Few cancer targets are as
prominent as KRAS, a molecular switch that has been called “the beating heart
of cancer.” Mutations that cause the switch to be stuck in the “on” state occur
in roughly a quarter of human tumors. The protein’s role in driving cancer has
been known for nearly forty years, but for most of that time it has been considered
undruggable.
Until now.
When bound to GTP, KRAS is turned
on, promoting cell proliferation until the GTP is hydrolyzed to GDP. Activating
mutants impair this hydrolysis. An obvious approach to targeting KRAS would be
to develop small molecules that bind in the nucleotide-binding pocket, as has
been done successfully for kinases. Unfortunately, the extremely high affinity of
KRAS for GTP, along with the high intracellular concentration of GTP, makes this
impossible.
One activating mutant replaces a
glycine with cysteine (G12C), providing a convenient handle for covalent inhibitors.
In 2013, Kevan Shokat and colleagues at University of California San Francisco
described in Nature how they used Tethering to identify fragments such
as 6H05 that bound to this cysteine through a disulfide bond. Because disulfides
are not stable in cells, they replaced this “warhead” with an acrylamide moiety
and made a few other tweaks to arrive at compound 12. Extensive optimization described
by Yi Liu and collaborators at Kura, Wellspring, and Janssen in a 2018 Cell
paper led to molecules such as ARS-1620, which showed potent biochemical and
cell-based activity and promising results in mouse xenograft models.
In 2014, Carmot Therapeutics began a collaboration with Amgen to discover covalent inhibitors of the G12C mutant of KRAS. Carmot’s technology, Chemotype Evolution, entails rapid synthesis and testing of large libraries around an existing molecule such as a fragment (see here for a nice animation). In this case, fragments chosen included simple acrylamides, the thought being that – unlike the disulfides in Tethering – these could be carried through into the final molecule.
Initial hit 2 was truncated and
cyclized to compound 4, which had comparable activity but with fewer atoms and
rotatable bonds. Additional iterations of Chemotype Evolution and medicinal
chemistry ultimately led to compound 1, with nanomolar activity in cells
containing KRASG12C. Crystallography revealed that the
tetrahydroisoquinoline moiety bound in a previously cryptic pocket formed by
movement of a histidine side chain. These interactions contributed to the high
affinity of the molecule; more details are provided in a paper published last
year in ACS Med. Chem. Lett. by Victor Cee, myself, and our collaborators
at Amgen and Carmot.
Unfortunately, although compound 1 was more potent in cell assays than ARS-1620, it had low oral bioavailability and rapid clearance in mice and rats. However, as described in J. Med. Chem., Brian Lanman and colleagues at Amgen superimposed ARS-1620 with compound 1 and realized that it would be possible to access the cryptic pocket from the former compound. This strategy proved successful, ultimately leading to AMG510, which entered the clinic in August 2018. And although it is still early, a paper in Nature by Jude Canon, J. Russell Lipford, and collaborators at Amgen and elsewhere describes promising responses to the drug by a handful of patients with non-small-cell lung carcinoma.
Amgen is not the only company to have
capitalized on the Tethering results: Mirati used the information to develop their
clinical-phase MRTX849. And Janssen has also entered the clinic with JNJ-74699157.
There are multiple lessons here.
First, as we’ve seen previously, a single fragment can lead to multiple
clinical compounds. Second, progress often requires considerable changes to the
initial fragment. This story is clearly a case of fragment-assisted drug discovery,
and in the interest of space I’ve had to omit most of the lovely medicinal
chemistry, not to mention biology and biophysics, detailed in these five papers.
Another lesson is that covalent
fragments can enable lead discovery for targets not accessible through other
means. But this enablement may require non-conventional molecules; the initial
fragments violate the rule of three, and the disclosed clinical compounds have
molecular weights in excess of 500 Da. Despite these challenges, remarkably rapid
progress is possible: less than five years elapsed between the first Nature
publication and the entry of AMG 510 into the clinic.
Most important, this research has
led to possibly life-extending molecules – one of the responders described in
the second Nature paper had been on drug for 42 weeks. Practical
Fragments wishes her or him, and everyone else involved with the trials, the
best of luck.
This is a great example of fragment assisted drug discovery. Well done to everyone involved, including Dan!
ReplyDeleteThanks Chris - this project was a lot of fun, and unlike much of what we do in drug discovery, it actually seems to be working (fingers crossed)!
ReplyDelete