Confirming Target Engagement
for Reversible Inhibitors
in Vivo by Kinetically Tuned Activity-Based Probes
Posted on 2012-06-27 - 00:00
The development of small-molecule inhibitors for perturbing
enzyme
function requires assays to confirm that the inhibitors interact with
their enzymatic targets in vivo. Determining target engagement in
vivo can be particularly challenging for poorly characterized enzymes
that lack known biomarkers (e.g., endogenous substrates and products)
to report on their inhibition. Here, we describe a competitive activity-based
protein profiling (ABPP) method for measuring the binding of reversible
inhibitors to enzymes in animal models. Key to the success of this
approach is the use of activity-based probes that show tempered rates
of reactivity with enzymes, such that competition for target engagement
with reversible inhibitors can be measured in vivo. We apply the competitive
ABPP strategy to evaluate a newly described class of piperazine amide
reversible inhibitors for the serine hydrolases LYPLA1 and LYPLA2,
two enzymes for which selective, in vivo active inhibitors are lacking.
Competitive ABPP identified individual piperazine amides that selectively
inhibit LYPLA1 or LYPLA2 in mice. In summary, competitive ABPP adapted
to operate with moderately reactive probes can assess the target engagement
of reversible inhibitors in animal models to facilitate the discovery
of small-molecule probes for characterizing enzyme function in vivo.
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Adibekian, Alexander; Martin, Brent R.; Chang, Jae Won; Hsu, Ku-Lung; Tsuboi, Katsunori; Bachovchin, Daniel
A.; et al. (2016). Confirming Target Engagement
for Reversible Inhibitors
in Vivo by Kinetically Tuned Activity-Based Probes. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/ja303400uÂ