Development of a Selective CDK7 Covalent Inhibitor Reveals Predominant Cell-Cycle Phenotype
- Authors
- Olson, Calla M.; Liang, Yanke; Leggett, Alan; Park, Woojun D.; Li, Lianbo; Mills, Caitlin E.; Elsarrag, Selma Z.; Ficarro, Scott B.; Zhang, Tinghu; Duester, Robert; Geyer, Matthias; Sim, Taebo; Marto, Jarrod A.; Sorger, Peter K.; Westover, Ken D.; Lin, Charles Y.; Kwiatkowski, Nicholas; Gray, Nathanael S.
- Issue Date
- 2019-06
- Publisher
- CELL PRESS
- Citation
- CELL CHEMICAL BIOLOGY, v.26, no.6, pp.792 - +
- Abstract
- Cyclin-dependent kinase 7 (CDK7) regulates both cell cycle and transcription, but its precise role remains elusive. We previously described THZ1, a CDK7 inhibitor, which dramatically inhibits superenhancer-associated gene expression. However, potent CDK12/13 off-target activity obscured CDK7s contribution to this phenotype. Here, we describe the discovery of a highly selective covalent CDK7 inhibitor. YKL-5-124 causes arrest at the G(1)/S transition and inhibition of E2F-driven gene expression; these effects are rescued by a CDK7 mutant unable to covalently engage YKL-5-124, demonstrating on-target specificity. Unlike THZ1, treatment with YKL-5-124 resulted in no change to RNA polymerase II C-terminal domain phosphorylation; however, inhibition could be reconstituted by combining YKL-5-124 and THZ531, a selective CDK12/13 inhibitor, revealing potential redundancies in CDK control of gene transcription. These findings highlight the importance of CDK7/12/13 polypharmacology for anti-cancer activity of THZ1 and posit that selective inhibition of CDK7 may be useful for treatment of cancers marked by E2F misregulation.
- Keywords
- RNA-POLYMERASE-II; TERMINAL DOMAIN; ACTIVATING KINASE; GENE-EXPRESSION; CANCER; PHOSPHORYLATION; PROGRESSION; CTD; IDENTIFICATION; ASSOCIATION; cancer; cell cycle; drug discovery; gene expression; small-molecule inhibitor; transcription
- ISSN
- 2451-9448
- URI
- https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/119905
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.chembiol.2019.02.012
- Appears in Collections:
- KIST Article > 2019
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