23 research outputs found
Application of virtual screening to the discovery of novel nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase (NAMPT) inhibitors with potential for the treatment of cancer and axonopathies.
NAMPT may represent a novel target for drug discovery in various therapeutic areas, including oncology and inflammation. Additionally, recent work has suggested that targeting NAMPT has potential in treating axon degeneration. In this work, publicly available X-ray co-crystal structures of NAMPT and the structures of two known NAMPT inhibitors were used as the basis for a structure- and ligand-based virtual screening campaign. From this, two novel series of NAMPT inhibitors were identified, one of which showed a statistically significant protective effect when tested in a cellular model of axon degeneration
Cell-active Small Molecule Inhibitors of the DNA-damage Repair Enzyme Poly(ADP-ribose) Glycohydrolase (PARG) : Discovery and Optimization of Orally Bioavailable Quinazolinedione Sulfonamides
DNA
damage repair enzymes are promising targets in the development
of new therapeutic agents for a wide range of cancers and potentially
other diseases. The enzyme polyÂ(ADP-ribose) glycohydrolase (PARG)
plays a pivotal role in the regulation of DNA repair mechanisms; however,
the lack of potent drug-like inhibitors for use in cellular and in
vivo models has limited the investigation of its potential as a novel
therapeutic target. Using the crystal structure of human PARG in complex
with the weakly active and cytotoxic anthraquinone <b>8a</b>, novel quinazolinedione sulfonamides PARG inhibitors have been identified
by means of structure-based virtual screening and library design.
1-Oxetan-3-ylmethyl derivatives <b>33d</b> and <b>35d</b> were selected for preliminary investigations in vivo. X-ray crystal
structures help rationalize the observed structure–activity
relationships of these novel inhibitors
Targeted genetic dependency screen facilitates identification of actionable mutations in FGFR4, MAP3K9, and PAK5 in lung cancer
Approximately 70% of patients with non–small-cell lung cancer present with late-stage disease and have limited treatment options, so there is a pressing need to develop efficacious targeted therapies for these patients. This remains a major challenge as the underlying genetic causes of ∼50% of non–small-cell lung cancers remain unknown. Here we demonstrate that a targeted genetic dependency screen is an efficient approach to identify somatic cancer alterations that are functionally important. By using this approach, we have identified three kinases with gain-of-function mutations in lung cancer, namely FGFR4, MAP3K9, and PAK5. Mutations in these kinases are activating toward the ERK pathway, and targeted depletion of the mutated kinases inhibits proliferation, suppresses constitutive activation of downstream signaling pathways, and results in specific killing of the lung cancer cells. Genomic profiling of patients with lung cancer is ushering in an era of personalized medicine; however, lack of actionable mutations presents a significant hurdle. Our study indicates that targeted genetic dependency screens will be an effective strategy to elucidate somatic variants that are essential for lung cancer cell viability
Identification of selective inhibitors of RET and comparison with current clinical candidates through development and validation of a robust screening cascade [version 2; referees: 4 approved]
RET (REarranged during Transfection) is a receptor tyrosine kinase, which plays pivotal roles in regulating cell survival, differentiation, proliferation, migration and chemotaxis. Activation of RET is a mechanism of oncogenesis in medullary thyroid carcinomas where both germline and sporadic activating somatic mutations are prevalent. Â At present, there are no known specific RET inhibitors in clinical development, although many potent inhibitors of RET have been opportunistically identified through selectivity profiling of compounds initially designed to target other tyrosine kinases. Vandetanib and cabozantinib, both multi-kinase inhibitors with RET activity, are approved for use in medullary thyroid carcinoma, but additional pharmacological activities, most notably inhibition of vascular endothelial growth factor - VEGFR2 (KDR), lead to dose-limiting toxicity. The recent identification of RET fusions present in ~1% of lung adenocarcinoma patients has renewed interest in the identification and development of more selective RET inhibitors lacking the toxicities associated with the current treatments. Â In an earlier publication [Newton et al, 2016; 1] we reported the discovery of a series of 2-substituted phenol quinazolines as potent and selective RET kinase inhibitors. Here we describe the development of the robust screening cascade which allowed the identification and advancement of this chemical series. Â Furthermore we have profiled a panel of RET-active clinical compounds both to validate the cascade and to confirm that none display a RET-selective target profile