Blocking C-terminal processing of KRAS4b via a direct covalent attack on the CaaX-box cysteine

Anna E. Maciag(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), Yue Yang(Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory), Alok K. Sharma(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), David M. Turner(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), Caroline J. DeHart(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), Hazem Abdelkarim(University of Illinois Chicago), Lixin Fan(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), Brian P. Smith(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), Vandana Kumari(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), Marcin Dyba(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), Megan Rigby(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), Jean A. Castillo Badillo(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), Lauren Adams, Luca Fornelli, Stephen Fox(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), Alla Brafman(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), Thomas J. Turbyville(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), William Gillette(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), Simon Messing(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), Constance Agamasu(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), Andrew L. Wolfe(UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center), Stephan Gysin(UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center), Albert H. Chan(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), Dhirendra K. Simanshu(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), Dominic Esposito(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), Oleg Chertov(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), Andrew G. Stephen(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), Michelle R. Arkin, Adam R. Renslo, Neil L. Kelleher, Vadim Gaponenko(University of Illinois Chicago), Felice C. Lightstone(Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory), Dwight V. Nissley(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), Frank McCormick(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
May 9, 2025
Cited by 5Open Access
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Abstract

is the most frequently mutated oncogene in cancer. RAS proteins show high sequence similarities in their G-domains but are significantly different in their C-terminal hypervariable regions (HVR). These regions interact with the cell membrane via lipid anchors that result from posttranslational modifications (PTM) of cysteine residues. KRAS4b is unique as it has only one cysteine that undergoes PTM, C185. Small molecule covalent modification of C185 would block any form of prenylation and subsequently inhibit attachment of KRAS4b to the cell membrane, blocking its biological activity. We translated this concept to the discovery and development of disulfide tethering screen hits into irreversible covalent modifiers of C185. These compounds inhibited proliferation of KRAS4b-driven mouse embryonic fibroblasts, but not cells driven by N-myristoylated KRAS4b that harbor a C185S mutation and are not dependent on C185 prenylation. Top-down proteomics was used to confirm target engagement in cells. These compounds bind in a pocket formed when the HVR folds back between helix 3 and 4 in the G-domain (HVR-α3-α4). This interaction can happen in the absence of small molecules as predicted by molecular dynamics simulations and is stabilized in the presence of C185 binders as confirmed by small-angle X-ray scattering and solution NMR. NOESY-HSQC, an NMR approach that measures internuclear distances of 6 Å or less, and structure analysis identified the critical residues and interactions that define the HVR-α3-α4 pocket. Further development of compounds that bind to this pocket could be the basis of a new approach to targeting KRAS cancers.


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