Abstract
Coronaviruses can evolve and spread rapidly to cause severe disease morbidity and mortality, as exemplified by SARS-CoV-2 variants of the COVID-19 pandemic. Although currently available ...vaccines remain mostly effective against SARS-CoV-2 variants, additional treatment strategies are needed. Inhibitors that target essential viral enzymes, such as proteases and polymerases, represent key classes of antivirals. However, clinical use of antiviral therapies inevitably leads to emergence of drug resistance. In this study we implemented a strategy to pre-emptively address drug resistance to protease inhibitors targeting the main protease (M
pro
) of SARS-CoV-2, an essential enzyme that promotes viral maturation. We solved nine high-resolution cocrystal structures of SARS-CoV-2 M
pro
bound to substrate peptides and six structures with cleavage products. These structures enabled us to define the substrate envelope of M
pro
, map the critical recognition elements, and identify evolutionarily vulnerable sites that may be susceptible to resistance mutations that would compromise binding of the newly developed M
pro
inhibitors. Our results suggest strategies for developing robust inhibitors against SARS-CoV-2 that will retain longer-lasting efficacy against this evolving viral pathogen.
ATP competitive inhibitors of the BRAFV600E oncogene paradoxically activate downstream signaling in cells bearing wild-type BRAF (BRAFWT). In this study, we investigate the biochemical mechanism of ...wild-type RAF (RAFWT) activation by multiple catalytic inhibitors using kinetic analysis of purified BRAFV600E and RAFWT enzymes. We show that activation of RAFWT is ATP dependent and directly linked to RAF kinase activity. These data support a mechanism involving inhibitory autophosphorylation of RAF’s phosphate-binding loop that, when disrupted either through pharmacologic or genetic alterations, results in activation of RAF and the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway. This mechanism accounts not only for compound-mediated activation of the MAPK pathway in BRAFWT cells but also offers a biochemical mechanism for BRAF oncogenesis.
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•BRAFV600E inhibitors activate recombinant purified BRAFWT and CRAF in vitro•RAFWT but not BRAF oncogenes are autoinhibited through P-loop autophosphorylation•P-loop autophosphorylation is required for inhibitors to activate RAFWT•Preventing P-loop autophosphorylation activates RAF monomers
The design of cereblon-binding molecular glues (MGs) that selectively recruit a desired protein while excluding teratogenic SALL4 is an area of significant interest when designing therapeutic agents. ...Previous studies show that SALL4 is degraded in the presence of IKZF1 degraders pomalidomide, and to a lesser extent by CC-220. To expand our understanding of the molecular basis for the interaction of SALL4 with cereblon, we performed biophysical and structural studies demonstrating that SALL4 zinc finger domains one and two (ZF1-2) interact with cereblon (CRBN) in a unique manner. ZF1 interacts with the N-terminal domain of cereblon and ZF2 binds as expected in the C-terminal IMiD-binding domain. Both ZF1 and ZF2 contribute to the potency of the interaction of ZF1-2 with CRBN:MG complexes and the affinities of SALL4 ZF1-2 for the cereblon:CC-220 complex are less potent than for the corresponding pomalidomide complex. Structural analysis provides a rationale for understanding the reduced affinity of SALL4 for cereblon in the presence of CC-220, which engages both ZF1 and ZF2. These studies further our understanding of the molecular glue-mediated interactions of zinc finger-based proteins with cereblon and may provide structural tools for the prospective design of compounds with reduced binding and degradation of SALL4.
RAS oncogenes have been implicated in >30% of human cancers, all representing high unmet medical need. The exquisite dependency on CRAF kinase in KRAS mutant tumors has been established in ...genetically engineered mouse models and human tumor cells. To date, many small molecule approaches are under investigation to target CRAF, yet kinase-selective and cellular potent inhibitors remain challenging to identify. Herein, we describe 14 (RAF709) Aversa , Biaryl amide compounds as kinase inhibitors and their preparation. WO 2014151616, 2014 , a selective B/C RAF inhibitor, which was developed through a hypothesis-driven approach focusing on drug-like properties. A key challenge encountered in the medicinal chemistry campaign was maintaining a balance between good solubility and potent cellular activity (suppression of pMEK and proliferation) in KRAS mutant tumor cell lines. We investigated the small molecule crystal structure of lead molecule 7 and hypothesized that disruption of the crystal packing would improve solubility, which led to a change from N-methylpyridone to a tetrahydropyranyl oxy-pyridine derivative. 14 proved to be soluble, kinase selective, and efficacious in a KRAS mutant xenograft model.
RAS mutations lead to a constitutively active oncogenic protein that signals through multiple effector pathways. In this chemical biology study, we describe a novel coupled biochemical assay that ...measures activation of the effector BRAF by prenylated KRASG12V in a lipid-dependent manner. Using this assay, we discovered compounds that block biochemical and cellular functions of KRASG12V with low single-digit micromolar potency. We characterized the structural basis for inhibition using NMR methods and showed that the compounds stabilized the inactive conformation of KRASG12V. Determination of the biophysical affinity of binding using biolayer interferometry demonstrated that the potency of inhibition matches the affinity of binding only when KRAS is in its native state, namely post-translationally modified and in a lipid environment. The assays we describe here provide a first-time alignment across biochemical, biophysical, and cellular KRAS assays through incorporation of key physiological factors regulating RAS biology, namely a negatively charged lipid environment and prenylation, into the in vitro assays. These assays and the ligands we discovered are valuable tools for further study of KRAS inhibition and drug discovery.
The current commercially licensed enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs) for hepatitis C virus (HCV) mainly use recombinant proteins containing linear epitopes. There is evidence, however, that ...conformational epitopes of HCV are more immunoreactive. Thus, we have designed an HCV antibody assay that employs a conformational protein, NS3NS4a PI (with functional protease and helicase activities), and a linear fusion protein, multiple-epitope fusion antigen 7.1 (MEFA 7.1) or MEFA 7.2. We have shown that NS3NS4a PI detects early-seroconversion conformation-sensitive antibodies better than c33c antigen. The correct conformation of NS3NS4a PI also cross-reacts with different genotype samples better than the c33c antigen. MEFA 7.1 and MEFA 7.2 incorporate all the major immunodominant and genotype-specific epitopes of HCV core, E1, E2 hypervariable region 1 (HVR1), E2 HVR1-plus-HVR2 consensus, NS3, NS4, and NS5. Since MEFA 7.1 is degraded by the active NS3NS4a PI protease, we designed a second MEFA 7.2 construct in which the six protease cleavage sites found in MEFA 7.1 were eliminated by amino acid mutation. We demonstrate here that MEFA 7.2 remains intact in the presence of NS3NS4a PI and preserves the epitopes present in MEFA 7.1. Compared to currently licensed assays, an ELISA incorporating a combination of the two antigens NS3NS4a PI and MEFA 7.1 or 7.2 demonstrates better serotype sensitivity and detects seroconversion earlier in many commercially available panels. We believe that an assay using NS3NS4a PI and MEFA 7.1 or 7.2 may have the potential to replace current HCV immunoassays for better sensitivity.
Direct pharmacological inhibition of RAS has remained elusive, and efforts to target CRAF have been challenging due to the complex nature of RAF signaling, downstream of activated RAS, and the poor ...overall kinase selectivity of putative RAF inhibitors. Herein, we describe 15 (LXH254, Aversa, R.; et al. Int. Patent WO2014151616A1, 2014), a selective B/C RAF inhibitor, which was developed by focusing on drug-like properties and selectivity. Our previous tool compound, 3 (RAF709; Nishiguchi, G. A.; et al. J. Med. Chem. 2017, 60, 4969), was potent, selective, efficacious, and well tolerated in preclinical models, but the high human intrinsic clearance precluded further development and prompted further investigation of close analogues. A structure-based approach led to a pyridine series with an alcohol side chain that could interact with the DFG loop and significantly improved cell potency. Further mitigation of human intrinsic clearance and time-dependent inhibition led to the discovery of 15. Due to its excellent properties, it was progressed through toxicology studies and is being tested in phase 1 clinical trials.
While there are hundreds of predicted E3 ligases, characterizing their applications for targeted protein degradation has proved challenging. Here, we report a chemical biology approach to evaluate ...the ability of modified recombinant E3 ligase components to support neo-substrate degradation. Bypassing the need for specific E3 ligase binders, we use maleimide-thiol chemistry for covalent functionalization followed by E3 electroporation (COFFEE) in live cells. We demonstrate that electroporated recombinant von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) protein, covalently functionalized at its ligandable cysteine with JQ1 or dasatinib, induces degradation of BRD4 or tyrosine kinases, respectively. Furthermore, by applying COFFEE to SPSB2, a Cullin-RING ligase 5 receptor, as well as to SKP1, the adaptor protein for Cullin-RING ligase 1 F box (SCF) complexes, we validate this method as a powerful approach to define the activity of previously uncharacterized ubiquitin ligase components, and provide further evidence that not only E3 ligase receptors but also adaptors can be directly hijacked for neo-substrate degradation.
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•COFFEE tests neo-substrate degradation by chemically modified E3 ligase components•Recombinant E3s are labeled with maleimide-functionalized neo-substrate ligands•Proof-of-concept degradation by electroporated JQ1- or dasatinib-labeled VHL•SPSB2 and SKP1 can be redirected to degrade tyrosine kinases
Pinch et al. present a method to test neo-substrate degradation by recombinant E3 ligase components in live cells, called COFFEE (covalent functionalization followed by E3 electroporation). Following proof-of-concept studies with VHL, they demonstrate neo-substrate degradation by the Cullin-RING ligase receptor SPSB2, and by the adaptor protein, SKP1.
While vaccines and antivirals are now being deployed for the current SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, we require additional antiviral therapeutics to not only effectively combat SARS-CoV-2 and its variants, but ...also future coronaviruses. All coronaviruses have relatively similar genomes that provide a potential exploitable opening to develop antiviral therapies that will be effective against all coronaviruses. Among the various genes and proteins encoded by all coronaviruses, one particularly "druggable" or relatively easy-to-drug target is the coronavirus Main Protease (3CL
or Mpro), an enzyme that is involved in cleaving a long peptide translated by the viral genome into its individual protein components that are then assembled into the virus to enable viral replication in the cell. Inhibiting Mpro with a small-molecule antiviral would effectively stop the ability of the virus to replicate, providing therapeutic benefit. In this study, we have utilized activity-based protein profiling (ABPP)-based chemoproteomic approaches to discover and further optimize cysteine-reactive pyrazoline-based covalent inhibitors for the SARS-CoV-2 Mpro. Structure-guided medicinal chemistry and modular synthesis of di- and tri-substituted pyrazolines bearing either chloroacetamide or vinyl sulfonamide cysteine-reactive warheads enabled the expedient exploration of structure-activity relationships (SAR), yielding nanomolar potency inhibitors against Mpro from not only SARS-CoV-2, but across many other coronaviruses. Our studies highlight promising chemical scaffolds that may contribute to future pan-coronavirus inhibitors.
A series of imidazo1,2-apyridin-6-yl-benzamide analogs were designed as inhibitors of B-RAFV600E. Medicinal chemistry techniques were employed to explore the SAR for this series and improve ...selectivity versus P38 and VEGFR2.
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A series of imidazo1,2-apyridin-6-yl-benzamide analogs was designed as inhibitors of B-RAFV600E. Medicinal chemistry techniques were employed to explore the SAR for this series and improve selectivity versus P38 and VEGFR2.