4.7 Article

Light-Control over Casein Kinase 1δ Activity with Photopharmacology: A Clear Case for Arylazopyrazole-Based Inhibitors

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23105326

Keywords

photopharmacology; kinases; molecular photoswitches; arylazopyrazole photoswitches

Funding

  1. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO-CW) [723.014.001]
  2. Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences Science (KNAW)
  3. Ministry of Education, Culture and Science [024.001.035]
  4. European Research Council [227897]
  5. Ramalingaswami Re-entry Fellowship by Department of Biotechnology, Govt. of India
  6. IIT Gandhinagar

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Protein kinases play a crucial role in cellular processes and signaling pathways, and their dysfunction is associated with various diseases. Photopharmacology, as an unconventional approach, uses light-controlled bioactive molecules to selectively activate drugs for kinase inhibition. This study presents the discovery and optimization of a photoswitchable inhibitor targeting casein kinase 1 delta (CK1 delta), which is involved in important signaling processes such as cell differentiation, circadian rhythm, DNA repair, and apoptosis. The optimized photoswitchable inhibitor showed improved properties, including high photostationary state distributions and solubility, as well as a 10-fold difference in activity between irradiated and thermally adapted samples.
Protein kinases are responsible for healthy cellular processes and signalling pathways, and their dysfunction is the basis of many pathologies. There are numerous small molecule inhibitors of protein kinases that systemically regulate dysfunctional signalling processes. However, attaining selectivity in kinase inhibition within the complex human kinome is still a challenge that inspires unconventional approaches. One of those approaches is photopharmacology, which uses light-controlled bioactive molecules to selectively activate drugs only at the intended space and time, thereby avoiding side effects outside of the irradiated area. Still, in the context of kinase inhibition, photopharmacology has thus far been rather unsuccessful in providing light-controlled drugs. Here, we present the discovery and optimisation of a photoswitchable inhibitor of casein kinase 1 delta (CK1 delta), important for the control of cell differentiation, circadian rhythm, DNA repair, apoptosis, and numerous other signalling processes. Varying the position at which the light-responsive azobenzene moiety has been introduced into a known CK1 delta inhibitor, LH846, revealed the preferred regioisomer for efficient photo-modulation of inhibitory activity, but the photoswitchable inhibitor suffered from sub-optimal (photo)chemical properties. Replacement of the bis-phenyl azobenzene group with the arylazopyrazole moiety yielded a superior photoswitch with very high photostationary state distributions, increased solubility and a 10-fold difference in activity between irradiated and thermally adapted samples. The reasons behind those findings are explored with molecular docking and molecular dynamics simulations. Results described here show how the evaluation of privileged molecular architecture, followed by the optimisation of the photoswitchable unit, is a valuable strategy for the challenging design of the photoswitchable kinase inhibitors.

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