An Oral, Small Molecule GLP-1R Agonist Fast-Follower from Structure Therapeutics
aleniglipron
oral GLP-1R agonist Ph. IIa for obesity from known starting point and SBDD press release / INN proposed names list Structure Therapeutics, South San Francisco, CA
Other molecules you may be interested in
resmetirom
On Mar. 14th, 2024, resmetirom (REZDIFFRA™) became the first and only medicine approved by the FDA for the treatment of NASH (non-alcoholic steatohepatitis, aka MASH). Resmetirom, an oral, liver-targeting, once-daily THR-β-selective agonist originally discovered at Roche Nutley, was first highlighted as a Molecule of the Month in Dec. 2022. Now, with the FDA’s accelerated approval, this 2023 Molecule of the Year nominee reflects a historic milestone for liver drug discovery. This article reviews how the molecule works, how it was discovered, and why it’s a big deal.
orforglipron
Orforglipron is an oral non-peptide glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor partial agonist that entered Ph. III for obesity and type-2-diabetes mellitus (T2DM). This 2020 and 2023 Molecule of the Year nominee (nominated initially back when it was still in Ph. I) was first discovered by Chugai Pharmaceuticals under the name OWL833, then licensed by Eli Lilly for worldwide development under the name LY3502970. The article discusses where it sits in the GLP-1R agonist landscape, why it’s scientifically notable, how it works with illustrations from cryo-EM structures, its synthesis, and more.
seladelpar
In August 2024, seladelpar (LivdelziTM) became the first FDA-approved selective agonist of PPARδ (peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor δ), following an almost 20-year journey from the original discovery and patent publications. Originally developed by CymaBay in collaboration with Johnson & Johnson, approval was granted to Gilead Sciences following their February 2024 purchase of CymaBay Therapeutics for $4.3B. Seladelpar was approved as a second-line treatment for patients with primary biliary cholangitis.
NVP-DFV890
Novartis' NLRP3 inhibitor, NVP-DFV890, features a unique sulfonimidamide motif designed to reduce hydrolysis relative to traditional sulfonylureas. This potent compound, with promising PK in humans, is advancing through multiple clinical studies, including Ph. II trials for coronary heart disease and knee osteoarthritis. Presented by Angela Mackay at the EFMC-ISMC 2024 joint conference in Rome, this overview covers NVP-DFV890's discovery, as well as its preclinical PK and PD data.
BBO-8520
BridgeBio’s BBO-8520 is a selective, covalent KRAS(G12C) inhibitor which differentiates itself from the pack by engaging the (ON) state of the protein, potentially conferring increased clinical benefit in KRAS(G12C)-driven cancers, including overcoming resistance to current treatments. Disclosed at the 2024 AACR Annual Meeting in San Diego, is currently in a Ph. I trial in patients with advanced non-small-cell lung cancer. This article covers the structure, mechanism of action and preclinical efficacy that marks this compound out as one to watch.