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Tunable Methacrylamides for Covalent Ligand Directed Release Chemistry

[Image: see text] Targeted covalent inhibitors are an important class of drugs and chemical probes. However, relatively few electrophiles meet the criteria for successful covalent inhibitor design. Here we describe α-substituted methacrylamides as a new class of electrophiles suitable for targeted c...

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Autores principales: Reddi, Rambabu N., Resnick, Efrat, Rogel, Adi, Rao, Boddu Venkateswara, Gabizon, Ronen, Goldenberg, Kim, Gurwicz, Neta, Zaidman, Daniel, Plotnikov, Alexander, Barr, Haim, Shulman, Ziv, London, Nir
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2021
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8041284/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33761747
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.0c10644
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author Reddi, Rambabu N.
Resnick, Efrat
Rogel, Adi
Rao, Boddu Venkateswara
Gabizon, Ronen
Goldenberg, Kim
Gurwicz, Neta
Zaidman, Daniel
Plotnikov, Alexander
Barr, Haim
Shulman, Ziv
London, Nir
author_facet Reddi, Rambabu N.
Resnick, Efrat
Rogel, Adi
Rao, Boddu Venkateswara
Gabizon, Ronen
Goldenberg, Kim
Gurwicz, Neta
Zaidman, Daniel
Plotnikov, Alexander
Barr, Haim
Shulman, Ziv
London, Nir
author_sort Reddi, Rambabu N.
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Targeted covalent inhibitors are an important class of drugs and chemical probes. However, relatively few electrophiles meet the criteria for successful covalent inhibitor design. Here we describe α-substituted methacrylamides as a new class of electrophiles suitable for targeted covalent inhibitors. While typically α-substitutions inactivate acrylamides, we show that hetero α-substituted methacrylamides have higher thiol reactivity and undergo a conjugated addition–elimination reaction ultimately releasing the substituent. Their reactivity toward thiols is tunable and correlates with the pK(a)/pK(b) of the leaving group. In the context of the BTK inhibitor ibrutinib, these electrophiles showed lower intrinsic thiol reactivity than the unsubstituted ibrutinib acrylamide. This translated to comparable potency in protein labeling, in vitro kinase assays, and functional cellular assays, with improved selectivity. The conjugate addition–elimination reaction upon covalent binding to their target cysteine allows functionalizing α-substituted methacrylamides as turn-on probes. To demonstrate this, we prepared covalent ligand directed release (CoLDR) turn-on fluorescent probes for BTK, EGFR, and K-Ras(G12C). We further demonstrate a BTK CoLDR chemiluminescent probe that enabled a high-throughput screen for BTK inhibitors. Altogether we show that α-substituted methacrylamides represent a new and versatile addition to the toolbox of targeted covalent inhibitor design.
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spelling pubmed-80412842021-04-13 Tunable Methacrylamides for Covalent Ligand Directed Release Chemistry Reddi, Rambabu N. Resnick, Efrat Rogel, Adi Rao, Boddu Venkateswara Gabizon, Ronen Goldenberg, Kim Gurwicz, Neta Zaidman, Daniel Plotnikov, Alexander Barr, Haim Shulman, Ziv London, Nir J Am Chem Soc [Image: see text] Targeted covalent inhibitors are an important class of drugs and chemical probes. However, relatively few electrophiles meet the criteria for successful covalent inhibitor design. Here we describe α-substituted methacrylamides as a new class of electrophiles suitable for targeted covalent inhibitors. While typically α-substitutions inactivate acrylamides, we show that hetero α-substituted methacrylamides have higher thiol reactivity and undergo a conjugated addition–elimination reaction ultimately releasing the substituent. Their reactivity toward thiols is tunable and correlates with the pK(a)/pK(b) of the leaving group. In the context of the BTK inhibitor ibrutinib, these electrophiles showed lower intrinsic thiol reactivity than the unsubstituted ibrutinib acrylamide. This translated to comparable potency in protein labeling, in vitro kinase assays, and functional cellular assays, with improved selectivity. The conjugate addition–elimination reaction upon covalent binding to their target cysteine allows functionalizing α-substituted methacrylamides as turn-on probes. To demonstrate this, we prepared covalent ligand directed release (CoLDR) turn-on fluorescent probes for BTK, EGFR, and K-Ras(G12C). We further demonstrate a BTK CoLDR chemiluminescent probe that enabled a high-throughput screen for BTK inhibitors. Altogether we show that α-substituted methacrylamides represent a new and versatile addition to the toolbox of targeted covalent inhibitor design. American Chemical Society 2021-03-25 2021-04-07 /pmc/articles/PMC8041284/ /pubmed/33761747 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.0c10644 Text en © 2021 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society Permits the broadest form of re-use including for commercial purposes, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Reddi, Rambabu N.
Resnick, Efrat
Rogel, Adi
Rao, Boddu Venkateswara
Gabizon, Ronen
Goldenberg, Kim
Gurwicz, Neta
Zaidman, Daniel
Plotnikov, Alexander
Barr, Haim
Shulman, Ziv
London, Nir
Tunable Methacrylamides for Covalent Ligand Directed Release Chemistry
title Tunable Methacrylamides for Covalent Ligand Directed Release Chemistry
title_full Tunable Methacrylamides for Covalent Ligand Directed Release Chemistry
title_fullStr Tunable Methacrylamides for Covalent Ligand Directed Release Chemistry
title_full_unstemmed Tunable Methacrylamides for Covalent Ligand Directed Release Chemistry
title_short Tunable Methacrylamides for Covalent Ligand Directed Release Chemistry
title_sort tunable methacrylamides for covalent ligand directed release chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8041284/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33761747
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.0c10644
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