The ATP site of kinases displays remarkable conformational flexibility when accommodating chemically diverse small molecule inhibitors. The so-called activation segment, whose conformation controls catalytic activity and access to the substrate binding pocket, can undergo a large conformational change with the active state assuming a 'DFG-in' and an inactive state assuming a 'DFG-out' conformation. Compounds that preferentially bind to the DFG-out conformation are typically called 'type II' inhibitors in contrast to 'type I' inhibitors that bind to the DFG-in conformation. This review surveys the large number of type II inhibitors that have been developed and provides an analysis of their crystallographically determined binding modes. Using a small library of type II inhibitors, we demonstrate that more than 200 kinases can be targeted, suggesting that type II inhibitors may not be intrinsically more selective than type I inhibitors. © 2014 American Chemical Society.
CITATION STYLE
Zhao, Z., Wu, H., Wang, L., Liu, Y., Knapp, S., Liu, Q., & Gray, N. S. (2014, June 20). Exploration of type II binding mode: A privileged approach for kinase inhibitor focused drug discovery? ACS Chemical Biology. American Chemical Society. https://doi.org/10.1021/cb500129t
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