Just over a year ago the FDA granted
accelerated approval to sotorasib, the first marketed inhibitor of KRAS and the
first approved fragment-derived covalent drug. In a recent ChemMedChem
paper, Samy Meroueh and colleagues at Indiana University School of Medicine
describe their efforts against a protein in a related pathway.
KRAS is a GTPase which cycles between
an “on” state, where GTP is bound, and an “off” state, where GTP is hydrolyzed to
GDP. KRAS is just one member of a superfamily of GTPases. Two other members also
associated with cancer include RalA and RalB. Sotorasib acts by binding to a
mutant form of KRAS in which a glycine is replaced by a cysteine, but this
mutation does not occur in RalA or RalB. An alternative approach to targeting GTPases
is to prevent them from becoming activated by guanine exchange factors (GEFs),
which help exchange GDP to GTP. We’ve previously written about how fragments have
led to noncovalent inhibitors of the GEF SOS1, which activates RAS proteins.
To sum up, there’s more than one
way to block GTPase activity: directly, or by preventing activation by an
associated GEF. The new paper focuses on Rgl2, a GEF that serves RalA and RalB.
Rgl2 sports four surface-exposed
cysteine residues, so the researchers screened the protein against a library of
1260 electrophilic fragments at 75 µM for 24 hours at 4 °C and then assessed whether
it could still activate RalB. 50 fragments inhibited guanine nucleotide
exchange by at least 30%, and a dozen were studied in detail. All were
time-dependent inhibitors and had EC50 values from 2.6 to 120 µM at 24 hours.
Next, the researchers mutated
each of the four surface-exposed cysteine residues to serine. The twelve fragments
still inhibited all the mutants except C284S. SOS1 does not contain a cysteine
at the position corresponding to C284, and indeed none of the twelve fragments significantly inhibited SOS1 activation of KRAS. All this suggests the fragments act via modification of C284.
The easiest and most direct
measurement of covalent binding is with intact protein mass spectrometry, and
the researchers confirmed that 10 of the 12 fragments did in fact form adducts.
Interestingly, Rgl2 was modified two or three times by each fragment, which is
perhaps not surprising given that they had relatively reactive warheads (chloroacetamides
or propiolamides). Mass-spec studies with the mutants revealed that most of the
modifications were at C284 and C508.
Whether or not these fragments
are advanceable, the discovery that modification of C284 inhibits Rgl2 is useful.
Interestingly, C284 is near but not at the Ral binding interface, and the
researchers suggest that their fragments block protein activity allosterically. I
believe such allosteric sites are common throughout the proteome, and readily addressable
using covalent approaches. Watch this space!
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