly selective inhibitors of cdc-like kinases (CLKs). And the kinase-inactive subset of 3,5,7-trisubstituted furo[3,2-b]pyridines afforded sub-micromolar modulators of the Hedgehog pathway.