|
Join
over 200 of your colleagues and register today!
Stay on to attend Structure-Based
Design (June 6 - 8)
Tuesday, June 5
7:30 am Morning Coffee (Breakfast Workshop Sponsorship Available)
8:30 Chairperson’s Remarks

8:35 PI3K Inhibitors As Therapeutics For Inflammatory-Based
Diseases
John Doukas, Ph.D.,Senior Director, Pharmacology,TargeGen, Inc.
Genetic deletion studies have demonstrated the regulatory roles that phosphoinositide
3-kinases play in inflammatory reactions. Our efforts to develop PI3K inhibitors
will be described, and in particular our advancement into the clinic of an
isoform-specific PI3Kg/d inhibitor for the reduction of reperfusion injury in myocardial infarction.
9:05 The Anti-Inflammatory Protein Tristetraprolin is
Phosphorylated at Multiple Sites by Multiple Protein Kinases
Heping Cao, Ph.D., Research Biologist, Human Nutrition Research Center,
USDA/ARS
Transgenic mice without tristetraprolin (TTP) protein develop a profound inflammatory
syndrome with erosive arthritis, autoimmunity, and myeloid hyperplasia. TTP is
a hyperphosphorylated zinc finger protein that binds to AU-rich elements within certain
mRNAs such as tumor necrosis factor mRNA and causes destabilization of those mRNAs. We have identified multiple phosphorylation sites in human TTP by
site-directed mutagenesis and mass spectrometry. We have also determined that
TTP is phosphorylated in vivo and/or in vitro by a number of protein kinases including
p42 MAP kinase, p38 MAP kinase, JNK, GSK3, MK2, PKA, PKB, and PKC.

9:35 Exploring Chemical Space in Protein Kinase Inhibitor
Drug Discovery
Tomi Sawyer, Ph.D., Senior Director, Department of Chemical Sciences,
Pfizer Global R&D
Significant advances in protein kinase drug discovery have been made
over the last three decades. This presentation will highlight key
achievements as exemplified by pioneering work focused on a few protein
kinases relative to ATP-competitive and non-ATP-competitive inhibitors
(e.g., Src, Abl, and MEK). This illustrates the integration of structural
biology, drug design, chemistry, and signal transduction pathway biology
strategies to provide molecular tools and clinical candidates for a wide
range of diseases involving protein kinases.
10:05 Coffee Break, Exhibit and Poster Viewing
10:45 Privileged Structure Concept Applied to Protein
Kinases: From 1st Generation Inhibitors to Chemo- Kinomics
Gerhard Mueller, Ph.D., Vice President, Drug Discovery, GPC Biotech AG
Today’s target proteins of pharmaceutical relevance cluster into multi-member gene
families, thus offering medicinal chemistry a systematic approach to broadly exploit
once established agonist, antagonist, or inhibitor concepts. In this context, the family
of protein kinases emerged as one, if not the most prominent target class for modern
drug discovery and development, convincingly proven by the recently launched
kinase inhibitors. In this talk, a systematic medicinal chemistry concept, applied to
the gene family of protein kinases, is presented that takes advantage of densely
populated protein families, exhibiting family-wide molecular recognition characteristics.
The privileged structure concept attempts to encode those structural and functional
commonalities that are conserved throughout, e.g., the kinase family into small-molecule inhibitors that, upon further ornamentation, allow for generation of
highly active and selective compounds suitable for lead finding and optimization
campaigns. The structural commonalities that serve as negative imprint for the
design of tailor-made kinase-directed privileged structures will be discussed in detail,
highlighting the basic ground rules for a systematic chemo-kinomics approach.
11:15 Thienopyridine-Based Multitargeted Kinase Inhibitors
Arkadii Vaisburg, Ph.D., Director, Medicinal Chemistry, MethylGene, Inc.
We have identified a series of novel thienopyridine-based small molecule inhibitors with potent activity against the c-MET receptor and all three receptors of the VEGFR family. Molecules of these series also have significant activity against other therapeutically relevant kinases including Tie-2 and Ron.
Profiling of these chemical entities in whole cells demonstrates potent inhibition of HGF dependent c-MET phosphorylation, c-MET dependent phenotypes such as HGF-stimulated cell scattering and migration. Importantly, these molecules also significantly suppress the growth of tumor cells in which c-MET is constitutively active. Lead molecules demonstrate potent activity in numerous in vitro angiogenesis assays e.g., VEGF-stimulated VEGFR2/KDR autophosphorylation. They also possess broad spectrum anti-tumor activity when dosed orally once daily in several human tumor xenograft models with no associated body weight loss or marrow suppressive effects.
| PANEL DISCUSSION:
11:45 Intellectual Property Issue within Kinase Inhibitor
Crowded Chemical Space. Is there any Room for Newcomers?
Moderator: Arkadii Vaisburg, Ph.D., Director, Medicinal Chemistry,
MethylGene, Inc.
Panelists:
Tomi Sawyer, Ph.D., Senior Director, Department of Chemical Sciences,
Pfizer Global R&D
Gerhard Mueller, Ph.D., Vice President, Drug Discovery, GPC Biotech AG |
12:15 pm Lunch and Learn Luncheon
Microfluidic Kinase Assays for Screening, Profiling, and Mechanism of Action Studies
Seth Cohen, Ph.D., Director of Application Sciences, Caliper Life Sciences
Caliper Life Sciences has developed a kinase profiling kit-
ProfilerPro- consisting of 48 kinases and appropriate peptide
substrates, predispensed into 384 well plates using the Lab-on-a-Chip
microfluidic mobility shift format. The kit contains all materials
needed to profile, in-house, up to 12 compounds. Kinase inhibitor
profiles and the work flow for in-house profiling using the
ProfilerPro kits will be presented. The use of microfluidic technology
for follow-up and real-time kinetic studies of mechanism of action for
kinase inhibitors will also be described. |
Sponsored by

|
1:40 Chairperson’s Remarks

1:45 Strategies for Cost Effective Screening and Profiling
Ulf Boemer, Ph.D., Head, Technology Development & HTS Infrastructure,
Research Center Europe, AD/HTS, Schering AG
This presentation will address different strategies for biochemical and cell-based
screening for kinase inhibitors. It will show how assay development, primary screening
and profiling are harmonized throughout the drug discovery process at Schering
to optimally exploit the kinase target family in a cost-effective manner.
2:15 Functional Interrogation of the Kinome Using Nucleotide
Acyl Phosphates
Matthew Patricelli P., Director, Discovery Technology, ActivX Biosciences
The central role of protein kinases in signal transduction pathways has generated
intense interest in targeting these enzymes for a wide range of therapeutic indications.
Here we report a method for identifying and quantifying protein kinases in any
biological sample or tissue from any species. The procedure relies on acyl phosphate-
containing nucleotides, prepared from a biotin derivative and ATP or ADP. The
acyl phosphate probes react selectively and covalently at the ATP binding sites of at
least 75% of the known human protein kinases. Biotinylated peptide fragments from
labeled proteomes are captured, and then sequenced and identified using a massspectrometry
based analysis platform to determine the kinases present and their relative levels. Further, direct competition between the probes and inhibitors can be
measured to determine inhibitor potency and selectivity against native protein kinases,
as well as hundreds of other ATPases. The ability to broadly profile kinase activities
in native proteomes offers an exciting prospect for both target discovery and
inhibitor selectivity profiling.
|
|
2:45 Technology Highlights
Progress Towards a Generic Cellular S/T-kinase assay platform
Achim Brinker, Associate Director Lead Discovery, Genomics Institute of
Novartis
The HTRF KinEASE assay system is based on universal biotinylated substrates and specific monoclonal antibodies labeled with europium cryptate (EuK) for sensitive detection of the phosphor-peptides. HTRF KinEASE TK has been developed using a single substrate containing a unique tyrosine phosphorylation site recognized by a Eu(K) labeled anti phosphor-tyrosine antibody. This assay has already been validated on 59 tyrosine kinases, either cytosolic or receptor-like. |
Sponsored by

|
|
|
3:15 Refreshment Break, Exhibit and Poster Viewing
4:00 Genome-Wide Identification of Kinase Targets in Human
B Lymphocytes
Andrea Califano, Professor, C2B2, Columbia University
Transcriptional interactions in the cell are modulated by a variety of mechanisms that prevent
their representation as static interactions between a transcription factor and its targets.
These include, among others, transcription factor modification by phosphorylation
and acetylation, formation of active complexes with one or more transcriptional co-factors,
and protein specific degradation and stabilization processes. We introduce a method,
MINDY (Modulator Inference by Network Dynamics), for the genome-wide identification of
post-translational modulators of transcription factor activity. Inferred modulators, such as
an activating kinase, modify the ability of a TF to activate/repress its targets, thus providing
cellular context specificity. Extensive biochemical validation of the algorithm on the
MYC transcriptional program in human B cells show that the algorithm is extremely effective
in identifying bona fide modulators of the TF, including protein kinases, phosphatases,
acetyltransferases, and co-transcription factors. A full analysis of TF modulation by kinases
in human B cells provides a wide repertoire of potential new drug targets that specifically
up- or down-regulate a given transcriptional program.
4:30 Identification of Potent Kinase Inhibitors Against EGFR
and its Signaling Pathways Using A Label-Free Cell Based Assay
Josephine Atienza, Ph.D., Senior Scientist, Cell Biology and Assay Development, ACEA Biosciences, Inc.
We report the identification of potent small molecule inhibitors of EGFR using a
novel, quantitative, real-time, and label-free cellular assay. This cellular assay
allows for the identification of both competitive and allosteric type of EGFR inhibitors.
Using EGF-mediated changes in morphology as a read-out, a focused kinase library
of about 1254 compounds was initially screened. From this screen, a benzothiazole
based compound that inhibits EGFR kinase activity was identified. In addition, a
compound was also identified that inhibited EGF dependent activity but not EGFR
tyrosine kinase activity. The activities of these compounds on proliferation of a panel
of normal and cancer cell lines including EGFR and erbB2 overexpressing lines and
on different signaling pathways activated by EGFR were also examined. An additional
10,000 compounds of a focused kinase library was screened. The unbiased nature of this screen can lead to classes of compounds that have novel mechanism
of inhibition and utility against resistant forms of the kinase. Furthermore, the utility
of label-free cell-based assays as a screening tool will also be discussed.
| PANEL DISCUSSION:
5:00 New Kinase Target Identification and Validation
Moderator: Ulf Boemer, Ph.D., Head, Technology Development & HTS
Infrastructure, Research Center Europe, AD/HTS, Schering AG
Panelists:
John Doukas, Ph.D., Senior Director, Pharmacology,TargeGen, Inc.
Josephine Atienza, Ph.D., Senior Scientist, Cell Biology and Assay Development, ACEA Biosciences, Inc.
Matthew Patricelli, Director, Discovery Technology, ActivX Biosciences
Fraser Glickman, Ph.D., Project Team Head, Lead Discovery Center, Novartis Institiutes for BioMedical Research |
5:45 End of Day Two
|