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      PFI-1, a highly selective protein interaction inhibitor, targeting BET Bromodomains.

      Cancer research
      Animals, Apoptosis, physiology, Cell Growth Processes, Child, Down-Regulation, Humans, Mice, Mice, Inbred NOD, Models, Molecular, Molecular Targeted Therapy, Nuclear Proteins, antagonists & inhibitors, chemistry, metabolism, Phosphorylation, Precursor B-Cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia-Lymphoma, drug therapy, Protein Interaction Mapping, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Quinazolines, pharmacology, Structure-Activity Relationship, Transcription Factors, Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays

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          Abstract

          Bromo and extra terminal (BET) proteins (BRD2, BRD3, BRD4, and BRDT) are transcriptional regulators required for efficient expression of several growth promoting and antiapoptotic genes as well as for cell-cycle progression. BET proteins are recruited on transcriptionally active chromatin via their two N-terminal bromodomains (BRD), a protein interaction module that specifically recognizes acetylated lysine residues in histones H3 and H4. Inhibition of the BET-histone interaction results in transcriptional downregulation of a number of oncogenes, providing a novel pharmacologic strategy for the treatment of cancer. Here, we present a potent and highly selective dihydroquinazoline-2-one inhibitor, PFI-1, which efficiently blocks the interaction of BET BRDs with acetylated histone tails. Cocrystal structures showed that PFI-1 acts as an acetyl-lysine (Kac) mimetic inhibitor efficiently occupying the Kac binding site in BRD4 and BRD2. PFI-1 has antiproliferative effects on leukemic cell lines and efficiently abrogates their clonogenic growth. Exposure of sensitive cell lines with PFI-1 results in G1 cell-cycle arrest, downregulation of MYC expression, as well as induction of apoptosis and induces differentiation of primary leukemic blasts. Intriguingly, cells exposed to PFI-1 showed significant downregulation of Aurora B kinase, thus attenuating phosphorylation of the Aurora substrate H3S10, providing an alternative strategy for the specific inhibition of this well-established oncology target. ©2013 AACR.

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