A Next-Generation Oral AR Heterobifunctional Degrader for Drug-Resistant Prostate Cancer
gridegalutamide (BMS-986365, CC-94676)
oral CRBN-based AR heterobifunctional degrader Ph. I for prostate cancer from CRBN-based E3 recruiter + AR ligand AACR San Diego 2024 Annual Meeting, New Drugs on the Horizon Session Celgene, Summit, NJ / Bristol Myers Squibb, Princeton, NJ
Other molecules you may be interested in
EOS-984
EOS-984 is an oral, potential first-in-class, highly selective ENT1 inhibitor from iTeos currently in clinical trials for advanced solid tumors. The drug, which was identified through SBDD and optimization of the vasodilator dilazep, targets the immunosuppressive effects of adenosine, which helps tumors evade immune detection. This is an excellent case study on the importance of understanding a molecule's bioactive conformation to reduce the entropy of binding and enhance potency.
BMS-986408
BMS-986408 is an oral, dual DGK ⍺ and ζ inhibitor currently in a Ph. I/II trial in patients with solid tumors. The compound was identified stemming from a phenotypic screening approach, and subsequent target deconvolution revealed DGK to be the target. If approved, it would be a first-in-class intracellular checkpoint inhibitor of DGK. This is an excellent case study on how to overcome a DILI risk associated with BSEP inhibition, as well as how to improve solubility and PK properties of your compounds through the introduction of polarity, reduction of aromatic rings, and increase in f(sp3).
inavolisib
Inavolisib is a PI3Kα isoform-selective kinase inhibitor and monovalent degrader of the mutant p110α catalytic subunit of mutant PI3Kα. The molecule selectively depletes mutant p110α in cancer cells with active RTK (receptor tyrosine kinase) signaling and is in several ongoing or planned Ph. III trials for breast cancer. In October 2024, it received FDA approval for use in combination with palbociclib and fulvestrant to treat adults with endocrine-resistant, PIK3CA-mutated, HR+/HER2- breast cancer. This article explains how it works, how it was discovered, and why it matters.
sovleplenib (HMPL-523)
Sovleplenib (HMPL-523) is an orally bioavailable Syk inhibitor being developed by HUTCHMED and is currently in Ph. II and Ph. III clinical trials for several autoimmune diseases. Derived from an HTS hit and SAR optimization, the discovery story of sovleplenib serves as an excellent case study on how to design a next-generation Syk inhibitor devoid of off-target kinase activity, mitigated hERG activity, and more.
BAY 2413555
BAY 2413555 is a M2R PAM that has the potential to counter parasympathetic withdrawal and restore autonomic balance in heart failure patients. The preclinical and clinical data of BAY 2413555 showed it has positive effects on heart rate and heart rate variability and a relatively long human t1/2 of 37 h. The Ph. I trial, however, was terminated in March 2024 due to findings from a chronic toxicology study. This article covers the discovery of BAY 2413555, presented by Alexandros Vakalopoulos of Bayer at the EFMC-ISMC 2024 conference in Rome and published in the Journal of Medicinal Chemistry.