1. Academic Validation
  2. Relocalizing transcriptional kinases to activate apoptosis

Relocalizing transcriptional kinases to activate apoptosis

  • Science. 2024 Oct 4;386(6717):eadl5361. doi: 10.1126/science.adl5361.
Roman C Sarott # 1 Sai Gourisankar # 1 Basel Karim # 2 Sabin Nettles 3 Haopeng Yang 4 Brendan G Dwyer 1 Juste M Simanauskaite 3 Jason Tse 1 Hind Abuzaid 3 Andrey Krokhotin 3 Tinghu Zhang 1 Stephen M Hinshaw 1 Michael R Green 4 Gerald R Crabtree 3 5 Nathanael S Gray 1
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Department of Chemical and Systems Biology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.
  • 2 Department of Chemistry, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.
  • 3 Department of Pathology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.
  • 4 Department of Lymphoma & Myeloma, MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX 77030, USA.
  • 5 Department of Developmental Biology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.
  • # Contributed equally.
Abstract

Kinases are critical regulators of cellular function that are commonly implicated in the mechanisms underlying disease. Most drugs that target kinases are molecules that inhibit their catalytic activity, but here we used chemically induced proximity to convert kinase inhibitors into activators of therapeutic genes. We synthesized bivalent molecules that link ligands of the transcription factor B cell lymphoma 6 (BCL6) to inhibitors of cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs). These molecules relocalized CDK9 to BCL6-bound DNA and directed phosphorylation of RNA polymerase II. The resulting expression of pro-apoptotic, BCL6-target genes caused killing of diffuse large B cell lymphoma cells and specific ablation of the BCL6-regulated germinal center response. Genomics and proteomics corroborated a gain-of-function mechanism in which global kinase activity was not inhibited but rather redirected. Thus, kinase inhibitors can be used to context-specifically activate transcription.

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