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Second year of the project
Several hundred natural extracts have been prepared from cyanobacterial and
fungal strains and also from plants, pure compounds isolated and preliminary
activity screening has been done. In addition several hundred synthetic
compounds targeted to various protein kinases have been synthesised.
Groups oriented to synthetic organic chemistry (WP3) use the modern methods of
organic synthesis to prepare compounds that are based on natural product
screening (WP1) or virtual screening of known chemicals (WP2). These synthesis
products can be tested in various protein kinase binding and activity assays to
find the hit molecules. This provides essential feed-back information for the
molecular modellers and synthetic chemists to refine the chemical structure of
the found hits within the iterative process of drug discovery and development.
Protein Kinase Research Consortium (PKRC) chemical library and databases of
synthesised and extracted compounds have been uploaded and updated to the
intranet. Computational tools for generation of 3D models of protein kinases and
for virtual screening of protein kinase-targeted compounds have been developed
within Consortium. Tens of thousands of compounds have been screened virtually
and the promising hits have been submitted for experimental validation to
further testing within Consortium.
A number of the novel compounds show biological activity in various assay
systems utilising purified kinase enzyme preparations. Several recombinant
protein kinase domains have been expressed and used in the screening for ligand
binding. Indeed, there are more than 150 different kinase activity assays
available within the Consortium, thus the binding affinity and biological
activity of potential protein kinase inhibitors/activators can be screened with
the help of extensive collaboration.
Rational drug design relies on three dimensional models of proteins and more
specifically of the active site – the ligand binding site. In order to determine
the crystal structure of the critical binding sites of different kinases, large
quantities of various protein kinases have been produced in cell cultures.
Structures of different kinase/inhibitor complexes and a novel protein kinase
have been solved. (WP4)
Protein kinases represent a significant therapeutic target in many pathologies
as they represent the effectors of cell signaling pathways that control a
variety of cell functions including cell proliferation, differentiation and cell
death. In WP5 various model systems for a range of diseases have been utilised
to test therapeutic potential of novel compounds of both natural and synthetic
origin. The diseases include cancer (with leukaemia as a specific disease
targeted as well as breast, glia and gastric tumours), epilepsy, heart disease
and post-stroke neurodegeneration, leishmaniasis and inflammatory disease. The
protein kinases that have been the focus of the project include tyrosine kinases
(receptor and cytoplasmic), Protein kinase C, MAP kinases and Cyclin Dependent
Kinases. In the second year of the project most partners in WP5 have progressed
to second generation screening of agents identified as of interest in year 1,
while other have carried out further investigations of compounds that were
already identified in year 1 as potential lead compounds.
Several protein kinase inhibitors showed inhibitory activity in vascular smooth
muscle proliferation assay and therefore it is possible that in the future
protein kinase inhibitors may be used in the treatment of re-stenosis after
balloon surgery (angioplasty) of coronary arteries. More than 100 compounds
originating from consortium laboratories have been tested in anti-parasite
assays against Leishmania species. Some compounds show promising activity and
this observation can open new avenues in the treatment strategies of parasite
diseases in the future. Leishmanial protein kinases have also been cloned and
expressed.
Natural and synthetic compounds have been tested in models of leukaemia and
already 3 plant and 3 synthetic PKC-modulating compounds show high potency
against leukaemic cells. The effects of selected inhibitors on neuronal
excitotoxicity (models of neuronal death identified during stroke) were tested
and identified as neuroprotective agents. One protein kinase inhibitor was shown
to display neuroprotective effect in an animal model of stroke. The lead
compound and its potential successors will be further studied for a possible
novel stroke therapy. Some of these inhibitors may also modulate neuronal
excitability and may represent a new approach for epileptic treatment.
See also our
scientific publications.
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