Discovery of Daraxonrasib (RMC-6236), a Potent and Orally Bioavailable RAS(ON) Multi-selective, Noncovalent Tri-complex Inhibitor for the Treatment of Patients with Multiple RAS-Addicted Cancers

James Cregg(Revolution Medicines (United States)), Anne Edwards(Revolution Medicines (United States)), Stephanie Chang(Revolution Medicines (United States)), Bianca J. Lee(Revolution Medicines (United States)), John E. Knox(Revolution Medicines (United States)), Aidan C.A. Tomlinson(Revolution Medicines (United States)), Abby Marquez(Revolution Medicines (United States)), Yang Liu(Revolution Medicines (United States)), Rebecca Freilich(Revolution Medicines (United States)), Naing Aay(Revolution Medicines (United States)), Yingyun Wang(Revolution Medicines (United States)), Lingyan Jiang(Revolution Medicines (United States)), Jingjing Jiang(Revolution Medicines (United States)), Zhican Wang(Revolution Medicines (United States)), Michael Flagella(Revolution Medicines (United States)), David Wildes(Revolution Medicines (United States)), Jacqueline A.M. Smith(Revolution Medicines (United States)), Mallika Singh(Revolution Medicines (United States)), Zhengping Wang(Revolution Medicines (United States)), Adrian L. Gill(Revolution Medicines (United States)), Elena S. Koltun(Revolution Medicines (United States))
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry
March 8, 2025
Cited by 64Open Access
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Abstract

Oncogenic RAS mutations are among the most common in human cancers. To target the active, GTP-bound state of RAS(ON) directly, we employed an innovative tri-complex inhibitor (TCI) modality. Formation of a complex with an intracellular chaperone protein CypA, an inhibitor, and a target protein RAS blocks effector binding, inhibiting downstream RAS signaling and tumor cell proliferation. Herein, we describe the structure-guided SAR journey that led to the discovery of daraxonrasib (RMC-6236), a noncovalent, potent tri-complex inhibitor of multiple RAS mutant and wild-type (WT) variants. This orally bioavailable bRo5 macrocyclic molecule occupies a unique composite binding pocket comprising CypA and SWI/SWII regions of RAS(ON). To achieve broad-spectrum RAS isoform activity, we deployed an SAR campaign that focused on interactions with residues conserved between mutants and WT RAS isoforms. Concurrent optimization of potency and drug-like properties led to the discovery of daraxonrasib (RMC-6236), currently in clinical evaluation in RAS mutant advanced solid tumors (NCT05379985; NCT06040541; NCT06162221; NCT06445062; NCT06128551).


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