Drugging an undruggable pocket on KRASDirk Kessler, Michael Gmachl, Andreas Mantoulidis et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|2019 The 3 human RAS genes, KRAS, NRAS, and HRAS, encode 4 different RAS proteins which belong to the protein family of small GTPases that function as binary molecular switches involved in cell signaling. Activating mutations in RAS are among the most common oncogenic drivers in human cancers, with KRAS being the most frequently mutated oncogene. Although KRAS is an excellent drug discovery target for many cancers, and despite decades of research, no therapeutic agent directly targeting RAS has been clinically approved. Using structure-based drug design, we have discovered BI-2852 (1), a KRAS inhibitor that binds with nanomolar affinity to a pocket, thus far perceived to be “undruggable,” between switch I and II on RAS; 1 is mechanistically distinct from covalent KRAS G12C inhibitors because it binds to a different pocket present in both the active and inactive forms of KRAS. In doing so, it blocks all GEF, GAP, and effector interactions with KRAS, leading to inhibition of downstream signaling and an antiproliferative effect in the low micromolar range in KRAS mutant cells. These findings clearly demonstrate that this so-called switch I/II pocket is indeed druggable and provide the scientific community with a chemical probe that simultaneously targets the active and inactive forms of KRAS.
Targeting cancer with small-molecule pan-KRAS degradersMutations in the Kirsten rat sarcoma viral oncogene homolog (KRAS) protein are highly prevalent in cancer. However, small-molecule concepts that address oncogenic KRAS alleles remain elusive beyond replacing glycine at position 12 with cysteine (G12C), which is clinically drugged through covalent inhibitors. Guided by biophysical and structural studies of ternary complexes, we designed a heterobifunctional small molecule that potently degrades 13 out of 17 of the most prevalent oncogenic KRAS alleles. Compared with inhibition, KRAS degradation results in more profound and sustained pathway modulation across a broad range of KRAS mutant cell lines, killing cancer cells while sparing models without genetic KRAS aberrations. Pharmacological degradation of oncogenic KRAS was tolerated and led to tumor regression in vivo. Together, these findings unveil a new path toward addressing KRAS-driven cancers with small-molecule degraders.
Start Selective and Rigidify: The Discovery Path toward a Next Generation of EGFR Tyrosine Kinase InhibitorsHarald Engelhardt, Dietrich Böse, Mark Petronczki et al.|Journal of Medicinal Chemistry|2019 xenograft model. Key was the identification of a highly selective but moderately potent benzimidazole followed by complete rigidification of the molecule through macrocyclization.
Intracellular Trapping of the Selective Phosphoglycerate Dehydrogenase (PHGDH) Inhibitor <b>BI-4924</b> Disrupts Serine BiosynthesisHarald Weinstabl, Matthias Treu, Joerg Rinnenthal et al.|Journal of Medicinal Chemistry|2019 Phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase (PHGDH) is known to be the rate-limiting enzyme in the serine synthesis pathway in humans. It converts glycolysis-derived 3-phosphoglycerate to 3-phosphopyruvate in a co-factor-dependent oxidation reaction. Herein, we report the discovery of BI-4916, a prodrug of the co-factor nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH/NAD+)-competitive PHGDH inhibitor BI-4924, which has shown high selectivity against the majority of other dehydrogenase targets. Starting with a fragment-based screening, a subsequent hit optimization using structure-based drug design was conducted to deliver a single-digit nanomolar lead series and to improve potency by 6 orders of magnitude. To this end, an intracellular ester cleavage mechanism of the ester prodrug was utilized to achieve intracellular enrichment of the actual carboxylic acid based drug and thus overcome high cytosolic levels of the competitive cofactors NADH/NAD+.
Microwave-Assisted Parallel Synthesis of Fused Heterocycles in a Novel Parallel Multimode ReactorMatthias Treu, Thomas Karner, Roland Kousek et al.|Journal of Combinatorial Chemistry|2008 New rotor types using disposable glass vials for small-scale parallel synthesis in multimode microwave reactors are introduced. One rotor comprises 16 groups of four vials, whereas the second uses four silicon carbide plates with a 6 x 4 matrix to process the vials. Both rotors achieve utmost temperature homogeneity upon microwave irradiation and can be used for microwave-mediated reactions at temperatures of up to 200 degrees C and pressures of 20 bar. The generation of three different heterocycle libraries furnishing thiophenes, oxindoles, and benzimidazoles using the new rotor types is described.