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Dive into the research topics where Matthäus Getlik is active.

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Featured researches published by Matthäus Getlik.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Identifying genotype-dependent efficacy of single and combined PI3K- and MAPK-pathway inhibition in cancer

Martin L. Sos; Stefanie Fischer; Roland T. Ullrich; Martin Peifer; Johannes M. Heuckmann; Mirjam Koker; Stefanie Heynck; Isabel Stückrath; Jonathan M. Weiss; Florian Fischer; Kathrin Michel; Aviva Goel; Lucia Regales; Katerina Politi; Samanthi A. Perera; Matthäus Getlik; Lukas C. Heukamp; Sascha Ansén; Thomas Zander; Rameen Beroukhim; Hamid Kashkar; Kevan M. Shokat; William R. Sellers; Daniel Rauh; Christine Orr; Klaus P. Hoeflich; Lori S. Friedman; Kwok-Kin Wong; William Pao; Roman K. Thomas

In cancer, genetically activated proto-oncogenes often induce “upstream” dependency on the activity of the mutant oncoprotein. Therapeutic inhibition of these activated oncoproteins can induce massive apoptosis of tumor cells, leading to sometimes dramatic tumor regressions in patients. The PI3K and MAPK signaling pathways are central regulators of oncogenic transformation and tumor maintenance. We hypothesized that upstream dependency engages either one of these pathways preferentially to induce “downstream” dependency. Therefore, we analyzed whether downstream pathway dependency segregates by genetic aberrations upstream in lung cancer cell lines. Here, we show by systematically linking drug response to genomic aberrations in non-small-cell lung cancer, as well as in cell lines of other tumor types and in a series of in vivo cancer models, that tumors with genetically activated receptor tyrosine kinases depend on PI3K signaling, whereas tumors with mutations in the RAS/RAF axis depend on MAPK signaling. However, efficacy of downstream pathway inhibition was limited by release of negative feedback loops on the reciprocal pathway. By contrast, combined blockade of both pathways was able to overcome the reciprocal pathway activation induced by inhibitor-mediated release of negative feedback loops and resulted in a significant increase in apoptosis and tumor shrinkage. Thus, by using a systematic chemo-genomics approach, we identify genetic lesions connected to PI3K and MAPK pathway activation and provide a rationale for combined inhibition of both pathways. Our findings may have implications for patient stratification in clinical trials.


Cancer Research | 2010

Chemogenomic profiling provides insights into the limited activity of irreversible EGFR Inhibitors in tumor cells expressing the T790M EGFR resistance mutation.

Martin L. Sos; Haridas B. Rode; Stefanie Heynck; Martin Peifer; Florian Fischer; Sabine Klüter; Vijaykumar Pawar; Cecile Reuter; Johannes M. Heuckmann; Jonathan M. Weiss; Lars Ruddigkeit; Matthias Rabiller; Mirjam Koker; Jeffrey R. Simard; Matthäus Getlik; Yuki Yuza; Tzu-Hsiu Chen; Heidi Greulich; Roman K. Thomas; Daniel Rauh

Reversible epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) inhibitors are the first class of small molecules to improve progression-free survival of patients with EGFR-mutated lung cancers. Second-generation EGFR inhibitors introduced to overcome acquired resistance by the T790M resistance mutation of EGFR have thus far shown limited clinical activity in patients with T790M-mutant tumors. In this study, we systematically analyzed the determinants of the activity and selectivity of the second-generation EGFR inhibitors. A focused library of irreversible as well as structurally corresponding reversible EGFR-inhibitors was synthesized for chemogenomic profiling involving over 79 genetically defined NSCLC and 19 EGFR-dependent cell lines. Overall, our results show that the growth-inhibitory potency of all irreversible inhibitors against the EGFR(T790M) resistance mutation was limited by reduced target inhibition, linked to decreased binding velocity to the mutant kinase. Combined treatment of T790M-mutant tumor cells with BIBW-2992 and the phosphoinositide-3-kinase/mammalian target of rapamycin inhibitor PI-103 led to synergistic induction of apoptosis. Our findings offer a mechanistic explanation for the limited efficacy of irreversible EGFR inhibitors in EGFR(T790M) gatekeeper-mutant tumors, and they prompt combination treatment strategies involving inhibitors that target signaling downstream of the EGFR.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2009

A new screening assay for allosteric inhibitors of cSrc

Jeffrey R. Simard; Sabine Klüter; Christian Grütter; Matthäus Getlik; Matthias Rabiller; Haridas B. Rode; Daniel Rauh

Targeting kinases outside the highly conserved ATP pocket is thought to be a promising strategy for overcoming bottlenecks in kinase inhibitor research, such as limited selectivity and drug resistance. Here we report the development and application of a direct binding assay to detect small molecules that stabilize the inactive conformation of the tyrosine kinase cSrc. Protein X-ray crystallography validated the assay results and confirmed an exclusively allosteric binding mode.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Development of a Fluorescent-Tagged Kinase Assay System for the Detection and Characterization of Allosteric Kinase Inhibitors

Jeffrey R. Simard; Matthäus Getlik; Christian Grütter; Vijaykumar Pawar; Sabine Wulfert; Matthias Rabiller; Daniel Rauh

Kinase disregulation disrupts the intricate network of intracellular signaling pathways and contributes to the onset of diseases such as cancer. Although several kinase inhibitors are on the market, inhibitor selectivity and drug resistance mutations persist as fundamental challenges in the development of effective long-term treatments. Chemical entities binding to less conserved allosteric sites would be expected to offer new opportunities for scaffold development. Because no high-throughput method was previously available, we developed a fluorescence-based kinase binding assay for identifying and characterizing ligands which stabilize the inactive kinase conformation. Here, we present a description of the development and validation of this assay using the serine/threonine kinase p38alpha. By covalently attaching fluorophores to the activation loop of the kinase, we were able to detect conformational changes and measure the K(d), k(on), and k(off) associated with the binding and dissociation of ligands to the allosteric pocket. We report the SAR of a synthesized focused library of pyrazolourea derivatives, a scaffold known to bind with high affinity to the allosteric pocket of p38alpha. Additionally, we used protein X-ray crystallography together with our assay to examine the binding and dissociation kinetics to characterize potent quinazoline- and quinoline-based type II inhibitors, which also utilize this binding pocket in p38alpha. Last, we identified the b-Raf inhibitor sorafenib as a potent low nanomolar inhibitor of p38alpha and used protein X-ray crystallography to confirm a unique binding mode to the inactive kinase conformation.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009

Hybrid compound design to overcome the gatekeeper T338M mutation in cSrc

Matthäus Getlik; Christian Grütter; Jeffrey R. Simard; Sabine Klüter; Matthias Rabiller; Haridas B. Rode; Armin Robubi; Daniel Rauh

The emergence of drug resistance remains a fundamental challenge in the development of kinase inhibitors that are effective over long-term treatments. Allosteric inhibitors that bind to sites lying outside the highly conserved ATP pocket are thought to be more selective than ATP-competitive inhibitors and may circumvent some mechanisms of drug resistance. Crystal structures of type I and allosteric type III inhibitors in complex with the tyrosine kinase cSrc allowed us to employ principles of structure-based design to develop these scaffolds into potent type II kinase inhibitors. One of these compounds, 3c (RL46), disrupts FAK-mediated focal adhesions in cancer cells via direct inhibition of cSrc. Details gleaned from crystal structures revealed a key feature of a subset of these compounds, a surprising flexibility in the vicinity of the gatekeeper residue that allows these compounds to overcome a dasatinib-resistant gatekeeper mutation emerging in cSrc.


Archiv Der Pharmazie | 2010

Proteus in the World of Proteins: Conformational Changes in Protein Kinases

Matthias Rabiller; Matthäus Getlik; Sabine Klüter; André Richters; Sandra Tückmantel; Jeffrey R. Simard; Daniel Rauh

The 512 protein kinases encoded by the human genome are a prime example of natures ability to create diversity by introducing variations to a highly conserved theme. The activity of each kinase domain is controlled by layers of regulatory mechanisms involving different combinations of post‐translational modifications, intramolecular contacts, and intermolecular interactions. Ultimately, they all achieve their effect by favoring particular conformations that promote or prevent the kinase domain from catalyzing protein phosphorylation. The central role of kinases in various diseases has encouraged extensive investigations of their biological function and three‐dimensional structures, yielding a more detailed understanding of the mechanisms that regulate protein kinase activity by conformational changes. In the present review, we discuss these regulatory mechanisms and show how conformational changes can be exploited for the design of specific inhibitors that lock protein kinases in inactive conformations. In addition, we highlight recent developments to monitor ligand‐induced structural changes in protein kinases and for screening and identifying inhibitors that stabilize enzymatically incompetent kinase conformations.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Fluorophore Labeling of the Glycine-Rich Loop as a Method of Identifying Inhibitors That Bind to Active and Inactive Kinase Conformations†

Jeffrey R. Simard; Matthäus Getlik; Christian Grütter; R. Schneider; Sabine Wulfert; Daniel Rauh

Targeting protein kinases with small organic molecules is a promising strategy to regulate unwanted kinase activity in both chemical biology and medicinal chemistry research. Traditionally, kinase inhibitors are identified in activity-based screening assays using enzymatically active kinase preparations to measure the perturbation of substrate phosphorylation, often resulting in the enrichment of classical ATP competitive (Type I) inhibitors. However, addressing enzymatically incompetent kinase conformations offers new opportunities for targeted therapies and is moving to the forefront of kinase inhibitor research. Here we report the development of a new FLiK (Fluorescent Labels in Kinases) binding assay to detect small molecules that induce changes in the conformation of the glycine-rich loop. Due to cross-talk between the glycine-rich loop and the activation loop in kinases, this alternative labeling approach can also detect ligands that stabilize inactive kinase conformations, including slow-binding Type II and Type III kinase inhibitors. Protein X-ray crystallography validated the assay results and identified a novel DFG-out binding mode for a quinazoline-based inhibitor in p38alpha kinase. We also detected the high-affinity binding of a clinically relevant and specific VEGFR2 inhibitor, and we provide structural details of its binding mode in p38alpha, in which it stabilizes the DFG-out conformation. Last, we demonstrate the power of this new FLiK labeling strategy to detect the binding of Type I ligands that induce conformational changes in the glycine-rich loop as a means of gaining affinity for the target kinase. This approach may be a useful alternative to develop direct binding assays for kinases that do not adopt the DFG-out conformation while also avoiding the use of expensive kits, detection reagents, or radioactivity frequently employed with activity-based assays.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015

Targeting Drug Resistance in EGFR with Covalent Inhibitors: A Structure-Based Design Approach.

Julian Engel; André Richters; Matthäus Getlik; Stefano Tomassi; Marina Keul; Termathe M; Jonas Lategahn; Christian F. W. Becker; Svenja Mayer-Wrangowski; Christian Grütter; Uhlenbrock N; Krüll J; Schaumann N; Eppmann S; Patrick Kibies; Franziska Hoffgaard; Jochen Heil; Sascha Menninger; Sandra Ortiz-Cuaran; Johannes M. Heuckmann; Tinnefeld; René P. Zahedi; Martin L. Sos; Carsten Schultz-Fademrecht; Roman K. Thomas; Stefan M. Kast; Daniel Rauh

Receptor tyrosine kinases represent one of the prime targets in cancer therapy, as the dysregulation of these elementary transducers of extracellular signals, like the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), contributes to the onset of cancer, such as non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Strong efforts were directed to the development of irreversible inhibitors and led to compound CO-1686, which takes advantage of increased residence time at EGFR by alkylating Cys797 and thereby preventing toxic effects. Here, we present a structure-based approach, rationalized by subsequent computational analysis of conformational ligand ensembles in solution, to design novel and irreversible EGFR inhibitors based on a screening hit that was identified in a phenotype screen of 80 NSCLC cell lines against approximately 1500 compounds. Using protein X-ray crystallography, we deciphered the binding mode in engineered cSrc (T338M/S345C), a validated model system for EGFR-T790M, which constituted the basis for further rational design approaches. Chemical synthesis led to further compound collections that revealed increased biochemical potency and, in part, selectivity toward mutated (L858R and L858R/T790M) vs nonmutated EGFR. Further cell-based and kinetic studies were performed to substantiate our initial findings. Utilizing proteolytic digestion and nano-LC-MS/MS analysis, we confirmed the alkylation of Cys797.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Direct Binding Assay for the Detection of Type IV Allosteric Inhibitors of Abl

R. Schneider; Christian F. W. Becker; Jeffrey R. Simard; Matthäus Getlik; Nina Bohlke; Petra Janning; Daniel Rauh

Abelson (Abl) tyrosine kinase is an important cellular enzyme that is rendered constitutively active in the breakpoint cluster region (BCR)-Abl fusion protein, contributing to several forms of leukemia. Although inhibiting BCR-Abl activity with imatinib shows great clinical success, many patients acquire secondary mutations that result in resistance to imatinib. Second-generation inhibitors such as dasatinib and nilotinib can overcome the majority of these mutations but fail to treat patients with an especially prevalent T315I mutation at the gatekeeper position of the kinase domain. However, a combination of nilotinib with an allosteric type IV inhibitor was recently shown to overcome this clinically relevant point mutation. In this study, we present the development of a direct binding assay that enables the straightforward detection of allosteric inhibitors which bind within the myristate pocket of Abl. The assay is amenable to high-throughput screening and exclusively detects the binding of ligands to this unique allosteric site.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

Synthesis, Optimization, and Evaluation of Novel Small Molecules as Antagonists of WDR5-MLL Interaction.

Yuri Bolshan; Matthäus Getlik; Ekaterina Kuznetsova; Gregory A. Wasney; Taraneh Hajian; Gennadiy Poda; Kong T. Nguyen; Hong Wu; Ludmila Dombrovski; Aiping Dong; Guillermo Senisterra; Matthieu Schapira; C.H. Arrowsmith; Peter J. Brown; Rima Al-awar; Masoud Vedadi; David Smil

The WD40-repeat protein WDR5 plays a critical role in maintaining the integrity of MLL complexes and fully activating their methyltransferase function. MLL complexes, the trithorax-like family of SET1 methyltransferases, catalyze trimethylation of lysine 4 on histone 3, and they have been widely implicated in various cancers. Antagonism of WDR5 and MLL subunit interaction by small molecules has recently been presented as a practical way to inhibit activity of the MLL1 complex, and N-(2-(4-methylpiperazin-1-yl)-5-substituted-phenyl) benzamides were reported as potent and selective antagonists of such an interaction. Here, we describe the protein crystal structure guided optimization of prototypic compound 2 (K dis = 7 μM), leading to identification of more potent antagonist 47 (K dis = 0.3 μM).

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Daniel Rauh

Technical University of Dortmund

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André Richters

Technical University of Dortmund

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