Abl Tyrosine Kinase

What's
interesting about c-Abl is that the tyrosine residue (Tyr 527) that is crucial
for the regulation of the Src kinases is missing in c-Abl, and yet the SH2
and SH3 domains are somehow involved in keeping the activity of the tyrosine
kinase under control.
We
are also using a combination of techniques to understand how a drug known
as Gleevec (Imitanib, STI-571, Novartis) achieves specificity for its target.
Gleevec is used to treat chronic myelogeneous leukemia (CML), a deadly
disease if untreated, and it acts by blocking the kinase activity of a protein
known as BCR-Abl, which is improperly activated in the disease. BCR-Abl is
a fusion between the BCR protein and the Abl tyrosine kinase, which results
in the improper activation of the catalytic activity of Abl.
We have determined the crystal structure of the kinase domain of Abl in complex with Gleevec and have shown that the inhibitor recognizes an inactive conformation of Abl.
The
fact that Gleevec recognizes a distorted conformation of the Abl kinase domain
provides clues as to why Gleevec inhibits Abl (and BCR-Abl), but not Src.
At first glance this is quite puzzling, since essentially every residue that
touches the drug in our crystal structure of Abl is conserved in the Src kinases. It turns out that the inactive conformation
of Abl recognized by Gleevec is quite distinct structurally from the inactive
conformations seen previously for the Src kinases, and indeed Gleevec cannot
fit into the inactive Src and Hck structures.
Upon further consideration things do not remain so simple. The kinase domains of Src and Abl are so closely
related in sequence that it is not obvious why the Src kinases cannot distort
into a conformation that could accommodate Geevec.
We are investigating these questions, as well as the role of the regulatory
domains of Abl in controlling the activity of the kinase.
This
analysis of the Abl-Gleevec structure highlights the important role that the
conformational plasticity of protein kinases can play in providing routes
for the development of specific small molecule inhibitors of kinases. Although
the hundreds of proteins kinases encoded by the human genome are structurally
very similar, their conformational dynamics differ.
Understanding these dynamics is an important continuing part of our
research.