Journal
BIOCHEMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 420, Issue -, Pages 283-294Publisher
PORTLAND PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.1042/BJ20081899
Keywords
c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK); JNK-interacting protein (JIP); high-throughput Screening (HTS); polychloropyrimidines; protein-protein interaction; small-molecule inhibitors
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JNK I (c-Jun N-terminal kinase 1) plays a crucial role ill the regulation of obesity-induced insulin resistance and is implicated ill the pathology of Type 2 diabetes. Its partner, JIP1 (JNK-interacting protein I), serves a scaffolding function that facilitates JNK1 activation by MKK4 [MAPK (mitogen-activated protein kinase) kinase 4] and MKK7 (MAPK kinase 7). For example, reduced insulin resistance and JNK activation are observed in JIPI-deficient mice. On the basis of the ill vivo efficacy of a cell-permeable JIP peptide, the JIP-JNK interaction appears to be a potential target for JNK inhibition. The goal of the present study was to identify small-molecule inhibitors that disrupt the JIP-JNK interaction to provide an alternative approach for JNK inhibition to ATP-competitive inhibitors. High-throughput screening was performed by utilizing a fluorescence polarization assay that measured the binding of JNK1 to the JIP peptide. Multiple chemical series were identified, revealing two categories of JIP/JNK inhibitors: 'dual inhibitors' that are ATP competitive and probably inhibit JIP-JNK binding allosterically, and 'JIP-site binders' that block binding through interaction with the JIP site. A series of polychloropyrimidines from the second category was characterized by biochemical methods and explored through medicinal-chemistry efforts. As predicted, these inhibitors also inhibited full-length JIP-JNK binding and were selective against a panel of 34 representative kinases. including ones ill the MAPK family. Overall, this work demonstrates that small molecules can inhibit protein-protein interactions in vitro in the MAPK family effectively and provides strategies for similar approaches within other target families.
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