Selective Inhibition of Mutant Isocitrate Dehydrogenase 1 (IDH1) via Disruption of a Metal Binding Network by an Allosteric Small Molecule

Gejing Deng(AVEO Oncology (United States)), Junqing Shen(AVEO Oncology (United States)), Ming Yin(AVEO Oncology (United States)), Jessica McManus(AVEO Oncology (United States)), Magali Mathieu(Sanofi (France)), Patricia Gee(AVEO Oncology (United States)), Timothy He(AVEO Oncology (United States)), Chaomei Shi(AVEO Oncology (United States)), Olivier Bedel(AVEO Oncology (United States)), Larry R. McLean(Sanofi (France)), Frank Le-Strat(Sanofi (France)), Ying Zhang(Sanofi (France)), J.-P. Marquette(Sanofi (France)), Qiang Gao(AVEO Oncology (United States)), Bailin Zhang(AVEO Oncology (United States)), Alexey Rak(Sanofi (France)), Dietmar Hoffmann(AVEO Oncology (United States)), E.K. Rooney(Sanofi (France)), Aurélie Vassort(Sanofi (France)), Walter Englaro(Sanofi (France)), Yi Li(Sanofi (France)), Vinod F. Patel(Sanofi (France)), Francisco Adrián(AVEO Oncology (United States)), Stefan Größ(AVEO Oncology (United States)), Dmitri Wiederschain(AVEO Oncology (United States)), Hong Cheng(AVEO Oncology (United States)), Stuart Licht(AVEO Oncology (United States))
Journal of Biological Chemistry
November 13, 2014
Cited by 137Open Access
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Abstract

Cancer-associated point mutations in isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 and 2 (IDH1 and IDH2) confer a neomorphic enzymatic activity: the reduction of α-ketoglutarate to d-2-hydroxyglutaric acid, which is proposed to act as an oncogenic metabolite by inducing hypermethylation of histones and DNA. Although selective inhibitors of mutant IDH1 and IDH2 have been identified and are currently under investigation as potential cancer therapeutics, the mechanistic basis for their selectivity is not yet well understood. A high throughput screen for selective inhibitors of IDH1 bearing the oncogenic mutation R132H identified compound 1, a bis-imidazole phenol that inhibits d-2-hydroxyglutaric acid production in cells. We investigated the mode of inhibition of compound 1 and a previously published IDH1 mutant inhibitor with a different chemical scaffold. Steady-state kinetics and biophysical studies show that both of these compounds selectively inhibit mutant IDH1 by binding to an allosteric site and that inhibition is competitive with respect to Mg(2+). A crystal structure of compound 1 complexed with R132H IDH1 indicates that the inhibitor binds at the dimer interface and makes direct contact with a residue involved in binding of the catalytically essential divalent cation. These results show that targeting a divalent cation binding residue can enable selective inhibition of mutant IDH1 and suggest that differences in magnesium binding between wild-type and mutant enzymes may contribute to the inhibitors' selectivity for the mutant enzyme.


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