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Addressing Atropisomerism in the Development of Sotorasib, a Covalent Inhibitor of KRAS G12C: Structural, Analytical, and Synthetic Considerations

[Image: see text] Nearly a century after its first description, configurationally stable axial chirality remains a rare feature in marketed drugs. In the development of the KRAS(G12C) inhibitor sotorasib (LUMAKRAS/LUMYKRAS), an axially chiral biaryl moiety proved a critical structural element in eng...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Lanman, Brian A., Parsons, Andrew T., Zech, Stephan G.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2022
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9583618/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36178208
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.accounts.2c00479
Descripción
Sumario:[Image: see text] Nearly a century after its first description, configurationally stable axial chirality remains a rare feature in marketed drugs. In the development of the KRAS(G12C) inhibitor sotorasib (LUMAKRAS/LUMYKRAS), an axially chiral biaryl moiety proved a critical structural element in engaging a “cryptic” protein binding pocket and enhancing inhibitor potency. Restricted rotation about this axis of chirality gave rise to configurationally stable atropisomers that demonstrated a 10-fold difference in potency. The decision to develop sotorasib as a single-atropisomer drug gave rise to a range of analytical and synthetic challenges, whose resolution we review here. Assessing the configurational stability of differentially substituted biaryl units in early inhibitor candidates represented the first challenge to be overcome, as differing atropisomer stability profiles called for differing development strategies (e.g., as rapidly equilibrating rotamers vs as single atropisomers). We relied on a range of NMR, HPLC, and computational methods to assess atropisomer stability. Here, we describe the various variable-temperature NMR, time-course NMR, and chiral HPLC approaches used to assess the configurational stability of axially chiral bonds displaying a range of rotational barriers. As optimal engagement of the “cryptic” pocket of KRAS(G12C) was ultimately achieved with a configurationally stable atropisomeric linkage, the second challenge to be overcome entailed preparing the preferred (M)-atropisomer of sotorasib on industrial scale. This synthetic challenge centered on the large-scale synthesis of an atropisomerically pure building block comprising the central azaquinazolinone and pyridine rings of sotorasib. We examined a range of strategies to prepare this compound as a single atropisomer: asymmetric catalysis, chiral chromatographic purification, and classical resolution. Although chiral liquid and simulated moving bed chromatography provided expedient access to initial multikilo supplies of this key intermediate, a classical resolution process was ultimately developed that proved significantly more efficient on metric-ton scale. To avoid discarding half of the material from this resolution, this process was subsequently refined to enable thermal recycling of the undesired atropisomer, providing an even more efficient commercial process that proved both robust and green. While the preparation of sotorasib as a single atropisomer significantly increased both the analytical and synthetic complexity of its development, the axially chiral biaryl linkage that gave rise to the atropisomerism of sotorasib proved a key design element in optimizing sotorasib’s binding to KRAS(G12C). It is hoped that this review will help in outlining the range of analytical techniques and synthetic strategies that can be brought to bear in addressing the challenges posed by such axially chiral compounds and that this account may provide helpful guidelines for future efforts aimed at the development of such single atropisomer, axially chiral pharmaceutical agents.