10 research outputs found
Discovery of Novel Dot1L Inhibitors through a Structure-Based Fragmentation Approach
Oncogenic MLL fusion
proteins aberrantly recruit Dot1L, a histone
methyltransferase, to ectopic loci, leading to local hypermethylation
of H3K79 and misexpression of HoxA genes driving MLL-rearranged leukemias.
Inhibition of the methyltransferase activity of Dot1L in this setting
is predicted to reverse aberrant H3K79 methylation, leading to repression
of leukemogenic genes and tumor growth inhibition. In the context
of our Dot1L drug discovery program, high-throughput screening led
to the identification of <b>2</b>, a weak Dot1L inhibitor with
an unprecedented, induced pocket binding mode. A medicinal chemistry
campaign, strongly guided by structure-based consideration and ligand-based
morphing, enabled the discovery of <b>12</b> and <b>13</b>, potent, selective, and structurally completely novel Dot1L inhibitors
Discovery of First-in-Class, Potent, and Orally Bioavailable Embryonic Ectoderm Development (EED) Inhibitor with Robust Anticancer Efficacy
Overexpression and somatic heterozygous
mutations of EZH2, the catalytic subunit of polycomb repressive complex
2 (PRC2), are associated with several tumor types. EZH2 inhibitor,
EPZ-6438 (tazemetostat), demonstrated clinical efficacy in patients
with acceptable safety profile as monotherapy. EED, another subunit
of PRC2 complex, is essential for its histone methyltransferase activity
through direct binding to trimethylated lysine 27 on histone 3 (H3K27Me3).
Herein we disclose the discovery of a first-in-class potent, selective,
and orally bioavailable EED inhibitor compound <b>43</b> (EED226).
Guided by X-ray crystallography, compound <b>43</b> was discovered
by fragmentation and regrowth of compound <b>7</b>, a PRC2 HTS
hit that directly binds EED. The ensuing scaffold hopping followed
by multiparameter optimization led to the discovery of <b>43</b>. Compound <b>43</b> induces robust and sustained tumor regression
in EZH2<sup>MUT</sup> preclinical DLBCL model. For the first time
we demonstrate that specific and direct inhibition of EED can be effective
as an anticancer strategy
Discovery of the Clinical Candidate MAK683: An EED-Directed, Allosteric, and Selective PRC2 Inhibitor for the Treatment of Advanced Malignancies
Polycomb
Repressive Complex 2 (PRC2) plays an important role in
transcriptional regulation during animal development and in cell differentiation,
and alteration of PRC2 activity has been associated with cancer. On
a molecular level, PRC2 catalyzes methylation of histone H3 lysine
27 (H3K27), resulting in mono-, di-, or trimethylated forms of H3K27,
of which the trimethylated form H3K27me3 leads to transcriptional
repression of polycomb target genes. Previously, we have shown that
binding of the low-molecular-weight compound EED226 to the H3K27me3
binding pocket of the regulatory subunit EED can effectively inhibit
PRC2 activity in cells and reduce tumor growth in mouse xenograft
models. Here, we report the stepwise optimization of the tool compound
EED226 toward the potent and selective EED inhibitor MAK683 (compound 22) and its subsequent preclinical characterization. Based
on a balanced PK/PD profile, efficacy, and mitigated risk of forming
reactive metabolites, MAK683 has been selected for clinical development
Discovery of the Clinical Candidate MAK683: An EED-Directed, Allosteric, and Selective PRC2 Inhibitor for the Treatment of Advanced Malignancies
Polycomb
Repressive Complex 2 (PRC2) plays an important role in
transcriptional regulation during animal development and in cell differentiation,
and alteration of PRC2 activity has been associated with cancer. On
a molecular level, PRC2 catalyzes methylation of histone H3 lysine
27 (H3K27), resulting in mono-, di-, or trimethylated forms of H3K27,
of which the trimethylated form H3K27me3 leads to transcriptional
repression of polycomb target genes. Previously, we have shown that
binding of the low-molecular-weight compound EED226 to the H3K27me3
binding pocket of the regulatory subunit EED can effectively inhibit
PRC2 activity in cells and reduce tumor growth in mouse xenograft
models. Here, we report the stepwise optimization of the tool compound
EED226 toward the potent and selective EED inhibitor MAK683 (compound 22) and its subsequent preclinical characterization. Based
on a balanced PK/PD profile, efficacy, and mitigated risk of forming
reactive metabolites, MAK683 has been selected for clinical development
Discovery of the Clinical Candidate MAK683: An EED-Directed, Allosteric, and Selective PRC2 Inhibitor for the Treatment of Advanced Malignancies
Polycomb
Repressive Complex 2 (PRC2) plays an important role in
transcriptional regulation during animal development and in cell differentiation,
and alteration of PRC2 activity has been associated with cancer. On
a molecular level, PRC2 catalyzes methylation of histone H3 lysine
27 (H3K27), resulting in mono-, di-, or trimethylated forms of H3K27,
of which the trimethylated form H3K27me3 leads to transcriptional
repression of polycomb target genes. Previously, we have shown that
binding of the low-molecular-weight compound EED226 to the H3K27me3
binding pocket of the regulatory subunit EED can effectively inhibit
PRC2 activity in cells and reduce tumor growth in mouse xenograft
models. Here, we report the stepwise optimization of the tool compound
EED226 toward the potent and selective EED inhibitor MAK683 (compound 22) and its subsequent preclinical characterization. Based
on a balanced PK/PD profile, efficacy, and mitigated risk of forming
reactive metabolites, MAK683 has been selected for clinical development
Discovery of the Clinical Candidate MAK683: An EED-Directed, Allosteric, and Selective PRC2 Inhibitor for the Treatment of Advanced Malignancies
Polycomb
Repressive Complex 2 (PRC2) plays an important role in
transcriptional regulation during animal development and in cell differentiation,
and alteration of PRC2 activity has been associated with cancer. On
a molecular level, PRC2 catalyzes methylation of histone H3 lysine
27 (H3K27), resulting in mono-, di-, or trimethylated forms of H3K27,
of which the trimethylated form H3K27me3 leads to transcriptional
repression of polycomb target genes. Previously, we have shown that
binding of the low-molecular-weight compound EED226 to the H3K27me3
binding pocket of the regulatory subunit EED can effectively inhibit
PRC2 activity in cells and reduce tumor growth in mouse xenograft
models. Here, we report the stepwise optimization of the tool compound
EED226 toward the potent and selective EED inhibitor MAK683 (compound 22) and its subsequent preclinical characterization. Based
on a balanced PK/PD profile, efficacy, and mitigated risk of forming
reactive metabolites, MAK683 has been selected for clinical development
Discovery of the Clinical Candidate MAK683: An EED-Directed, Allosteric, and Selective PRC2 Inhibitor for the Treatment of Advanced Malignancies
Polycomb
Repressive Complex 2 (PRC2) plays an important role in
transcriptional regulation during animal development and in cell differentiation,
and alteration of PRC2 activity has been associated with cancer. On
a molecular level, PRC2 catalyzes methylation of histone H3 lysine
27 (H3K27), resulting in mono-, di-, or trimethylated forms of H3K27,
of which the trimethylated form H3K27me3 leads to transcriptional
repression of polycomb target genes. Previously, we have shown that
binding of the low-molecular-weight compound EED226 to the H3K27me3
binding pocket of the regulatory subunit EED can effectively inhibit
PRC2 activity in cells and reduce tumor growth in mouse xenograft
models. Here, we report the stepwise optimization of the tool compound
EED226 toward the potent and selective EED inhibitor MAK683 (compound 22) and its subsequent preclinical characterization. Based
on a balanced PK/PD profile, efficacy, and mitigated risk of forming
reactive metabolites, MAK683 has been selected for clinical development
Discovery of the Clinical Candidate MAK683: An EED-Directed, Allosteric, and Selective PRC2 Inhibitor for the Treatment of Advanced Malignancies
Polycomb
Repressive Complex 2 (PRC2) plays an important role in
transcriptional regulation during animal development and in cell differentiation,
and alteration of PRC2 activity has been associated with cancer. On
a molecular level, PRC2 catalyzes methylation of histone H3 lysine
27 (H3K27), resulting in mono-, di-, or trimethylated forms of H3K27,
of which the trimethylated form H3K27me3 leads to transcriptional
repression of polycomb target genes. Previously, we have shown that
binding of the low-molecular-weight compound EED226 to the H3K27me3
binding pocket of the regulatory subunit EED can effectively inhibit
PRC2 activity in cells and reduce tumor growth in mouse xenograft
models. Here, we report the stepwise optimization of the tool compound
EED226 toward the potent and selective EED inhibitor MAK683 (compound 22) and its subsequent preclinical characterization. Based
on a balanced PK/PD profile, efficacy, and mitigated risk of forming
reactive metabolites, MAK683 has been selected for clinical development
Discovery of the Clinical Candidate MAK683: An EED-Directed, Allosteric, and Selective PRC2 Inhibitor for the Treatment of Advanced Malignancies
Polycomb
Repressive Complex 2 (PRC2) plays an important role in
transcriptional regulation during animal development and in cell differentiation,
and alteration of PRC2 activity has been associated with cancer. On
a molecular level, PRC2 catalyzes methylation of histone H3 lysine
27 (H3K27), resulting in mono-, di-, or trimethylated forms of H3K27,
of which the trimethylated form H3K27me3 leads to transcriptional
repression of polycomb target genes. Previously, we have shown that
binding of the low-molecular-weight compound EED226 to the H3K27me3
binding pocket of the regulatory subunit EED can effectively inhibit
PRC2 activity in cells and reduce tumor growth in mouse xenograft
models. Here, we report the stepwise optimization of the tool compound
EED226 toward the potent and selective EED inhibitor MAK683 (compound 22) and its subsequent preclinical characterization. Based
on a balanced PK/PD profile, efficacy, and mitigated risk of forming
reactive metabolites, MAK683 has been selected for clinical development
Discovery of the Clinical Candidate MAK683: An EED-Directed, Allosteric, and Selective PRC2 Inhibitor for the Treatment of Advanced Malignancies
Polycomb
Repressive Complex 2 (PRC2) plays an important role in
transcriptional regulation during animal development and in cell differentiation,
and alteration of PRC2 activity has been associated with cancer. On
a molecular level, PRC2 catalyzes methylation of histone H3 lysine
27 (H3K27), resulting in mono-, di-, or trimethylated forms of H3K27,
of which the trimethylated form H3K27me3 leads to transcriptional
repression of polycomb target genes. Previously, we have shown that
binding of the low-molecular-weight compound EED226 to the H3K27me3
binding pocket of the regulatory subunit EED can effectively inhibit
PRC2 activity in cells and reduce tumor growth in mouse xenograft
models. Here, we report the stepwise optimization of the tool compound
EED226 toward the potent and selective EED inhibitor MAK683 (compound 22) and its subsequent preclinical characterization. Based
on a balanced PK/PD profile, efficacy, and mitigated risk of forming
reactive metabolites, MAK683 has been selected for clinical development
