| Literature DB >> 35024121 |
Shuhui Lim1, Nicolas Boyer2, Nicole Boo1, Chunhui Huang2, Gireedhar Venkatachalam1, Yu-Chi Angela Juang1, Michael Garrigou2, Hung Yi Kristal Kaan1, Ruchia Duggal2, Khong Ming Peh1, Ahmad Sadruddin1, Pooja Gopal1, Tsz Ying Yuen3, Simon Ng3, Srinivasaraghavan Kannan3, Christopher J Brown3, Chandra S Verma3, Peter Orth4, Andrea Peier4, Lan Ge4, Xiang Yu5, Bhavana Bhatt5, Feifei Chen5, Erjia Wang5, Nianyu Jason Li5, Raymond J Gonzales5, Alexander Stoeck2, Brian Henry1, Tomi K Sawyer2, David P Lane3, Charles W Johannes3, Kaustav Biswas2, Anthony W Partridge1.
Abstract
Macrocyclic peptides have the potential to address intracellular protein-protein interactions (PPIs) of high value therapeutic targets that have proven largely intractable to small molecules. Here, we report broadly applicable lessons for applying this modality to intracellular targets and specifically for advancing chemical matter to address KRAS, a protein that represents the most common oncogene in human lung, colorectal and pancreatic cancers yet is one of the most challenging targets in human disease. Specifically, we focused on KRpep-2d, an arginine-rich KRAS-binding peptide with a disulfide-mediated macrocyclic linkage and a protease-sensitive backbone. These latter redox and proteolytic labilities obviated cellular activity. Extensive structure-activity relationship studies involving macrocyclic linker replacement, stereochemical inversion, and backbone α-methylation, gave a peptide with on-target cellular activity. However, we uncovered an important generic insight - the arginine-dependent cell entry mechanism limited its therapeutic potential. In particular, we observed a strong correlation between net positive charge and histamine release in an ex vivo assay, thus making this series unsuitable for advancement due to the potentially fatal consequences of mast cell degranulation. This observation should signal to researchers that cationic-mediated cell entry - an approach that has yet to succeed in the clinic despite a long history of attempts - carries significant therapy-limiting safety liabilities. Nonetheless, the cell-active molecules identified here validate a unique inhibitory epitope on KRAS and thus provide valuable molecular templates for the development of therapeutics that are desperately needed to address KRAS-driven cancers - some of the most treatment-resistant human malignancies. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 35024121 PMCID: PMC8672774 DOI: 10.1039/d1sc05187c
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Sci ISSN: 2041-6520 Impact factor: 9.825
Fig. 1Replacement of the KRpep-2d's disulfide bridge with a d-Cys5–CH2–l-Cys15 thioacetal linkage results in a redox-stable, high affinity peptide. (A) SPR analysis shows that oxidized (cyclic) but not reduced (linear) KRpep-2d binds with high affinity to GDP-loaded KRASG12D. The chemical structure is shown, with the N- and C-terminal arginine chains and disulfide linker highlighted in red. (B) Redox-stable peptides MP-6483 and MP-4090 display cell-based inhibition of KRAS signaling (pERK and pAKT) in AsPC-1 cells, as assessed by Western blot at 1 hour and 16 hour time-points; non-binding control enantiomeric peptide MP-4956 showed no activity (Left). Sequences for the peptides are shown. (C) MP-6483 and MP-4090 but not the non-binder controls (MP-9657 and MP-9658) display cell-based inhibition (pERK) in AsPC-1 cells, as assessed by Alpha SureFire Ultra Multiplex Phospho/Total ERK1/2 assay (Perkin Elmer) when treated for 1 h (n = 6, black symbols) and 18 h (n = 2, red symbols). The d-Cys5 residue, N- and C-terminal arginine residues, core modifications and thioacetal linker is highlighted in red (D) the same lysates in panel C were also assessed for membrane toxicity, as measured by the CytoTox-ONE™ homogenous membrane integrity assay (Promega). (E) Superimposition of co-crystal structures involving (i) KRpep-2d in complex with KRASG12D (GDP) (PDB ID 5XCO, blue) and (ii) MP-9903, a peptide containing the d-Cys5–CH2–l-Cys15 thioacetal linkage, with KRASG12D (GMPPCP) (PDB ID 7ROV, pink), shows a highly similar KRAS conformation and that binding of MP-9903 involves a cis peptide bond between d-Cys5 and Pro6. For clarity, terminal arginine residues are either transparent or hidden. The d-Cys5 residue, N- and C-termini and thioacetal linker are highlighted in red in the structure and the termini changes to MP-6483 is noted.
Modification of the disulfide cyclization motif of KRpep-2d, Ac-RRRR-cyclo(CPLYISYDPVC)-RRRR-NH2
| Compound | Sequence | Linker | KRASG12D GDP TR-FRET EC50 (nM) |
|---|---|---|---|
| KRpep-2d | Ac-RRRR-cyclo(CPLYISYDPVC)-NH2 |
| 1916 (>50 000 |
| 1 | Ac-K(N3)-RRRR-cyclo(DPLYISYDPV-Dap)-RRRR-NH2 |
| >50 000 |
| 2 | Ac-K(N3)-RRRR-cyclo(dPLYISYDPV-Dap)-RRRR-NH2 |
| 19 331 |
| 3 | Ac-K(N3)-RRRR-cyclo(C(methylene)PLYISYDPVC)-RRRR-NH2 |
| 13 740 |
| MP-6483 | Ac-K(N3)-RRRR-cyclo(c(methylene)PLYISYDPVC)-RRRR- NH2 |
| 172 (93 |
| 4 | Ac-K(N3)-RR-cyclo(c(methylene)PLYISYDPV-hC)-RR-NH2 |
| 4719 |
Reducing conditions (1 mM DTT), see Fig. S2. Lower case letters represent d amino acids.
Alanine scan on peptide Ac-K(N3)-RR-cyclo(c(methylene)PLYISYDPVC)-RR-NH2 (MP-1687)a
| Compound | Modification | KRASG12D GDP TR-FRET EC50 (nM) |
|---|---|---|
| MP-1687 | None | 60 |
| 5 | Pro6Ala | >48 080 |
| 6 | Leu7Ala | >48 080 |
| 7 | Tyr8Ala | 691 |
| 8 | Ile9Ala | >48 080 |
| 9 | Ser10Ala | 1072 |
| 10 | Tyr11Ala | 2430 |
| 11 | Asp12Ala | >48 080 |
| 12 | Pro13Ala | 427 |
| 13 | Val14Ala | 161 |
|
| ||
The d-Cys5 residue and thioacetal linker is highlighted in red in the structure. The N- and C-termini are shown. MP-1687 has the same macrocyclic core as MP-6483, with only two arginine residues at each terminus.
Key binder peptides showing SAR evolution and non-binder control peptides
| Compound | Peptide sequence | Changes | KRASG12D GDP TR-FRET EC50 (nM) | AsPC-1 pERK EC50 1 h/18 h (μM) | AsPC-1 LDH EC50 1 h/18 h (μM) | A375 pERK EC50 1 h/18 h (μM) | NanoClick EC50 4 h/18 h (nM) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MP-6483 (binder) | Ac-K(N3)-RRRR-cyclo(c(methylene)PLYISYDPVC)-RRRR-NH2 | None | 172.4 | 15.9/>50 | >50/>50 | NT | 2693/636 |
| MP-4090 (binder) | Ac-K(N3)-rrrr-cyclo(c(methylene)PLYISYDPVC)-rrrr-NH2 | All | 140.7 | 3.6/30.5 | >50/>50 | >50/>50 | 250.5/34.9 |
| MP-3995 (binder) | Ac-KN3)-rrrr-cyclo(c(methylene)PLYI-αMeS-YDPVC)-rrrr-NH2 | All | 172.1 | 1.2/1.5 | >50/>50 | >50/>50 | 1777/32.1 |
| MP-4956 (non-binder) | Ac-rrrr-cyclo(c(methylene)plyisydpvc)-rrrr-NH2 | All | >48 080 | >50/>50 | >50/>50 | NT/>50 | NT |
| MP-9657 (non-binder) | Ac-K(N3)-rrrr-cyclo(c(methylene)PLYiSYDPVC)-rrrr-NH2 | All | >48 080 | >50/>50 | >50/>50 | NT | 1756/36.2 |
| MP-9658 (non-binder) | Ac-K(N3)-rrrr-cyclo(c(methylene)PLYISYdPVC)-rrrr-NH2 | All | >48 080 | >50/>50 | >50/>50 | NT/>50 | 196.1/31.4 |
Lower case letters represent d-amino acids. NT = not tested.
Fig. 2MP-4090 and MP-3995 specifically engage with cellular KRAS to inhibit its interactions with RAF–RBD. (A) Isothermal CETSA® experiments using intact AsPC-1 cells show that both MP-4090 and MP-3995 thermally stabilize KRASG12D whereas non-binding controls (MP-9657 and MP-9658) do not. The d-Cys5 residue, N- and C-termini, core modifications and thioacetal linker are highlighted in red in the structures. (B) Introduction of a RBD-CRD-eGFP fusion protein into AsPC-1 cells (homozygous KRASG12D) using mRNA transfection resulted in enrichment of the GFP signal at the membrane when cells were incubated with DMSO (not shown) or the non-binder control peptides, MP-9657 and MP-9658. Membrane enrichment was lost when cells were incubated with MP-4090 or MP-3995, suggesting that these peptides could effectively compete with the PPI. (C) Summary of SAR evolution from KRpep-2d to MP-3995.
α-Methyl amino acid scan biochemical assay and cell homogenate half-life data on peptide Ac-K(N3)-RR-cyclo(c(methylene)PLYISYDPVC)-RR-NH2 (MP-1687)
| Compound | Modification | KRASG12D GDP TR-FRET EC50 (nM) | HeLa |
|---|---|---|---|
| MP-1687 | None | 60 | 37 |
| 14 | α-Me-Pro6 | 10 830 | 142 |
| 15 | α-Me-Leu7 | 11 510 | 114 |
| 16 | α-Me-Phe8 | 46 120 | >373 |
| 17 | α-Me-Ser10 | 62 | 154 |
| 18 | α-Me-Tyr11 | 1800 | 71 |
| 19 | α-Me-Asp12 | 3705 | 41 |
| 20 | α-Me-Pro13 | 67 | 134 |
| 21 | α-Me-Val14 | 222 | NA |
| 22 | α-Me-Cys15 | 48 080 | 120 |
Fig. 3KRpep-2d peptide analogs have dual inhibitory mechanisms. (A) MP-3995 and MP-9903 potently inhibited SOS-mediated nucleotide exchange. The d-Cys5 residue, N- and C-termini, core modifications and thioacetal linker are highlighted in red in the structure. (B) MP-6483, MP-4090, MP-3995, and MP-9903 showed a superior capacity to block the KRAS-RBD PPI compared to KRpep-2d, whereas the non-binder control (MP-4956) had no activity. (C) MP-6483 and MP-1687 blocked the co-immunoprecipitation of b-RAF (left panel) and c-RAF (right panel) with KRASG12D. Alanine mutant peptide library analogs of MP-1687 (Table S1†) demonstrated that KRAS binding affinity correlated well with disruption of the PPI. (D) MP-3995 blocked phospho-ERK signaling in cells expressing either NanoLuc-KRASG12C or NanoLuc-KRASG12C/A59G whereas AMG 510 only inhibited NanoLuc-KRASG12C, non-binders (MP-4956 and MP-9658) had no activity.
Fig. 4MP-3995 inhibits cell proliferation in cell lines of different tissue origins bearing various KRAS mutations. (A) MP-3995 inhibits phospho-ERK in KRAS mutant cell lines but not BRAFV600E (KRAS independent) A375 cells. (B) MP-3995, but not the non-binder control MP-4956, inhibits cell proliferation in KRASG12D, KRASG12C and KRASG12V mutant cells. (C) MP-3995 inhibits cell proliferation in 8 out of 13 KRAS mutant cell lines across different disease indications.
Arginine-truncation and mast cell degranulation SAR study
| Compound | Sequence | KRASG12D GDP TR-FRET EC50 (nM) | AsPC-1 pERK EC50 1 h/18 h (μM) | # of Arg | rMCD histamine release threshold (μM) | NanoClick EC50 4 h/18 h (nM) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MP-4090 | Ac-K(N3)-rrrr-cyclo(c(methylene)PLYISYDPVC)-rrrr-NH2 | 140.7 | 3.6/30.8 | 8 | ≥0.14 | 251/35 |
| MP-6483 | Ac-K(N3)-RRRR-cyclo(c(methylene)PLYISYDPVC)-RRRR-NH2 | 172.4 | 15.9/>50 | 8 | ≥0.14 | 2693/636 |
| 23 | Ac-K(N3)-RRR-cyclo(c(methylene)PLYISYDPVC)-RRR-NH2 | 75.8 | >50/>50 | 6 | ≥0.14 | 3314/>10 000 |
| MP-1687 | Ac-K(N3)-RR-cyclo(c(methylene)PLYISYDPVC)- RR-NH2 | 59.4 | >50/>50 | 4 | ≥3.7 | 4552/4711 |
| MP-9903 | Ac-K(N3)-R-cyclo(c(methylene)PLYISYDPVC)-R-NH2 | 138.6 | >50/>50 | 2 | >100 | 6939/6828 |
| 24 | Ac-K(N3)-cyclo(c(methylene)PLYISYDPVC)-R-NH2 | 187.6 | >50/>50 | 1 | >100 | >10 000/4462 |
| 25 | Ac-K(N3)-cyclo(c(methylene)PLYISYDPVC)-NH2 | 409.5 | >50/>50 | 0 | >100 | >10 000/5136 |
Lower case letters represent d-amino acids.