A small molecule MST1/2 inhibitor accelerates murine liver regeneration with improved survival in models of steatohepatitis

Ryan Watkins(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Ana M. Gamo(Scripps Research Institute), Seung Hyuk Choi(Scripps Research Institute), Manoj Kumar(Scripps Research Institute), EeeLN H. Buckarma(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Chantal E. McCabe(Mayo Clinic), Jennifer L. Tomlinson(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), David Pereya(Vienna General Hospital), Blaž Lupše(University of Bremen), Shirin Geravandi(University of Bremen), Nathan W. Werneburg(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Chen Wang(Mayo Clinic), Patrick Starlinger(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Siying Zhu(Scripps Research Institute), Sijia Li(Scripps Research Institute), Shan Yu(Scripps Research Institute), Murali Surakattula(Scripps Research Institute), Tyler D. Baguley(Scripps Research Institute), Amin Ardestani(University of Bremen), Kathrin Maedler(University of Bremen), Jason Roland(Scripps Research Institute), Vân Nguyên-Trân(Scripps Research Institute), Sean B. Joseph(Scripps Research Institute), Mike Petrassi(Scripps Research Institute), Nikki Lynn Rogers(Scripps Research Institute), Gregory J. Gores(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Arnab K. Chatterjee(Scripps Research Institute), Matthew S. Tremblay(Scripps Research Institute), Weijun Shen(Scripps Research Institute), Rory L. Smoot(Mayo Clinic)
PNAS Nexus
February 29, 2024
Cited by 4Open Access
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Abstract

Dysfunctional liver regeneration following surgical resection remains a major cause of postoperative mortality and has no therapeutic options. Without targeted therapies, the current treatment paradigm relies on supportive therapy until homeostasis can be achieved. Pharmacologic acceleration of regeneration represents an alternative therapeutic avenue. Therefore, we aimed to generate a small molecule inhibitor that could accelerate liver regeneration with an emphasis on diseased models, which represent a significant portion of patients who require surgical resection and are often not studied. Utilizing a clinically approved small molecule inhibitor as a parent compound, standard medicinal chemistry approaches were utilized to generate a small molecule inhibitor targeting serine/threonine kinase 4/3 (MST1/2) with reduced off-target effects. This compound, mCLC846, was then applied to preclinical models of murine partial hepatectomy, which included models of diet-induced metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH). mCLC846 demonstrated on target inhibition of MST1/2 and reduced epidermal growth factor receptor inhibition. The inhibitory effects resulted in restored pancreatic beta-cell function and survival under diabetogenic conditions. Liver-specific cell-line exposure resulted in Yes-associated protein activation. Oral delivery of mCLC846 perioperatively resulted in accelerated murine liver regeneration and improved survival in diet-induced MASH models. Bulk transcriptional analysis of regenerating liver remnants suggested that mCLC846 enhanced the normal regenerative pathways and induced them following liver resection. Overall, pharmacological acceleration of liver regeneration with mCLC846 was feasible, had an acceptable therapeutic index, and provided a survival benefit in models of diet-induced MASH.


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