Naturally, kinases exert their activities in a highly
regulated
fashion. A number of ingenious approaches have been developed to artificially
control kinase activity by external stimuli, such as the incorporation
of unnatural amino acids or the fusion of additional protein domains;
however, methods that directly modulate endogenous kinases in native
cells are lacking. Herein, we present a facile and potent method that
takes advantage of recent developments in targeted covalent inhibitors
and rapid light-mediated uncaging chemistry. Using an important drug
target, Bruton’s tyrosine kinase (BTK), as an example, these
opto-covalent modulators successfully blocked the activity of endogenous
BTK in native cells after simple incubation and washout steps. However,
upon a few minutes of light irradiation, BTK activity was cleanly
restored, and could be blocked again by conventional inhibitors. Promisingly,
this photoactivation strategy easily worked in human peripheral blood
mononuclear cells (hPBMCs).