1. Academic Validation
  2. Discovery of Oral Degraders of the ROS1 Fusion Protein with Potent Activity against Secondary Resistance Mutations

Discovery of Oral Degraders of the ROS1 Fusion Protein with Potent Activity against Secondary Resistance Mutations

  • J Med Chem. 2024 Oct 24;67(20):18098-18123. doi: 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.4c01205.
Xianyou Peng 1 2 Shanchun Guo 1 2 Shilong Zheng 1 2 Ahamed Hossain 1 2 Changde Zhang 1 2 Madhusoodanan Mottamal 1 2 Elena Skripnikova 2 3 Peng Ma 2 3 Kindy Martinez-Carter 2 3 Qiang Zhang 1 2 Faisal Abedin 4 Thomas Huckaba 4 Guangdi Wang 1 2
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Department of Chemistry, Xavier University of Louisiana, New Orleans, Louisiana 70125, United States.
  • 2 RCMI Cancer Research Center, Xavier University of Louisiana, New Orleans, Louisiana 70125, United States.
  • 3 College of Pharmacy, Xavier University of Louisiana, New Orleans, Louisiana 70125, United States.
  • 4 Department of Biology, Xavier University of Louisiana, New Orleans, Louisiana 70125, United States.
Abstract

The development of therapeutic resistance in the majority of patients limits the long-term benefit of ROS1 inhibitor treatment. On-target mutations of the ROS1 kinase domain confer resistance to crizotinib and lorlatinib in more than one-third of acquired resistance cases with no current effective treatment option. As an alternative to stoichiometric inhibition, proteolytic degradation of ROS1 could provide an effective tool to combat resistance generated by these mutations. Our study has identified a potent, orally active ROS1 degrader with an excellent pharmacokinetics profile. The degrader can effectively inhibit ROS1-dependent cell proliferation and tumor growth by degrading the ROS1 kinase, thereby eliminating the active phospho-ROS1. More importantly, the degradation-based therapeutic modality can overcome on-target mutation resistance to tyrosine kinase inhibitors by efficient degradation of the mutated kinase to achieve greater potency than inhibition.

Figures
Products