Scientific Reports 5

Anchor-based classification and type-C inhibitors for tyrosine kinases

Kai-Cheng Hsu, Tzu-Ying Sung, Chih-Ta Lin, Yi-Yuan Chiu, John T.-A. Hsu, Hui-Chen Hung, Chung-Ming Sun, Indrajeet Barve, Wen-Liang Chen, Wen-Chien Huang, Chin-Ting Huang, Chun-Hwa Chen, Jinn-Moon Yang.
Tyrosine kinases regulate various biological processes and are drug targets for cancers. At present, the design of selective and anti-resistant inhibitors of kinases is an emergent task. Here, we inferred specific site-moiety maps containing two specific anchors to uncover a new binding pocket in the C-terminal hinge region by docking 4,680 kinase inhibitors into 51 protein kinases, and this finding provides an opportunity for the development of kinase inhibitors with high selectivity and anti-drug resistance. We present an anchor-based classification for tyrosine kinases and discover two type-C inhibitors, namely rosmarinic acid (RA) and EGCG, which occupy two and one specific anchors, respectively, by screening 118,759 natural compounds. Our profiling reveals that RA and EGCG selectively inhibit 3% (EGFR and SYK) and 14% of 64 kinases, respectively. According to the guide of our anchor model, we synthesized three RA derivatives with better potency. These type-C inhibitors are able to maintain activities for drug-resistant EGFR and decrease the invasion ability of breast cancer cells. Our results show that the type-C inhibitors occupying a new pocket are promising for cancer treatments due to their kinase selectivity and anti-drug resistance.