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Special Chemical Biology Seminar

Friday, February 23, 2024
12:00pm to 1:00pm
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Spalding Laboratory 106 (Hartley Memorial Seminar Room)
Borrowing Transcriptional Kinases to Activate Apoptosis
Dr. Roman Sarott, Postdoctoral Scholar, School of Medicine, Stanford University,
  • Internal Event

Protein kinases are disease drivers whose therapeutic targeting traditionally centers on inhibition of enzymatic activity. We leverage chemically induced proximity to convert kinase inhibitors into context-specific activators of therapeutic genes. Bivalent molecules that link ligands of the transcription factor BCL6 to ATP-competitive inhibitors of cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) re-localize CDKs to BCL6-bound loci on chromatin and direct phosphorylation of RNA Pol II. The resulting expression of pro-apoptotic BCL6-target genes translates into potent killing of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) cells and specific ablation of the BCL6-regulated germinal center response in mice. Genomic and proteomic evidence corroborates a gain-of-function mechanism where, instead of global enzyme inhibition or degradation, a small fraction of total kinase activity is borrowed and re-localized. Our findings suggest that the wide range of ATP-competitive inhibitors may be used to borrow, rather than inhibit, kinase activity for therapeutic purposes.

For more information, please contact Annette Luymes by phone at x6016 or by email at aluymes@caltech.edu.