Expanding
the repertoire of electrophiles with unique reactivity
features would facilitate the development of covalent inhibitors with
desirable reactivity profiles. We herein introduce bicyclo[1.1.0]butane
(BCB) carboxylic amide as a new class of thiol-reactive electrophiles
for selective and irreversible inhibition of targeted proteins. We
first streamlined the synthetic routes to generate a variety of BCB
amides. The strain-driven nucleophilic addition to BCB amides proceeded
chemoselectively with cysteine thiols under neutral aqueous conditions,
the rate of which was significantly slower than that of acrylamide.
This reactivity profile of BCB amide was successfully exploited to
develop covalent ligands targeting Bruton’s tyrosine kinase
(BTK). By tuning BCB amide reactivity and optimizing its disposition
on the ligand, we obtained a selective covalent inhibitor of BTK.
The in-gel activity-based protein profiling and mass spectrometry-based
chemical proteomics revealed that the selected BCB amide had a higher
target selectivity for BTK in human cells than did a Michael acceptor
probe. Further chemical proteomic study revealed that BTK probes bearing
different classes of electrophiles exhibited distinct off-target profiles.
This result suggests that incorporation of BCB amide as a cysteine-directed
electrophile could expand the capability to develop covalent inhibitors
with the desired proteome reactivity profile.
Covalent modification of disease-associated proteins with small molecules is a powerful approach for achieving an increased and sustained pharmacological effect. To reduce the potential risk of nonselective covalent modification, molecular design of covalent inhibitors is critically important. We report herein the development of a targeted covalent inhibitor for mutated epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) (L858R/ T790M) using α-chlorofluoroacetamide (CFA) as the reactive group. The chemically tuned weak reactivity of CFA was suitable for the design of third-generation EGFR inhibitors that possess the pyrimidine scaffold. The structure−activity relationship study revealed that CFA inhibitor 18 (NSP-037) possessed higher inhibition selectivity to the mutated EGFR over wild-type EGFR when compared to clinically approved osimertinib. Mass-based chemical proteomics analyses further revealed that 18 displayed high covalent modification selectivity for the mutated EGFR in living cells. These findings highlight the utility of CFA as a warhead of targeted covalent inhibitors and the potential application of the CFA-pyrimidines for treatment of non-small-cell lung cancer.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.