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Day 2 Oral Communications II
Chair: Prof. Jari Yli-Kauhaluoma, University of
Helsinki |
Lectures and Oral Communications in
Red are from members of our Consortium.
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Automated LC/MS-coupled protein kinase C assay for
discovering active compounds from natural sources
Dr. Jouni Jokela, University of Helsinki, Finland
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New PKC translocation
inhibitors
M. Sc. Virpi Talman, University of Helsinki, Finland
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Effective bisubstrate analogue-type
inhibitors of protein kinases for biological applications
Dr. Asko Uri, University of Tartu, Estonia
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Automated LC/MS-coupled protein kinase C assay for discovering active
compounds from natural sources
Dr. Jouni Jokela, University of Helsinki, Finland
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Jouni Jokela1, Andres Perez1, Anna Galkin2,
Matti Wahlsten1, Päivi Tammela2,
Pia Vuorela2,3, Annele Hatakka1 and Kaarina Sivonen1
1University of Helsinki, Department of Applied Chemistry and Microbiology,
Division of Microbiology,
2Drug Discovery and Development Technology Center and Division of
Pharmaceutical Biology, Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Helsinki
3Department of Biochemistry and Pharmacy, Åbo Akademi University, FIN-20520
Turku, Finland
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The aim of this study was to develop a
non-radioactive HTS-method capable of detecting protein kinase active
compounds from nature, especially from microbial sources. The effect of
cyanobacterial, fungal or other natural product extracts on protein kinase C
activity was studied on 96/384 well plates using a liquid handling
workstation Biomek® FX. After enzymatic reaction well plates were
transferred to LCMS and partially LC-separated phosphopeptide was
quantififed with MS using 13C-15N-labeled phosphopeptide as internal
standard.
Four hundred samples (one 384 well plate + controls) could be analyzed
~overnight (20 h). Quality parameters signal-tobaseline (S/B) ratio from 29
to 32, signal-to-noise (S/N) ratio from 10 to 38 and Z' value from 0.7 to
0.9 showed that the method works reliably. The IC50 values of the PKC
inhibitors tested were in good accordance with values from the literature.
The method was able to sensitively detect added staurosporin (PKC inhibitor)
from LC-fractionated cyanobacterial extracts.
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New PKC translocation
inhibitors
M. Sc. Virpi Talman, University of Helsinki, Finland
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Virpi Talman, Olli Aitio, Elina Ekokoski,
Gustav Boije af Gennäs, Jari Yli-Kauhaluoma, Moshe Finel & Raimo K. Tuominen
– University of Helsinki, Finland |
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Protein kinase C (PKC) is a family of serine/threonine kinases that regulate
various cellular processes including cell proliferation and malignant
transformation. We have used the X-ray structure of PKC- delta C1b domain
with bound phorbol ester as a template for molecular modelling to design
ligands which compete with phorbol esters for binding and thus modulate PKC
activity. The effect of the most promising ligands on PKC translocation was
tested in living cells. HeLa cells transfected with PKC—green fluorescent
protein (GFP) constructs were pretreated with the ligands and stimulated
with phorbol ester. The translocation of PKC-GFP constructs was visualized
with confocal microscopy and quantified from confocal microscopic images
captured during the experiments. Three out of eight hydrophobic compounds
tested inhibited phorbol ester induced PKC translocation in micromolar
concentrations. These novel PKC translocation inhibitors could be used as
lead molecules in drug development.
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Effective bisubstrate
analogue-type inhibitors of protein kinases for biological applications
Dr. Asko Uri, University of Tartu, Estonia
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Asko Uri, Erki Enkvist & Kaido Viht
University of Tartu, Institute of Organic and Bioorganic Chemistry, Tartu,
Estonia
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Despite serious selectivity problems (all 500
protein kinases and more than 1500 other proteins are able to bind purine
nucleotides) the main efforts of drug companies have been concentrated on
the development of ATP competitive inhibitors. Development of bisubstrate
analogue (biligand) inhibitors that simultaneously bind toATP and protein
binding sites could logically give more selective and potent inhibitors of
kinases. Bifunctional inhibitors of basophilic PK designed by us comprise
moieties targeted at the ATP binding site, adenosine-5?-carboxylic acid, and
the protein/peptide substrate binding site-directed arginine-rich peptides.
The optimization of the structures of these motifs and the linker has lead
to inhibitors with Ki in low nanomolar range. These inhibitors were used as
affinity adsorbents with tailored efficacy for chromatography and pull-down
assays of kinases. Fluorescently labeled biligand inhibitors were applied
for the determination of kinase binding characteristics of nanomolar and
micromolar inhibitors with confocal single-molecule and classical optical
methods. |
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